Pinnock, Schirmer, Rosen, Gould....there are so many beautiful Bach players in this work, and Mr.Satz will get more recordings to write about - at least if the other major labels are not so stupid like DGG. For there are some very fine unpublished recordings of Goldberg, and other works, that DGG was offered by some Bach society to buy up cheap and release, and what do they do? They are surely not satisfied with this; they flood the market with Sinopolis worthless operatic recordings - I heard he had got 80 (or such an unrealistic sum of) contracts with DG. And they sell out for example Eroicas conducted by some scurvy Chinoise prophet-clown who tries to prove Beethovens relevance for neo-confucianism, new releases of Beethovens symphonies which have already been released on CD(!), and rave that Brahms was the ultimate prodigal child and that motivates to trade his symphonies (with Sinopoli I bet) for half a treasure each! This must be the end for Deutsche Grammophon Gesellschafft! I don't want to sound as rabiat-polemic as Nietzsche, but alas, lets be honest for once and tell the truth of the day: it is well-known in the classical society today that DGG is run by senilitys - they have their reputation based on their longpast vinyl releases solely. But I do hope that DGG really 'zu Grunde geht'! Naxos can buy up their historical recordings of value and sell to 1/4 -1/5 of DGG's prices. Naxos at least know how to please their customers. I keep to them! It somehow always feels better to trade with people who behaves like people who keeps on the right side of the law. And yes, I am a little tired of certain putrefactions in the etablishment, and I just came from my food store where they sell the ghostconductors a.k.a Alberto Lizzio and c/o that used to figurate on the ultracheap labels on Cd's originally prized to 12 dollars each. *Grrrr* Mats Norrman [log in to unmask]