Arturo Toscanini made US tour late 1920 till March next year with newly assembled la Scala Orchestra for financing Scala theater, and decided reluctantly tor record several sides acoustically (no other chance then) for Victor. Some of the recordings are astonishingly successful for that period with clear woodwinds and ambient sound level. I will be posting sound clip of the entire discs Toscanini made during this tour, acoustically reproduced on Victrola Credenza, as electrically there is an excellent
Arturo Toscanini (born 25 March 1867; died 16 January 1957) was an Italian conductor. Most musicians think he was the greatest conductor of his time. His fame was legendary: he was probably the first conductor to become a world superstar. He had an incredibly good memory and could remember every single note of the large number of works he conducted.
Impressionante!!! Thank you for sharing this video.
MrGer2295 5 months ago in playlist More videos from VictrolaCredenza
He had a photographic memory so that he could remember what the pages looked like. Sometimes he found little mistakes in the scores which no one else had ever noticed. He had a very keen sense of hearing and knew exactly what each instrument was doing. He also had a fiery temperament and there are films of him shouting angrily at his orchestra in rehearsals. In the early days of gramophone recordings he made some of the first recordings of famous orchestral works.
Impressionante!!! Thank you.
MrGer2295 5 months ago in playlist More videos from VictrolaCredenza
I agree; excellent. I have a full recording of "Butterfly" made in 1924 and the full orchestra is barely audible. Perhaps they were stuffed into a tiny studio here rather than a large hall.
VinylToVideo 11 months ago
..IN 1920, when Toscanini was about 53...this must have seemed like the ultimate in music reproduction.....as if this was the highest point of music reproduction....the beefed up tubas, the big horn, etc....
valdengo1 1 year ago