Regarding "no ads", I gave up on The Gramaphone shortly after they stopped restricting full-page ads to non-editorial pages (a practice which applied to the continuation of the sheet of paper the other side of the staples which were used before any change to perfect binding).
Gramophone at 100
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI found early copies of The Gramophone on the Internet Archive including this poem in the Nov 1923 edition written by the great Irish Doctor, Politician and sometime poet Oliver St John Gogarty- immortalised as Buck Mulligan in Joyce’s Ulysses ( and later indeed in a Temple Bar pub). The poem is a meditation on how voice recording has transformed death and life.
I’m just quoting the first and middle verse as the layout of the Gramophone doesn’t lend itself to copying.
“Verses to the Editor of the Gramophone By Oliver St. John Gogarty.
The immemorial decency of Death
Was silence ; but it is no longer true:
For who can say now * With his latest breath
He parted,” when his words thou canst renew ?
Aye ; and canst make them last and later, latest,
When on his record with thy “ style ” thou gratest,
Bringing Life's platitudes back o’er the Border ?
The rest is—” What? Implacable Recorder. “
Nice quibble on style . He later uses Gramophone as a verb / gerund
“Think,, in those States, so much worse than the first,
How cheerful will the graveyards soon become
With epitaphs that into song will burst,
Making a noisy nightmare of the tomb ;
When every vault, endowed for gramophoning,
_ The records of the dead will keep intoning ;
Telling, perchance, how poppa swelled the till
In quaint redundant Copperanopolisville.”
Not the worlds greatest poem but quite possibly the very first ode to vinyl (or shellac I guess)
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Like many others I have fond memories of Richard Osborne's reviews, not quite verbatim, I'm afraid , but something like this (re Artur Schnabel's late 1930's Schubert) :
'These performances were recorded at a moment in history when the tradition which had nurtured them had reached its fullest extent and was at the same time threatened with total extinction.'
He goes on to quote Seneca (no less) : ' "when the state is beyond repair the wise man retires and writes for posterity." Fortunately for us Schnabel did not retire but gave us these recordings. '
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Originally posted by smittims View PostLike many others I have fond memories of Richard Osborne's reviews, not quite verbatim, I'm afraid , but something like this (re Artur Schnabel's late 1930's Schubert) :
'These performances were recorded at a moment in history when the tradition which had nurtured them had reached its fullest extent and was at the same time threatened with total extinction.'
He goes on to quote Seneca (no less) : ' "when the state is beyond repair the wise man retires and writes for posterity." Fortunately for us Schnabel did not retire but gave us these recordings. '
We'd search in vain for that quality in today's Gramophone. One reviewer in the current issue even strained to make a modish Formula One metaphor work for its keep: if you insist on bringing Lewis Hamilton into your review, you (or your editor) needs to know that he drives a Mercedes, not a McLaren - Lewis has not sat in one of those for over a decade!
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Originally posted by Alison View PostStrangely advertisements were more pleasing to my eye when occupying their own page."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostOsborne - like Steane - was a first-rate teacher, able to call on wide cultural references as well as being able to incorporate them seamlessly into the thread of his writing.
We'd search in vain for that quality in today's Gramophone. One reviewer in the current issue even strained to make a modish Formula One metaphor work for its keep: if you insist on bringing Lewis Hamilton into your review, you (or your editor) needs to know that he drives a Mercedes, not a McLaren - Lewis has not sat in one of those for over a decade!
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post... and Lipatti the Ayrton Senna, brilliant but doomed to an early death.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostOne reason for giving up was that the Gram catalogue a) stopped giving a reference to the review date and b) became very expensive...
Explore 40,000 album reviews from the pages of Gramophone, the world's leading classical music magazine, from 1983 to today
Is the "free internet" good enough? In searching the internet the gramophone reviews do come up quite often, and usually seem more interesting than the average free internet comment... they allow you to read five for free each month... and I think it's worth paying to get full access.
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Originally posted by Mal View Post[...] Is the "free internet" good enough? In searching the internet the gramophone reviews do come up quite often, and usually seem more interesting than the average free internet comment... they allow you to read five for free each month... and I think it's worth paying to get full access.
Another concern, browsing through the March 2023 issue, is this very question of editorial control. I don't expect to turn to a review claiming to be "an album of early Spanish music", only to find that it is an album of Italian, French and Flemish music, without one Spanish note in it. I don't expect to turn to a comparative review of "The Magic Flute on Film", which fails to make any reference to Ingmar Bergman's film version of the opera (a classic by any standards, and a totally baffling omission, presumably because it's 'only' in Swedish!)
I don't blame the reviewers: this is the sub-editors and editor falling asleep on the job.
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Originally posted by smittims View Post...and in many cases simple ignorance, lack of education. One sees it everywhere now. Spotify cut up 'Pelleas et Melisande' into three-minute 'songs' with a short break between each, wrecking the continuity for anyone who loves this opera.
I was a regular subscriber to Gramophone from 1971 but I hadn't bought it for quite a few years when I recently acquired the 100th Anniversary Edition. It seemed OK to me.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostThere lies the rub. "Free internet" reviews lack the kind of quality control one expects from a publication coming in at £6.95 per month.
I don't expect to turn to a comparative review of "The Magic Flute on Film", which fails to make any reference to Ingmar Bergman's film version of the opera (a classic by any standards, and a totally baffling omission, presumably because it's 'only' in Swedish!)
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Originally posted by smittims View Post...and in many cases simple ignorance, lack of education. One sees it everywhere now. Spotify cut up 'Pelleas et Melisande' into three-minute 'songs' with a short break between each, wrecking the continuity for anyone who loves this opera.
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