The American Clasical Music Magazine Fanfare, published bimonthly (around 600 pages/tome), carries an Editorial from it's Editor in the current issue. He usually only contributes when he feels there is something of major import.
It seems that Naxos of America, which is not identical to the Naxos Record Label, but a distribution group for more than 50% of Classical Music Labels available in the US, will now only supply 1 CD of each new release for reviewers. If more than 1 Reviewer is used, the others will have to listen to downloads. There are several comments from Reviewers on this. In general, they seem to conflate this with the demise of the CD.
The magazine has submitted at least half ofthe recordings to more than 1 reviewer over the past few years, sometimes as many as 5. It is interesting to read the divergent opinions amongst the reviewers, all of whom seem to be writing independently of what their colleagues write.
Yet since the magazine has stayed at the same book length over the past several years, it has made me wonder if there are much less recordings being made.
The fact that Naxos stil supplies at least 1 CD to the magazine to me indicates that the CD is going nowhere towards extinction. Perhaps they expect the Editor will burn a few copies to send to other reviewers, which is probably illegal here but extremely prevalent. Some of the reviewers are complaining that they will have to buy new equipment to listen to downloads and now become conversant with Computer Audio.
It seems that Naxos of America, which is not identical to the Naxos Record Label, but a distribution group for more than 50% of Classical Music Labels available in the US, will now only supply 1 CD of each new release for reviewers. If more than 1 Reviewer is used, the others will have to listen to downloads. There are several comments from Reviewers on this. In general, they seem to conflate this with the demise of the CD.
The magazine has submitted at least half ofthe recordings to more than 1 reviewer over the past few years, sometimes as many as 5. It is interesting to read the divergent opinions amongst the reviewers, all of whom seem to be writing independently of what their colleagues write.
Yet since the magazine has stayed at the same book length over the past several years, it has made me wonder if there are much less recordings being made.
The fact that Naxos stil supplies at least 1 CD to the magazine to me indicates that the CD is going nowhere towards extinction. Perhaps they expect the Editor will burn a few copies to send to other reviewers, which is probably illegal here but extremely prevalent. Some of the reviewers are complaining that they will have to buy new equipment to listen to downloads and now become conversant with Computer Audio.
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