BaL 6.04.19 - Mahler: Symphony no. 4 in G
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Originally posted by Goon525 View PostAh, Jayne, you have provided a solution. I can log into Exact Editions, even via Safari on my iPad, and get the same results as you did. I hadn’t thought of doing that before, assuming using the Gramophone App or website should provide at least equal functionality. They don’t, so thank you, Jayne.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostBarbirollians said "Gramophone’s search function on its archive is a shockingly out of date embarrassment" .
Which I simply don't find it to be.... so I answered accordingly. A lot of this is down to the efficiency of different browsers and OSs (with a degree of ingenuity and patience re. your search terms, as per amazon, qobuz or google itself...) , but never mind, I've been as clear as I can re. my own experience..
The "online reviews database...since 1983" is a separate & distinct facility from the archive of all issues, which you can subscribe to or not, according to choice of subscription package. I tried it but found it redundant alongside the archive access.
My own experience of the original archive was... sort-of-OK, but spoiled by inefficient searching and the appalling frequency of typos. TOTALLY different from the Complete Archive via subscription now. I love it and can get lost in it for hours searching for something else...
That is the app - the website is not much better requiring absolute accuracy - if you leave the umlaut out of Furtwangler - most of the recordings will be missing - Also often if there is a review of two discs together only the first of them will come up on a search and it is a matter of luck that you find the other reviewed with it .
Content marvellous and endlessly fascinating - search functions are a shockingly out of date embarrassment.
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Yes I should have mentioned Margaret Richie, to avoid risking Jayne’s chides! I was really talking about the symphonies and discogs obviously missed the Kubelik from 1954. There was the live 1951 Klemperer No2 which appeared on Decca very much later.Last edited by cloughie; 04-04-19, 17:03.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostIt is an embarrassment because it is so vague . You search for say Mahler Walter - and yes by carefully scrolling down you may be lucky enough to find a review amongst the endless adverts and other rubbish . As a search function it is appallingly poor .
That is the app - the website is not much better requiring absolute accuracy - if you leave the umlaut out of Furtwangler - most of the recordings will be missing - Also often if there is a review of two discs together only the first of them will come up on a search and it is a matter of luck that you find the other reviewed with it .
Content marvellous and endlessly fascinating - search functions are a shockingly out of date embarrassment.
"Mahler Walter" includes content other than reviews? Well, I'm deeply shocked. Sorry but you misunderstand the essential stupidity of computers. They give you what you ask for. Truly smart AI is close, but not quite with us routinely yet, at least in the domestic context...(Alexa, Siri etc notwithstanding...)
Or: Suppose you had a (human!) personal assistant, and you ask them to bring you every Gramophone which features "Mahler Walter" in it, what d'you think would happen?
I've tried to help - but I give up. No more cruelty to metaphorical horses. Sorry about the Mahler 4 BaL hijack....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 04-04-19, 18:57.
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Originally posted by Goon525 View PostI suspect that even Jayne thinks it’s sub-optimal - but she’s found ways of dealing with that, and has now helped several others amongst us to get more out of it.
Now has anyone mentioned Lucia Popp and Tennstedt, must wade back through this to find out.
NB I have just seen this on Spotify. Will listen sometime today!Last edited by BBMmk2; 05-04-19, 08:11.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI am baffled that anyone can think that the Gramophone search function is anything other than sub -optimal .
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostHe is presumably merely referring to the facts as stated on Gramophone's own website: "Access to the world’s most authoritative classical reviews online database, with more than 45,000 reviews since 1983."
Having said that, I would still like the old Gramophone catalogue as a means of finding reviews now early editions are so easily found on line and I would very much like an index to The Gramophone Collection.
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