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FIRST RELEASE OF FAMOUS OVERTURES.
Old releases in new style: new label, new cover, yet same reference number and same stampers.
FAMOUS OVERTURES IN NEW DESIGN. Complete Audible Range Recording

It is said that Gabor would take any tape he could lay hands on to release on his label(s). When beginning building a catalogue such an attitude would be quite understandable. And since the record business was no big business at all (unlike to-day where anybody can start recording and releasing and can achieve success more easily, thanks to the more accessable digital recording equipment), any item that would enlarge the catalogue was welcome. It seems that Don Gabor knew quite well that the releases with Albert Spalding, Simon Barere, George Enesco, Ernst von Dohnanyi, a.o. were of value in 1950 and 1952. If he also saw the importance of recordings with oher artists like, for instance violinist Gérard Poulet, is questionable, because most of the time he only received the lists with recordings which were proposed by Marcel Prawy. The importance of the releases with Michèle Auclair were of course clear as Michèle made her American debut in 1950 in Boston with Charles Munch and the Boston Symphony.
The canisters with the tapes were labeled and packed in Vienna (and later also in Berlin) and were shipped to the United States for mastering. Many times the handwriting on the list or the canister's label was not very clear. That is why the recording of Schubert's Trout-Quintet by Günther Breitenbach, Nikolaus Hubner (spelled Nicholaus), Johannes Krump, Walter Panhoffer (spelled Panhofer) and Willy Boskovsky, together "The Boskovsky Quintette" was named BOSHOVSKY QUINTETTE, the 'Austrian' k being read as h. There were more of those mistakes.
The important thing was that Gabor wanted to create a diverse catalogue like the big labels did. He did not restrict himself to violinists and pianists but also the field of song and opera was present in the names of Rosette Anday, Kurt Baum, Karin Branzell, Giacomo Lauri-Volpi, Ivan Petroff, Ettore Ghiglia, Elisabeth Wysor, Mona Paulee, Frances Schimenti, Anne Roselle, Christina Carroll, and later also Oralia Dominguez, Ettore Bastianini, Franco Capuana, to name a few.

As the market developped and competition increased, a new look was necessary to regain attention and the label was redesigned. The new (third) label had the letters of the name REMINGTON placed in boxes in a circle. The colors of the label were black and gold (and later sometimes silver). Eventually the new distinctive logo was placed as a vertical bar at the left next to the spine of each cover, a logo that could not be overlooked and certainly helped to promote the label. This new identity was designed by Alex Steinweiss who as a free lancer worked for Columbia Records at the same time.

Not only fresh releases had this new style. Covers of existing recordings were redesigned and got the new circular label. But when technical progress in the field of matrix production and recording technique was made and the playback systems were improved, the releases more and more showed their less eminent quality.

When conductor Laszlo Halasz left the New York City Opera in 1952 to be an independant conductor, Don Gabor immediately asked him to be his recording director, a title that was mentioned in Halasz' program notes wherever he conducted. In the USA Laszlo Halasz supervised many recordings with Thor Johnson, Alec Templeton and Jorge Bolet and harpsichordist Sylvia Marlowe. In Austria he supervised the recordings with Albert Spalding, in Italy recording operatic repertoire and in Germany with a host of conductors. In Berlin a serious collaboration of Gabor's company with Bertelsmann was at hand. From 1953 on recordings with a better quality were made, especially those made with the RIAS Symphony Orchestra. This collaboration gave way to the 3rd label with the improved sound quality.

Prokofiev by Bolet Liner notes in new design. 3rd label: MUSIRAMA. Factory Guaranteed.
..

