Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Bargains
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostWorth it for that Ring Cycle alone, you also get excellent performances of Lohengrin, Die Meistersinger and (especially) Parsifal - these latter three taken from off-air recordings in not the best (nor the worst) sound. No Tannhauser or Tristan - and the worst performance of Dutchman I've ever heard. Some historic recordings from Melchior and Flagstad, some more modern ones (Brunnhilde immolates no fewer than thrice in this collection!) - orchestral excerpts and arrangements from Stokowski, Szell and Maazel, and a disc of two-piano arrangements of or by Wagner.
Everything taken from the SONY/CBS, EURODISC and RCA/BMG back catalogues - which makes the omission of Tristan & Tannhauser all the more remarkable: not a single recording of either from any of these companies between the 1960s and the 1990s?!
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Apologies if this has been said before, I cant face trawling through 490 pages to check, but I have just bought two bargain boxes of CDs:
Arturo Toscanini: The Complete RCA Collection. 72 "volumes", each containing more than one CD, a book and a free DVD. The CDs work out at around two pounds each or maybe even less.
Maria Callas Remastered. The Complete Studio Recordings (1949 - 1969). Forty "volumes" each containing one or more CDs, in wallets featuring the artwork of the original LPs, a book in several languages with lots of photos of Callas with other leading singers, and making studio recordings with Walter Legge. Again, in the region of two or three pounds a CD.
Now admittedly, these boxes are not cheap - somewhere around two hundred to three hundred quid each - but per CD they are outstanding value. I am working my through them, though that many CDs will take a few evenings!
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Woops, Bryn you are right, I got the Toscanini box for around eighty or ninety quid from my local hifi shop, not two or three hundred. That would make the CDs less than a quid each, which is an even more outstanding bargain. I probably got the price for the Callas box wrong too, but if I did it was even cheaper than I said.
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostWoops, Bryn you are right, I got the Toscanini box for around eighty or ninety quid from my local hifi shop, not two or three hundred. That would make the CDs less than a quid each, which is an even more outstanding bargain. I probably got the price for the Callas box wrong too, but if I did it was even cheaper than I said.
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View Post
Maria Callas Remastered. The Complete Studio Recordings (1949 - 1969). Forty "volumes" each containing one or more CDs, in wallets featuring the artwork of the original LPs, a book in several languages with lots of photos of Callas with other leading singers, and making studio recordings with Walter Legge. Again, in the region of two or three pounds a CD.
Now admittedly, these boxes are not cheap - somewhere around two hundred to three hundred quid each - but per CD they are outstanding value.
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Highland Dougie, dinnae fasch, or something like that. Never mind the neeps and porridge, buy the discs and you wont regret it. Pease brose (whatever that is) will be a price worth paying.
And if you ever stray south of the border as far as Devon, I'll happily play you the discs. There's a bottle of Bells in the pantry to tempt you, I keep it for guests but dare not drink it myself any more, whisky is wonderful but it makes my head ache (especially after a couple of CDs of Callas at full throttle) and these days I stick to vodka.
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Originally posted by hafod View PostThe Callas, very recently released and newly remastered 70 disc box can be had for just over £116 delivered - less than £1.70 per disc. It would appear that the sound quality is a great improvement on the set issued (I think in 2007) under the EMI imprint.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00KN15P5...I10IVUHX02Z1MB
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Anyone contemplating buying the new Callas set should find it useful to have a look at Pristine Classical's comparison with some of the new against the old. In the circumstances, I don't think that I shall buy the new box, but may try one or two of the individual opera recordings to compare with the older big set.
Incidentally, I am not entirely happy with the New Warner Karajan transfers, as there appears to be quite a bit of inconsistency. Some are an improvement, some sound worse than their predecessors, and others sound about the same, but with an increase in volume. The Kempe/Richard Strauss re-mastered set I found far more satisfactory. Unfortunately, in my experience, EMI/Warner's re-mastering is rarely as satisfactory as the results from Sony and Decca (or whoever owns Decca at this point).
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Seeing that many of us bought the Harmonia Mundi Lumieres box a couple of months ago, Forumistas may be interested in a similar bargain collection:
... a bit more than the £16 asked for the Lumieres, but still under a quid per CD. (Personally, I'd have exchanged the 20th Century stuff and the Mendelssohn for a few more discs of Bach Cantatas and an Earthquake Mass or other material, but what the hey ... )[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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