I understand (read "I'm sure I've read somewhere") that many studio recordings of multi-movement works were recorded over several sessions, with Movements recorded according to Sessions timetables, rather than score order. Details on CD booklets suggest that not merely were Symphony movements recorded weeks apart from their "neighbours", but that other works by other composers were recorded "in between".
It doesn't (or hasn't yet!) affected my listening any more than knowing that "corrections" have been edited within the Movements themselves (I feel much happier with the decades-later added Horn in the Scherzo of the Barbirolli Mahler #5 than with the "authentic" original, for example). I know that lots of jiggery-pokery happens in the studio - as long as the results aren't too obvious, it doesn't "feature" in my listening.
It doesn't (or hasn't yet!) affected my listening any more than knowing that "corrections" have been edited within the Movements themselves (I feel much happier with the decades-later added Horn in the Scherzo of the Barbirolli Mahler #5 than with the "authentic" original, for example). I know that lots of jiggery-pokery happens in the studio - as long as the results aren't too obvious, it doesn't "feature" in my listening.
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