Saw this in a charity shop today, but didn't buy it:
http://http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/pr...AG0BXMG64SN6V5
What put me off was the (no doubt) fearful sound quality: and the fact that I'd probably only play it once out of curiosity, then never again. Is anyone familiar with thsi performance?
This got me thinking about how intolerant I've become lately of recordings with seriously compromised sound: and I think recording Mahler 2 acoustically is about as 'compromised' as you could get. Even listening to Karl Muck's Parsifal recordings last night, I got the feeling I wasn't gettting anything I can't get just as well from Karajan/Solti et al, but in much better sound.
And this led to think about the element of inverted snobbery that's crept into some reviews of 'historical' recordings: this idea that something recorded in mono in the 30s/40s is automatically 'better' than something recorded last week (yes, Michael Tanner, I'm looking at YOU!).
http://http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/pr...AG0BXMG64SN6V5
What put me off was the (no doubt) fearful sound quality: and the fact that I'd probably only play it once out of curiosity, then never again. Is anyone familiar with thsi performance?
This got me thinking about how intolerant I've become lately of recordings with seriously compromised sound: and I think recording Mahler 2 acoustically is about as 'compromised' as you could get. Even listening to Karl Muck's Parsifal recordings last night, I got the feeling I wasn't gettting anything I can't get just as well from Karajan/Solti et al, but in much better sound.
And this led to think about the element of inverted snobbery that's crept into some reviews of 'historical' recordings: this idea that something recorded in mono in the 30s/40s is automatically 'better' than something recorded last week (yes, Michael Tanner, I'm looking at YOU!).
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