a "real life" Brahms vs. Wagner experience

Started by Scion7, March 03, 2012, 02:51:36 AM

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Scion7

In 1982 the mail-order record service Blue Angel Records out of Maryland had obtained a few of the Brahms-Kammermusik 15LP DG box sets - not the clothbound "tulips" edition from 1968, but a later edition  (yet another edition was issued in 1983 with a different cover in France/England.)  If I recall correctly, it went for ~ $80 or so.   I tried to get one, but was told "sold out" - they went fast!  So I was going to have to just suck a lemon and be content with the rest of the order I placed that they still had.

A few days later, I'm sitting in the living room listening to Frank Zappa-Lumpy Gravy, and the phone rings - a lady from Blue Angel is telling me that they've accidentally shipped me a very expensive complete set of the Wagner Ring cycle - I think it was the Solti - and could I please make sure to notify them when it arrived so they could make arrangements for UPS to come and pick it up.   "Sure" says I - briefly contemplating melting it down on arrival -  :P - I used to be caught up in the silly fanatical B/W wars back then. "One for Clara!" I was thinking.  ;D

BUT - some days later, UPS delivers a package, which I knew was too small to be the complete Ring.  Inside is this with a note from the lady saying they "found" a set and sent it to me next-day UPS - I knew she was "bribing" me to good intentions/actions on that Ring set.  :)   Some poor slob out in Peoria wasn't going to get his Brahms set - and I could not have cared less, clutching it in me greedy paws and savoring it as I tore off the plastic wrapper.   Eventually UPS dropped two big boxes on my porch, and I called BAR and they had it picked up.

          click to enlarge


It's an awesome set, and the recordings - 1960-1968 by various artists/ensembles - are very good.



When, a few months before his death, Rachmaninov lamented that he no longer had the "strength and fire" to compose, friends reminded him of the Symphonic Dances, so charged with fire and strength. "Yes," he admitted. "I don't know how that happened. That was probably my last flicker."

Opus106

Regards,
Navneeth

The new erato

I bought this too in the late 70-ies, (76 maybe?) in exact the same edition. In fact I bought two, one for me, one for a friend; and I seem to remember they were ridicolously cheap, certainly less than what you paid. A wonderful set that opened me to Brahms, still sitting on my shelves.

Scion7

It may have been less - don't have any old Blue Angel catalogues or even any old Schwann's - wish I never tossed them out.  Who knew there wouldn't be a new issue of Schwann at the time?   :(
When, a few months before his death, Rachmaninov lamented that he no longer had the "strength and fire" to compose, friends reminded him of the Symphonic Dances, so charged with fire and strength. "Yes," he admitted. "I don't know how that happened. That was probably my last flicker."

Geo Dude

This is a great story, thanks for telling it.