Originally posted by cloughie
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Testament Label Favourites
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Hi Ferret,
I've got some Eloquence issues that haven't appeared on Decca yet, Martinon's wonderful Offenbach overtures for instance, and I've been disappointed by the sound, I had hoped it would have more 'presence' but it sounds very flat and monochrome. I've also got some of the Grumiaux recordings which were pretty good LPs in their time and, again, sound lacklustre but, to be fair, I haven't compared them with the Decca CDs.
Some of the early EMI CDs were particularly poor transfers and the Michael Rabin set was one of the worst, very poor when compared with the LPs. I'd love to know whether Testament set is better but I'm not going to buy them on spec.
Mike
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Yes to the Keilberth Ring and yes to the Kempe Alpine Symphony. Grateful thanks to Testament for the release of these vital issues.
Someone at Testament, though, really does need to get a grip on the pricing structure. Offering Furtwangler's 1942 Bruckner 5, to take one example, at £10.99 (as on their website) is simply not competitive however good the transfer. I got the CD anyway but I would consider a price of £6.99 to be a fair one given the extreme age of the recording.
Edit: I see that Presto are offering 20% off Testament recordings until April 18 2012. Fill yer boots!!"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostOffering Furtwangler's 1942 Bruckner 5, to take one example, at £10.99 (as on their website) is simply not competitive however good the transfer.
But, returning to the topic, I've often wondered whether the Marmite and peanut butter sleeve-note designs affect the sales of Testament CDs?
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Joining a thread too late as usual, probably be ignored, but, albeit we're all used to budget boxes, I'm a little surprised at complaints about price, Testament do offer quality, not quantity - pace Mike Aldren, I'm generally impressed with the processing, especially if Paul Baily (sic) is doing it. I've often compared Testament issues with the Toshiba 13/1400s - something of a world standard for EMI remastering - and they're almost as good, pretty damn close, sometimes a bit easier on the ear than the warts-and-all Toshibas.
My favorites would include :
Cluytens Roussel 3&4 and the Sinfonietta, his mono Bizet Suites and DSCH 11;
Peter Maag, Mozart 29, 34 and the Posthorn with the SRO;
Solomon/Dobrowen Brahms B Flat Concerto;
Klemperer's live VPO set - that Bruckner 5, that Brahms Requiem!
Knappertsbusch/VPO, Bruckner 3&4;
Szell's live BPO Schumann 2 etc.;
Albert Wolff doing luscious Massenet suites in Paris;
and as said above, anything by the Hollywood Quartet.
I've always been fond of the white-on-black covers - it always seems an insignia of quality, of real care being taken with the sonic accuracy and quality.
PS to FF and Mike Aldren - I share your suspicions of Eloquence, but their Krips reissues last year were pretty good, no? I loved the Haydn/Mendelssohn/Schubert one with the LSO/VPO.
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I only have a couple of Testament issues, and after the disappointment at discovering the receiver end FM source used for their Havergal Brian 'Gothic'/Boult issue,(there's a give-away stereo carrier peak in the region of 19kHz), I feel in no hurry to get any further issues from them without Testament giving a more honest account the provenance of the recordings they release.
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Yes, that does seem to have been happening more recently, those live Klemperer Beethoven Symphonies issued in 2007 (sbt 1405 etc.) sounded distinctly dodgy too. Disappointing, they can do much better!Originally posted by Bryn View PostI only have a couple of Testament issues, and after the disappointment at discovering the receiver end FM source used for their Havergal Brian 'Gothic'/Boult issue,(there's a give-away stereo carrier peak in the region of 19kHz), I feel in no hurry to get any further issues from them without Testament giving a more honest account the provenance of the recordings they release.
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I find the price criticism a little odd . They are at the high end of mid price - £10.50 - it is true that full price discs have largely disappeared or are discounted online but I hardly consider £10.50 extortionate and they can be often sourced more cheaply.
I have more of their reissues of old EMI recordings than live stuff - but the Toscanini Brahms RFH recordings and that 1957 Klemperer Beethoven 9 are both splendid .
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI find the price criticism a little odd . They are at the high end of mid price - £10.50 - it is true that full price discs have largely disappeared or are discounted online but I hardly consider £10.50 extortionate and they can be often sourced more cheaply.
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Originally posted by mathias broucek View PostThat's a fair point for first issue material but rather less so for recording that used to be on Classics for Pleasure LPs....."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Postpace Mike Aldren, I'm generally impressed with the processing, especially if Paul Baily (sic) is doing it. I've often compared Testament issues with the Toshiba 13/1400s - something of a world standard for EMI remastering - and they're almost as good, pretty damn close, sometimes a bit easier on the ear than the warts-and-all Toshibas.
Mike
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There is one fair point I think about their pricing . The Brahms 2 with Barbirolli that apparently preceded the opening of Coventry Cathedral with the BPO is alone on disc no doubt as the rest of the concert was apparently not recorded . That surely called for Testament to put it out at a special price . Otherwise , I think the quality of the repertoire and the proper new booklet notes justify a higher mid price offering.
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