Gramophone celebrates its 100th birthday in April 2023, and at a time when BBC Music seems to have lost its way with funding and direction, it feels more vitally important than ever. 100 years continuous publication of a journal devoted to Classical Music (in every sense, including the Contemporary), musicians, the recording media, the ever-evolving playback media and equipment. Gramophone has always kept its ear to the groundswell of new technology and New Music. Under Martin Cullingford, editor since 2011 and publisher (with Mark Allen Group) since 2014, the magazine is vibrant - thriving, its coverage as wide and deep as it has ever been.
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The Special issue includes nearly 50 pages of the best archived features and interviews. You’ll find Szigeti and Stravinsky with impassioned pleas for the recording of Contemporary Music - this in 1936. Or anecdotes like the one from Clifford Curzon, recalling his excitement in Germaine Tailleferre agreeing to come to his rehearsal of her Ballade. Excitedly telling Sir Henry Wood about this, Wood replied: “I’m having none of these women composers taking up my time. You’ll have to put her off, my boy”.
She didn't come….
Pablo Casals, learning to play an improvised Cello his father made from a strung gourd….
Rostropovich lamenting the lack of personality in recent interpretations “it isn’t very thoughtful, in my opinion, to criticize someone for simply not following the marked speeds…”
*****
A 20-page decade by decade history of Gramophone from James Jolly, surprisingly hardhitting and penetrating in its reflections on the arrival of SACD (a sonic pinnacle) and the almost contemporaneous and subsequent rise of mp3 (a significant, financially driven backward step, as (apart from dynamic range) DAB was, after FM); the cost/benefit of purchased recordings vs streaming..…the ambiguous impact of the Three Tenors and the Gorecki 3rd, when executives from outside the Music Business came in to look for the next big thing..... the state and status of Arts and Music in the World today. A fascinating commentary.
With a detailed historical timeline on music, recordings and hifi, from Blumlein Stereo to Quad Electrostatics, and right up to date with Hyperion/Universal and Presto/Apple streaming….
Many other features too.
Gramophone has enriched Classical Musical Life in so many ways; so many listeners owe their awareness and knowledge of Classical Music and the Recorded Catalogue, often to technology and aspects of hifi, to its wide and deep coverage; impossible to imagine our lives without it.
Even if you don’t currently subscribe, it’s well worth getting a copy of this Centenary Collectors’ Edition while it’s available; a 20th and 21st Century history of all that matters in Classical Music Recordings; full of so many wonderful and remarkable things….
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