Eugene Ormandy (and his discography as a Sheet!)

Started by lordlance, May 10, 2025, 01:40:48 PM

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lordlance

We have been seeing a plethora of Ormandy boxes recently. It's given me a chance to listen his ouevre in much greater detail than I had previously. I have to agree with a few others here - the recordings are consistently good or very good. Sure, they might not be reference but to maintain a consistently good standard is rather admirable too. Especially for their time when (ostensibly/correct me if I'm wrong) access in America to European records was rather limited and a lot of people had access to Ormandy's recordings the easiest. In that context, I think you could do a lot worse than Ormandy - a man you can trust (generally.)

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The folks at Discogs are doing the Lord's work with how extensively detailed the contents of each box are. Thanks to AI, I have been able to tabulate the 3 Columbia boxes (and Minneapolis/RCA*) as a Google Sheet.

It's quite the thing: http://tiny.cc/ormandydiscography

*Sadly I can't find the same kind of detailed information for the Philadelphia RCA 1935-45 box.

If you are interested in listening to orchestrations of solo/chamber music, you might be interested in this thread.
Also looking for recommendations on neglected conductors thread.

LKB

When l think about Ormandy ( who introduced me to Sibelius and a few of the " lighter " composers ), I'm always tempted to compare him with Haitink, as he was prior to 1980 or so. A craftsman heading a famed ensemble, not flashy or particularly " with it ", neither pilot nor playboy, nor even elder statesman.

A reliable professional, in every positive sense of the term.

I'm glad his efforts are still being recognized and re-released, as they should be.

Mit Flügeln, die ich mir errungen...

aukhawk

Plenty of premiere recordings to his name.

André

Quote from: LKB on May 10, 2025, 09:29:29 PMWhen l think about Ormandy ( who introduced me to Sibelius and a few of the " lighter " composers ), I'm always tempted to compare him with Haitink, as he was prior to 1980 or so. A craftsman heading a famed ensemble, not flashy or particularly " with it ", neither pilot nor playboy, nor even elder statesman.

A reliable professional, in every positive sense of the term.

I'm glad his efforts are still being recognized and re-released, as they should be.



Good point. Both were attentive to every facet of the wide repertoire they performed. Artistic results were widely different but at their source was the same honesty, commitment and respect for the score. IMO the Philadelphia Orchestra was the best on the planet in its heyday (ca 1958-1965).