Recording of the Month

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Recording of April 1978: The Power and the Majesty

This is more to my liking than the other records I review this month! Side 1 is devoted entirely to a real humdinger of a thunderstorm, replete with rain, thimble-sized hailstones, and five minutes of someone diddling with a set of wind chimes. Side 2 is four sequences in the saga of Steam Locomotive 4449, which was refurbished from rusty decrepitude to haul the bicentennial Freedom Train 28,000 miles around the continent.

Recording of December 1977: Jim Hall Live!

Jim Hall: Jim Hall Live!

Jim Hall, guitar, Don Thompson, double bass, Terry Clarke, drums.

Horizon Records: A&M SP-705 (LP), reissued on CD as Horizon SP-705. John Snyder, prod., Don Thompson, eng. TT: 41:29.


These performances were taped by the double-bass player, Don Thompson, during a week's stand in June 1975 at Bourbon Street, Toronto, Canada. They are very closely miked, yet audience noises are audible although they seem to enhance rather than detract from the music. The balances are fascinating.

Recording of March 1977: Direct from Cleveland

Direct From Cleveland

Orchestral works by De Falla, Bizet, Tchaikovsky, Berlioz

The Cleveland Orchestra, Lorin Maazel (cond.)

Telarc 5020 DD1 (LP). Robert Woods, prod.; Jack Renner, sound eng.; Glenn Glancy, Michael Bishop, disc-cutting engs.


Potentially the best news for perfectionists in years is the announcement of the first stereophonic direct-to-disc recording (in the US, at least) of a major symphony orchestra. Advent records of Cleveland, in collaboration with Discwasher, Inc. of Columbia, MO put four complete and usable runsthrough onto two sets of lacquers. The program was a collection of potboilers—what Sir Thomas Beecham used to call "lollypops"—much of it musically rather trivial, but all ideally suited for demonstrating what a no-holds barred recording can do in terms of sonics: works with bass drum, percussion, deep double-bass material, rich string sonorities" and so on.

Recording of August 1976: Britten: Orchestral Music

Britten: Orchestral Music

Four Sea Interludes & Passacaglia from Peter Grimes; Sinfonia da Requiem

London Symphony Orchestra, André Previn, conductor.

Angel S-37142. (Stereo/SQ LP). Christopher Bishop, prod.; Christopher Parker, eng.


EMl/Angel have come up with demonstration quality sound on this one. The "Sea Interludes" have stood well on their own as a concert piece, and previous recordings have been by Britten (Decca/London) and Giulini (EMI/Angel). Previn's earlier Sinfonia da Requiem with the St. Louis Symphony has recently been reissued on Odyssey, but that version, good as it is, must defer to the new reading and sonics. There are timpani thumps on this disc that literally bolted me upright from my chair! The dynamic range is tremendous.

Recording of September 1975: A Contemporary Collection

The King's Singers: A Contemporary Collection

Works by Peter Dickinson, Malcolm Williamson, Richard Rodney Bennett, Krzystof Penderecki, Paul Patterson

EMI EMD 5521 (UK LP). MMG Records MMG 1142 (US LP). 1975. Christopher Bishop, prod.


Astounding performances! Every piece here was commissioned by the King's Singers, those six English gentlemen whose vocal artistry surely has never been surpassed. The works here are by Peter Dickinson, Malcolm Williamson (recently appointed by HRH Elizabeth II to the post of Master of the Queen's Musick, succeeding the late Sir Arthur Bliss), Richard Rodney Bennett, Krzystof Penderecki, and Paul Patterson.

Recording of August 1975: The Complete Firesign Theater Recordings

You have probably read speaker reports that suggested that you audition with natural sounds like clanking chains, storms, animals and other things that give an easy reference to live experience. The problem is that most sound-effects albums are a real bore, dominated by reject Walt Disney announcers with adenoid problems.

Joint Recordings of April 1975: Brain Salad Surgery, Ummagumma

For a long time there, it seemed like anyone who walked into a good hi-fi shop and used the word "rock" and/or "bass" had a better-than-even chance of being "Lucky Man-ed" until his ears bled. I'm choosing Brain Salad Surgery as my favorite currently popular Rock offering partly because I've had it long enough to get over the first, transitory, blush of enjoyment, and mainly because most of the people I run into who have high-quality systems rate this group as one of the best. And EL&P come out with some very high-quality discs, making them the system demo group. I know of several expensive speaker systems that have been listed KIA as a result of several-hundred-watt amps and EL&P.

Recording of October 1974: Bax Symphony No.5

Bax: Symphony No.5 in c sharp

London Philharmonic Orchestra; Raymond Leppard, conductor.

Musical Heritage Society MHS-1652 (LP, From Lyrita SRCS-58).


Sir Arnold Bax (1883–1953) completed his fifth symphony in 1932 and dedicated it to Sibelius. Its first performance was conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham in 1934. Have any of our major orchestras ever played it? Not to my knowledge, and after over 40 years, it's about time. At least we have it on disc now, in addition to The Garden of Fand and Tintagel. Lyrita has even more Bax in their catalog.

Recordings of May 1974: Delos Records: A New Classical Label

Chopin: Preludes, Op.28

Carol Rosenberger, piano. DED-15311.


Handel: Harpsichord Suites Nos.3 in d & 7 in g; Chaconne No.1 in G

Malcolm Hamilton, harpsichord. DEL-15322.


Scarlatti: sonatas, Vol.1.

Malcolm Hamilton, harpsichord. DEl-15321.


Szymanowski: Masques, Op.34; Etudes, Op.33; Four Etudes, Op.4

Carol Rosenberger, piano. DEL-15312.


Common to all: Amelia S. Haygood, executive producer; John Wright, Katja Andy, producers; Carson C. Taylor, engineer.


It is certainly cause for rejoicing when a new label appears that is dedicated to presenting fine artists not generally known, with recorded sound to enhance the performance. John Wright, producer for Delos records, has this philosophy and has kindly sent us four of their first five releases. The fifth will be a Schubert program played by Miss Rosenberger. The records we received were all well-produced, with fine pressings, good jacket photos, and excellent sleeve notes. Complete credits are given to the production staff on each jacket.

Recording of December 1973: Rachmaninoff: Symphonic Dances

Rachmaninoff: Symphonic Dances, Vocalise

Dallas Symphony Orchestra, Donald Johanos, cond.

Turnabout TV-54145S (LP). David B. Hancock,
eng.; Tom Mowrey,
Musical Supervision, Recording Director. TT: 41:18.


Not a new recording, and one that has already received raves in all the other audiophile publications, but if Stereophile is the only such magazine you read, you'd just better know about it, for this is the definitive symphonic recording to date.

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