The new sound boasted of multiple microphone placement and the improved sound of the productions was given the name "MUSIRAMA" and the label showed the image of atoms as they were visualized in those days.
The critics and reviewers were rather positive about the new looks and noticed the sonic improvement of the new Remington MUSIRAMA recordings. The back of each MUSIRAMA release featured appropriate liner notes written by well known critics, journalists and musicicologists like Dr. Sigmund Spaeth, John W. Freeman, Irving Kolodin,
Louis Biancolli, Betty Reinman, Max de Schauensee, Irving Sablosky, Jerome Boehm (most of the time spelled Bohm), Bertram Stanleigh, Herbert Weinstock, Jack Urbont, Sheldon Soffer, Jay S. Harrison and Arthur Darack.
Well chosen and abbreviated quotations from reviewers also adorned the backcovers. Furthermore an educational series entitled 'Music Plus! was conceived with Sigmund Spaeth. And to add even more to the importance of the label Gabor and Halasz devised with Theodore and Alice Pashkus an inspirational series for youg violin students and amateurs: The Young Violinist's Edition.

Advertisements accompanied the introduction of the new MUSIRAMA sound. And as positive response increased, the temptation was great to adorn the covers of older recordings with the distinguishing MUSIRAMA qualification at the lower right corner even if these had not been reecorded in the new multiple microphone technique.. In certain cases new covers were designed. Although it may have increased sales in the beginning, serious buyers quickly must have found out that several older recordings were re-released with a higher catalog number and designated as a MUSIRAMA recording. Examples are Grieg's Suites to "Peer Gynt" and Overtures of Rossini operas conducted by Vittorio Gui on R-199-142. They had been recorded about one year earlier. The overture to "L'ingano felice" had been released on R-199-123 together with music by Strauss, Korngold, Puccini, Cherubini and Verdi. But now only Rossini overtures filled R-199-142. Much later more early recordings were adorned with the MUSIRAMA label: Barere's Liszt, "Polvetsian Dances" from Prince Igor, Beethoven's Third Symphony with Fritz Busch, and so on and so forth.

Original R-199-130
It was easy to print on existing covers of older recordings the new MUSIRAMA triangle and print new labels for the discs.
R-199-130 as MUSIRAMA release.
 
