- Were those really wax platters inside, not metal masters or shellac pressings?
- This business about the cleanup, digitizing, etc.: all of the recordings were and are commercially available. They were not made especially for the Paris Opera vault.
- The author appears unaware that Ernestine Schumann-Heink was one of the great stars of her time, including at the Met, where she sang 282 performances between 1898 and 1932. She was also a radio star; my mother remembers hearing her on radio during the 1920s and 30s.
Lisa Hirsch's Classical Music Blog.
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Opinions expressed on this blog are mine and not my employer's.
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Paris Opera Vault
The Times has published its second article in the last few months on a bunch of recordings that were in recently-opened time capsule-like vaults at the Paris Opera. The article leaves a lot to be desired.
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2 comments:
The other accounts I have read make it clear that these records are indeed normal shellac pressings, not waxes. Another error in the article: Alfred Clark was head of the Gramophone Company's Paris branch, not of the company itself.
Thank you for that confirmation!
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