In Decca's recording of Kodaly's Hary Janos suite by Kertesz there is one section in one of the movements with horns and a piano which sounds as though it has been recorded in a different venue with a very dry and non reverberant acoustic. It most probably wasn't, but all the ambience disappears in that section which appears twice. I don't know what they did to make that happen. The perceived hall size shrinks down to that of a small room for a few seconds.
Recording gaffs
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostIn Decca's recording of Kodaly's Hary Janos suite by Kertesz there is one section in one of the movements with horns and a piano which sounds as though it has been recorded in a different venue with a very dry and non reverberant acoustic. It most probably wasn't, but all the ambience disappears in that section which appears twice. I don't know what they did to make that happen. The perceived hall size shrinks down to that of a small room for a few seconds.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostDoes it still sound like that to your ears on the new Eloquence issue ? I must admit not noticing it when I played it for the first time last night - cracking performances and I felt the old Peacock variations deserved another Proms outing - not having been heard since 1975 .
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Originally posted by Gordon View PostBarbirolli's 1969 Mahler 5 with New Philharmonia in Watford and issued on LP in 1970 without several bars of horn solo!!! They were replaced for the CD issue by getting Nicholas Busch the original horn player back to Watford [I think during another session] to do the missing bars.
http://www.gramophone.co.uk/HallofFa.../Review/Mahler
R.I.P.
Apparently there is a tribute on the Norman Lebrecht website somewhere but so far I haven't found it. There is this, though|:
Last edited by Tony Halstead; 26-07-13, 20:46.
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Originally posted by waldhorn View PostI have just heard the desperately sad news that the legendary horn player NICK BUSCH formerly of the LPO, New Philharmonia and Philharmonia orchestras, died very suddenly yesterday.
R.I.P.
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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I forgot this one in my OP:
The Naxos abridged audiobook recording of Jane Eyre. I played on of the CDs, which sounded fine until the reading stopped suddenly and was replaced by an amateur jam session with badly played and sung guitar and voice which went on and on. I asked for a replacement and it arrived within 2 days, absolutely perfect. I can't imagine how this came about on a commercial release.
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amateur51
Originally posted by waldhorn View PostI have just heard the desperately sad news that the legendary horn player NICK BUSCH formerly of the LPO, New Philharmonia and Philharmonia orchestras, died very suddenly yesterday.
R.I.P.
Apparently there is a tribute on the Norman Lebrecht website somewhere but so far I haven't found it. There is this, though|:
http://horncups.com/forums/viewtopic...bdc433aa2a3e7a
Here's the piece that I think you mean
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostVery sad news indeed waldhorn.
Here's the piece that I think you mean
http://www.christopherparkes.com/page2/page3/index.html
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View Post.
Kovacevich's EMI Beethoven sonata cycle was so dryly recorded some had to be re-recorded as I recall ."Not too heavy on the banjos." E. Morecambe
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostWhen stereo LPs first appeared, Pye Records jumped the gun and made the first release, all of which were issued out of phase!
1) Kovacevich's Beethoven Sonatas
2) A different pianist playing the whole cycle
3) A different pianist playing some of the late sonatas
?
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Originally posted by waldhorn View PostI'm unclear as to your meaning:
1) Kovacevich's Beethoven Sonatas
2) A different pianist playing the whole cycle
3) A different pianist playing some of the late sonatas
?
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