.
What the quality of the early Austrian sound recordings originally must have been can be heard on reissues of original tapes in simulated stereo on the Austrian label Vibraton of performances by Fritz Busch, Kurt Wöss and other artists. Comparison of Alexander Jenner's rendition of Beethoven's "Moonlight Sonata" on Remington on R-199-10 (on older covers the name of Helmuth Rolof is mentioned), with the reissue on Vibraton VB K2008 shows that the original tapes were of rather good quality. The cutting process, the matrix production and the cheap vinyl of the Remington discs were to blame. This Vibraton disc with Jenner's Beethoven shows more or less the same sound but with practically no noise and distortion, but gives also a less chiseled piano tone because of the filtering that must have been applied when these better pressings were released in Austria. The Vibraton discs of course do profit from the vastly improved matrix production of the nineteen sixties and seventies, and they are pressed on purer vinyl. The same goes for the Vibraton releases of recordings by conductors Fritz Busch and  Kurt Wöss.
One should never forget that many recordings in the catalog date from 1950 or 1951, a mere three years after the introduction of the Lp by Columbia, and that the MUSIRAMA recordings were done as early as 1953.
The stereo-tapes of "The Origin of Fire", "Pohjola's Daughter" and 8 selections from the original stereo-tape of R-199-167 were reissued by Tom Null on Varèse-Sarabande stereo Lp, reference VC 81041. Although some equalization had to be applied to match the modern RIAA curve, this recording shows all too well that the original taperecordings made in 1953 by Robert Blake (Gabor's recording engineer) had a far better sound quality than was ever heard o
n the Remington discs. These recordings made in November 1953 were the first commercial stereo recordings issued on Lp. In February 1954 it was RCA who made their first commercial stereophonic recordings.
Alexander Jenner with Beethoven and Chopin. Austrian Vibraton release with Jenner and Beethoven (K2008).
Alexander Jenner on Remington and Vibraton. Kurt Wöss/Felicitas Karrer in Beethoven, and Fritz Busch with Haydn.
Kurt Wöss and Felicitas Karrer on Vibraton K2016. Fritz Busch conducting Haydn on Vibraton K2014.
The USA is a big territory and the company's turnover must have increased significantly. New offices were rented on 500 Fifth Avenue. And now the Remington recordings were also exported to several European countries: Belgium and The Netherlands, even after the Remington label was not longer listed in the Schwann and Long Player, they were available in Europ even after 1957.
In France Remington recordings were released on the Concerteum label. Matrixes were supplied by Remington Records Inc. and the labels mentioned "Une production DON GABOR". The vinyl was of a finer quality than that used in the US and the records revealed a better sound quality.
In Australia it was the Festival label on which Remington recordings were released, for example on CFR10-88 could be found Frieda Valenzi's recording of César Franck's "Symphonic Variations" coupled with Debussy's "Prélude a l'aprës-midi d'un faune" pressed from rather dull Australian plates made from tapes provided by Remington Records.
In France recordings were made with Georges Enesco as a conductor (of his own works with the Orchestra of the Colonne Concerts and the Paris Symphony) and as a violinist with a.o. pianist Céliny Chailley-Richez. The Sonatas for Solo Violin by Johann Sebastian Bach were recorded in New York much earlier, around 1949, on acetates.
Ossy Renardy on Concerteum
The cover of Renardy's Concerteum release
French Remington release on CONCERTONE. HANS WOLF CONDUCTS MOZART.  
The collaboration with Bertelsmann in Germany (starting in 1953) resulted in many MUSIRAMA-recordings made with the RIAS Symphony Orchestra. In Germany they were of course released on Bertelsmann's Phonoring. But Don Gabor wanted to release the older recordings made in Austria in Germany too. I suspect that he issued these on his own German label named DIAMANT. The records were pressed from Remington matrixes. Probably in the USA and the covers were made in Remington's Webster pressing plant. On the label was printed "Licensed by Remington Records." The German covers had no liner notes. The covers had a standard lay out. On the front the composer, the works and the names of the performers were printed as well as a reference number for ordering the item, in German "Best. Nr." (Bestell Nummer). On the Diamant label appeared Franck's Symphony in D conducted by Hans Wolff (BL 743), Astrid Varnay singing Wagner arias (BL 737) and Gaspar Cassado performing Dvorak's Cello Concerto with Kurt Wöss (BL 745).
But also Berlioz' Symphony Fantastique in the new Musirama sound (in the USA the label with the atomic symbol) was released as BL 733 while this same recording was also released by Bertelmann. The Diamant release was of course against the terms in the contract. Cellist Heinrich Köhler told me that there was a law suit, but he did not remember the actual cause. The releases recorded in Germany and offered in Germany on the Diamant label could have been the cause and the agreement was ended.
Another Concerteum release (left)
In Australia Remington recordings were released on the Festival label.
 
Wherever Laszlo Halasz went to fullfil his engagements to conduct, be it in Germany, Spain, Italy or France, recordings for the Remington MUSIRAMA label were made. In Berlin with the RIAS Symphony and pianists Edward Kilenyi and Conrad Hansen, violinist André Gabriel, and conductors Wolfgang Sawallisch, George Sebastian, Jonel Perlea, Otto Matzerath and Manuel Rosenthal. Rosenthal conducted his arrangement of Offenbach melodies called "Gaité Parisienne" with the RIAS Symphony Orchestra. Laszlo Halasz also seized opportunities to make recordings with other orchestras and ensembles. Recordings were later also made with the Düsseldorf Symphony Orchestra. And a complete Cosi Fan Tutte was recorded with singers Erna Hassler (soprano), Hetty Plümacher (contralto), Käthe Nentwig (soprano), Albert Weikenmeier (tenor) , Karl Hoppe (baritone) and Joseph Dunnwald conducting the Stuttgart Tonstudio Orchestra: R-199-117/3. Highlights from this recording were released on R-199-162.
Symphony Fantastique.
Several Remingtons were released in Germany on the Diamant label: Symphony Fantastique (Berlioz), Cello Concerto (Dvorak), Symphony (Franck).

