Date: |
Sun, 9 Jul 2000 20:39:43 -0700 |
Subject: |
|
From: |
|
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
Over the years think I've seen just about every sort of CD defect there
is. Last year, for instance, I bought a CD of Veracini flute sonatas on
Symphonia only to discover the booklet was for a disc of Renaissance vocal
music (Symphonia has such plain booklet art that I didn't even notice until
I got it home). I wrote to Symphonia and never heard anything.
When in the mood for some Renaissance vocal music a few days ago I grabbed
a disc from my largish pile of unheard CDs. It was the motet and Missa
Regali ex progenie with the Regali Magnificat and a couple of songs by
Robert Fayrfax (1464-1521). Into the CD player it went, and a few seconds
later what came out of my speakers was a rather poor-fidelity, mono
recording of Judy Garland singing "Somewhere Over The Rainbow".
Now, I like this song, and Judy in her heyday had quite a voice, but this
was rather jarring. So I opened the player and extracted the mystery disc
only to discover that it was actually printed with two labels. The first
is "Forces' Sweethearts - 23 Songs from the Heart Throbs of World War II",
and then, over that and rotated 180 degrees, the label for the Fayrfax mass.
I know there are people who collect mutant CDs and LPs such as
this. Anyone interested in this before I try and get a replacement from
Academy Sound & Vision?
By the way, I highly recommend the first four volumes in this series of
the complete Fayrfax sung by The Cardinall's Musick lead by Andrew Carwood.
These discs are a good introduction to what was happening in England forty
years before Tallis and eighty years before Byrd, besides the Eton
Choirbook of course.
Dave
[log in to unmask]
http://www.classical.net/
|
|
|