Some of the biggest culprits for this category must be with the labels that issue box sets and then put in a cheeseparing booklet that contains hardly any of the notes from the original discs. I'd happily pay extra for them.
Records let down by liner notes
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostSome of the biggest culprits for this category must be with the labels that issue box sets and then put in a cheeseparing booklet that contains hardly any of the notes from the original discs. I'd happily pay extra for them.
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostOn the other hand, the CD booklet for Jordi Savall's latest, 'Codex Las Huelgas', is sumptuous, with photographs, music examples, informative notes, texts, the lot. AliaVox label, of course.
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CDs often have their notes in several languages, thereby taking up extra space, somewhat redundantly. It can be of mild interest to see if these are just translations of the same text (which they usually are) or original text in each language. In the latter case I sometimes have a go at the foreign texts as well. I can manage French and German but Italian and Spanish are more of a challenge.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostCDs often have their notes in several languages, thereby taking up extra space, somewhat redundantly. It can be of mild interest to see if these are just translations of the same text (which they usually are) or original text in each language. In the latter case I sometimes have a go at the foreign texts as well. I can manage French and German but Italian and Spanish are more of a challenge.
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostYes, I often practise my French by using the French version, if there is one!
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostJust be careful to look out for those which have different authors, and thus content, for each language.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostCDs often have their notes in several languages, thereby taking up extra space, somewhat redundantly. It can be of mild interest to see if these are just translations of the same text (which they usually are) or original text in each language. In the latter case I sometimes have a go at the foreign texts as well. I can manage French and German but Italian and Spanish are more of a challenge.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostLps would do the same, or at least on DG
One of the advantages of buying the Szell, Walter and Bernstein boxes on Sony is that the CD wallets reproduce the back as well as the front so we get the original liner notes as well and very good they are too, often with music examples. The print is very tiny but I can fortunately read it without my glasses on. They are ideal examples of the note writer's art.
I can't resist mentioning one example from Decca that, 50 years on, remains for me the perfect sleeve note. It is Geoffrey Crankshaw's notes to the Solti recording of Elgar's Symphony No 1. Everything you could want in a sleeve note is there. No music examples but a well written description of the music as it unfolds complete with full historical background. It was ideal for someone like me who, at the time (1975), had never heard the work before."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostDG were alone in doing that, as far as I'm aware.
One of the advantages of buying the Szell, Walter and Bernstein boxes on Sony is that the CD wallets reproduce the back as well as the front so we get the original liner notes as well and very good they are too, often with music examples. The print is very tiny but I can fortunately read it without my glasses on. They are ideal examples of the note writer's art.
I can't resist mentioning one example from Decca that, 50 years on, remains for me the perfect sleeve note. It is Geoffrey Crankshaw's notes to the Solti recording of Elgar's Symphony No 1. Everything you could want in a sleeve note is there. No music examples but a well written description of the music as it unfolds complete with full historical background. It was ideal for someone like me who, at the time (1975), had never heard the work before.
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What gets me, which a friend said to me, and we agree that although the Sony White Box series is a very good one,we were chatting about the lack of a booklet in their products. Would this not incur any increase in production costs? As you wouldn’t have to pay for any fees, surely?Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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