In Germany Gabor launched the Diamant label for the release of recordings made in Austria: Franck Symphonie (Hans Wolf), Famous Opera Arias (Astrid Varnay), Dvorak Cello Concerto (Gaspar Cassado). An oddity is the Diamant release of Prokofiev's Piano Concerto Bo. 2 with Jorge Bolet. But the Diamant issue states that Thor Johnson conducts the Austrian Symphony Orchestra instead of that of Cincinnati.
The contract with Bertelsmann was breached when recordings made with the RIAS Symphony were also released on the Diamant label. This would mean competition for Bertelsmann on the German market. An example is the recording of Symphony Fantastique with the RIAS Symphony Orchestra conducted by George Sebastian.
Before there was trouble, excerpts of Remington recordings were released on a Bertelsmann 10" disc called "Wunschkonzert - Meisterwerke der Klassik" (Classical Masterworks). This shows that Bertelsmann also had access to earlier Remington recordings made in Austria as Alexander Jenner plays here one movement of Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata taken from Remington R-199-10. Could be that Marcel Prawy had sent the tapes of this music to Bertelsmann as Prawy was the copyright owner.

The first cellist of the RIAS Symphony Orchestra was Heinrich Köhler. He was engaged by Ferenc Fricsay in the season of 1949/50 and he stayed with the orchestra untill 1995. His cello playing can be heard in Carnival of Animals (Saint-Saëns) and Excerpts from Swan Lake (Tchaikovsky) on R-199-160. Heinrich Köhler witnessed the artistic rise of the orchestra under Fricsay, the intermediate period after Fricsay had left in 1953 and until he returned in 1959 to the orchestra (that was now called Radio Symphony Orchestra Berlin) and was again principal conductor until Fricsay's death in 1963. Mr. Köhler told me about the sessions of the orchestra for the Remington Record Company in the years 1953 and 1954. He recalls:


"In a three hour session at least one hour ready music should be recorded on tape. Unknown conductors acquited with difficulty their tasks. At one time Günther Wand stood in front of the orchestra; already at that time he was a feared perfectionist. He explained a lot of the music while rehearsing and he shaped every detail. (Even at his old age his interpretations are mindblowing.) When Günter Wand wanted to record the same passage again because he wanted a better take, recording director Laszlo Halasz had enough of it and said: "Hey man, we already have that on tape". Günther Wand put down his baton, took his hat and coat, and left.
The recording sessions for Remington records had a rather business like character. For example a work was played through and recorded in the same session and the title was ready: The next piece please!"

Of course, Laszlo Halasz had to see to it that the limited budget and the recording time were well spent and thus did not give young Günther Wand the time to shape the performance and bring it to a higher level. If it were not for the limited time, we now would have another historic performance of Günther Wand, but this time with the RIAS Symphony Orchestra on the Remington label.

Most conductors however were glad to have a job though. They accepted the limited time schedules. Some of the conductors were hardly known like Karl Rucht. Relatively unknown at the time were Wolfgang Sawallisch, Jonel Perlea , Manuel Rosenthal, George Sebastian , Georg Ludwig Jochum (brother of famous Eugen Jochum).

Fact is that also in this case Don Gabor did not buy ready tapes, and in no case tapes of obscure and illegal origin, (as Eli Oberstein did for his Royale label), and Gabor did not invent names, but hired a genuine and well trained orchestra of professional musicians and through Laszlo Halasz very able conductors and soloists were contracted. Yet a three hour session was too short for a recording of Brahms's 2nd Concerto with Kilenyi and Perlea which did not show some minute imperfections. Generally the performances were of a very good quality which rose far above the standard of any provincial orchestra and certainly above the quality of the 'Austrian Symphony Orchestra' or 'Niedersterosterreichisches Tonkünstler Orchester' which was also founded in 1946 but did not get the time to rehearse enough before recording.

On Bertelsmann Schallplattenring 8135 a variety of Remington artists can be heard:
Wolfgang Sawallisch, Alexander Jenner, Karl Rucht and Laszlo Halasz.
The gold/white striped label of Bertelsmann Schallplattenring 8135..
 

In Paris, where Laszlo Halasz had engagements also and was to perform with pianist Samson François, George Enescu's Dixtuor was recorded with the composer conducting the French National Orchestra.
In Vienna where Halasz himself had made a recording of Kodaly's Suite to the Singspiel 'Hary Janos', which was released on a 10" disc (R-149-44), the now famous performances of the Beethoven and Brahms concertos with Albert Spalding were recorded under the supervision of Halasz. And Verdi's "Aida" and Puccini's "Turandot" were recorded in the "Teatro La Fenice" in Venice with Franco Capuana and strong casts. After these recordings were released the quality of the performance was immediately noticed by other labels and this led to Capuana's contract with London/Decca.

On most covers the annotation "Recorded in Europe" was printed. In those days many American companies travelled with their taperecorders practically all over Europe, from Denmark to Austria and from Berlin to Rome. At home in the US there were many restrictions imposed by the Petrillo act, restrictions concerning working hours of artists and orchestras and the fees which made the productions very costly. If one did not have the facilities to tape in Europe, existing tapes from radio broadcasts and even tapes from the "Reichs Rundfunk Gesellschaft" which were made during World War 2 could be bought.
The annotation "Recorded in Europe" was not always a guarantee that the recording really was made in Europe. There were labels which had recorded at home in the USA, yet put "Recorded in Europe" on label and cover with the name of a so called European orchestra.
In those days there was a lively trade in taped performances of all sorts of works and it happened that inferior labels aquired the same tapes of performances which were released on mayor labels or simply copied a recording of a quality label and then printed fancy names for singers, instrumentalists and conductors on labels and covers and often omitted a movement from a symphony or abbreviated the work by splicing in order to avoid that the bootleg was recognized or just because they did not have any knowledge of the composition.
Don Gabor did not follow that fashion as far as I could detect. In any case not when he managed the catalogue of his Remington label. There are however some names of artists who need further explanation.

Cover and label of Frieda Valenzi's recording of "Variations Symphoniques" of César Franck, state the name of the conductor as Jean Moreau. A conductor with that name is not known. Apparently Jean Moreau was Jean Morel, originally from France, who worked also in the USA and made several recordings with DECCA/LONDON and American Columbia. Jean Morel was also a conductor at the New York City Opera Company. When I asked Mrs. Valenzi about the conductor she could not remember facts about Jean Moreau. The handwriting on the container with the recorded tape must have been wrongly read and copied.

The soloist in Glazunov's Violin concerto on R-199-191 is André Gabriel. No data can be found about this artist. Was he an upcoming star who never made it? Was he the principal violinist of the RIAS Symphony Orchestra? A record collector who visited my pages suggested that Andre Gabriel was a pseudonymn for Roman Totenberg who could not have his name printed because of contractual ties with another label. It is also possible that the artists is Tossy Spivakovsky. In the 1953 edition of the Remington record catalog Don Gabor announced the new Musirama recording technique. New recordings with various artists were in the making. One of these artists is violinist Tossy Spivakovsky whose name never appeared on a Remington label. In this case also because of contractual obligations with another label.

Record R-199-76 mentions Hermann Schwertmann as pianist in Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 in B flat minor Op. 23. For many years it was not clear if Hermann Schwertmann really was the pianist as the Plymouth issue of the same tape mentions Hans Kessler as pianist. No information was known until recently several entries on the internet could be found about a concert where Hermann Schwertmann played the piano and also he is mentioned as a teacher. The only recording of Hermann Schwertmann is this Remington R-199-76 which eventually was replaced by the distant approach of pianist Conrad Hansen and conductor Wolfgang Sawallisch with the RIAS Symphony on Remington Musirama R-199-197.

True is that there is a recording by The Boshovsky Sextet. This is certainly Willy Boskovsky's Sextet. The 'k' in the handwriting on the container must have been interpreted as 'h'.
The recording of pianist Frieda Valenzi playing Schumann and Brahms on Merit (another of Don Gabor's labels) has her name printed as "v. frieda" on cover and label. This prompted a record dealer and many musiclovers whose brains fantasized ad lib to suggest that the artist was Etelka Freund. The container of the tape apparently was labeled "v. frieda" by someone in Austria before the tape was shipped and Gabor or an assistant must have thought that the artist was "v. frieda" and had this copied onto cover and label. It is the custom to write first the family name
(or the initial of the family name) followed by the Christian name. Merit recordings were simultaneously released with Remington and Plymouth discs. The address on the cover of Merit M200-28 reads: 263 West 54th Street, New York 19, N.Y., the same address of the earlier Continental and Remington productions. Some Plymouth releases also carried the Merit-logo in the left upper corner.
Obviously the Valenzi-recording was obtained via Marcel Prawy and was meant to be released on the Remington label. But since Kilenyi played the same works on a Remington disc, the recording of Frieda Valenzi was only released on Merit.

Frieda Valenzi Merit
Sondra Bianca Plymouth
Frieda Valenzi's Merit release, Sondra Bianca performing Liszt on Plymouth and Conductor X with Beethoven's 1st.
CONDUCTOR X WITH BEETHOVEN'S FIRST.

Generally the Plymouth releases did not always bear the names of the artists and of the same orchestra. There are exceptions however. One is the recording of Liszt's 1st concerto played by pianist Sondra Bianca with the Lamoureux Orchestra conducted by Jean Martinon(!) coupled with the Piano Concerto of Carl Maria von Weber played by Fritz Egger with the Linz Symphony Orchestra (no conductor is mentioned).

There was one occurance when a name was not accidently changed or was really a pseudonymn, but was deliberately omitted. That was when Beethoven's 1st Symphony had been recorded with the Austrian Symphony Orchestra for release on R-199-156. Instead of the name of a known conductor the release mentioned "Conductor X" instead. The liner notes stated that the conductor could not be named because he had contractual obligations with another record label. Don Gabor and Laszlo Halasz wanted to release the recording anyway because a lot of money had gone into producing it. So it was decided that the record should be released without mentioning who the conductor really was. This recording kept reviewers and collectors guessing for many years about who really was the man who had led the Austrian Symphony Orchestra in Beethoven's First. Maybe it was a tape made by the "Reichs Rundfunk Gesellschaft" during the war when tape was already used in Germany for hours and hours of nightlong radio broadcasts? Could it be a bootleg and Furtwängler was the conductor? Or was it a recording with Hermann Scherchen, Carl Schuricht or even Herbert von Karajan? Or Clemens Krauss who had already appeared on Remington RLP 149-26 with a Johann Strauss program.
The guessing stopped when in 1998 the International Classical Record Collector revealed who the conductor really was: Arthur Rodzinski. He, according to the ICRC, had made a few recordings with Remington but did not approve of the quality. Obviously Rodzinski was talked into making the recording by fellow conductor Laszlo Halasz who was producing for Remington after he had left the New York City Opera Company in 1952.
At the time Rodzinski's Beethoven recordings on Columbia were listed in the catalogs. Apparently he was negotiating a recording contract with Westminster. A Remington recording was not opportune. So Arthur Rodzinski did not allow his name to be used. The release of this recording on the french label Concerteum mentioned Holstein as conductor. The people from Concerteum were well aware of the fact that a record with a conductor named 'X' would not be regarded as a serious release.
Whether this affair influenced Rodzinski's negotiations in a positive or negative way is not clear. In the end he made recording for Westminster.

Montoya R-199-171
Montoya R-199-179
Carlos Montoya on R-199-171 and R-199-179, the Palace reissue of 171 and Lydia Ibarrondo on R-199-139.
Montoya Palace M709

The covers of R-199-171 and R-199-179 (reissued on Vox Records STPL 513 430) of guitarist Carlos Montoya state "Recorded in Spain". Could be that the recordings were made when Halasz was conducting in Barcelona, and could be that Montoya who lived in the US was vacationing in Spain at the time. One is not always sure if such an indication is correct. I do not have a copy of R-199-134 on which Carlos Montaya accompanies mezzo-soprano Lydia Ibarrondo. This album certainly was recorded in the USA since Ibarrondo's 'Songs of Spain' on R-199-139 was recorded in the USA also.

Cover and label of Sari Biro's recording of Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an Exhibition" also mentions "recorded in Europe". Miss Biro lived in the United States. She travelled to Europe to concertize and made a recording of Mozart's Piano Concerto K491 in Vienna, so she could have made the Mussorgski recording then and there.
(An interesting investigation regarding several recordings of famous artists with pseudonym names which appeared on the Allegro, Royale and Ultraphon labels can be read on Ernst Lumpe's pages.


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