Horowitz finally gets his due - sort of
Hank Drake | Cleveland, OH United States | 12/02/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)
"After being released in a piecemeal, disorganized manner for decades, all of Vladimir Horowitz's RCA, Columbia, and Sony recordings are now available in one convenient, budget priced boxed set. (The Deutsche Grammophon recordings are not included, of course, nor are the HMV/EMI.) This set contains some newly issued performances, which I will comment on below. For space reasons, I refer you to my other reviews on Amazon for the previously issued material.
While this 70CD set is not remastered from scratch, this set does use the best existing versions of each recording. As for the RCA recordings, wherever possible, the Gold Seal versions from the 1980s and early 1990s are not being used. For example, the Beethoven Moonlight and Waldstein Sonatas from 1956 utilize the Classics Library master from 2004, which is far superior to the Gold Seal CD that was issued around 1990. Likewise, the 1943 Tchaikovsky Concerto with Toscanini uses the source material that appeared in the 1992 Toscanini Collection, rather than the lower quality version that was used in the Gold Seal CD issued in 1990. There are numerous other examples. For those of you who are wondering, the correct takes for the 1976 Schumann Concerto without Orchestra are used in this issue (a set of outtakes was briefly issued by mistake in 1989).
As to the Columbia recordings, Sony is using the same remasterings that were used for the blue boxed set in 1993. (The sole exception is the 1962 Kinderszenen which was remastered in 2003.) In the 1969 Kreisleriana, the (wrong) takes that were issued on the 1993 boxed set and every CD since are used again here. So, hang on to your LPs and the MK42409 CDs if you still have them.
As with other Original Jacket issues, the cover art from the original LPs (or, in a few cases, CDs) is used. The original programming is also strictly being adhered to, which has not always been the case with this series. The advantage is that Horowitz's programming concepts are respected (and Horowitz was a master at building a contrasted and interesting program). The disadvantage is that the playing time for most of these CDs is short. However, at budget price, I'm not complaining. Some trivia: in the early LP era, RCA issued both 10" and 12" LPs, depending on the playing time of the program. For this set, only the 12" LPs are used, with one exception: the Brahms Violin Sonata with Milstein, which was originally issued as a 10" record and only appeared on a 12" LP decades after the fact. Also, none of the 45RPM issues are being used (RCA had issued 45s as a transition between 78RPMs and LPs).
One CD includes assorted RCA recordings that were never issued on LP. This includes both the 1928 and the 1957 expanded version of Horowitz's Carmen Fantasy. The Chopin Mazurka in A Minor, Op. 17, No. 4 from 1975 that was issued on the Japanese version only of Horowitz Rediscovered is likewise included. Also, two CDs have the contents of Horowitz in Concert - 1967-1968 and Discovered Treasures, combined with two short Debussy works that were released in 1993.
Now, some information on the two "new" recitals: both the 1951 and 1967 recitals show Horowitz in excellent form and are valuable additions to his discography - though there is no new repertoire in either recital. The sound for the 1951 recital is mixed, because two different sources are being used: RCA's tapes of the recital and 33 1/3 RPM discs that were made for Horowitz's review. Both the taped and disc items sound cleaner than those in the Private Collection recordings. Mozart's K. 333 Sonata is a radically different (and more musicologically "correct") interpretation than the pianist's 1987 performances - yet I find the later recordings more pleasurable to listen to. Prokofiev's Seventh Sonata is thundering and compelling, similar in conception to Horowitz's 1945 studio recording, but with the added adrenaline he invariably put into his live performances. The Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6 illustrates one of Horowitz's unique attributes: he could play "cool" and "hot" at the same time. The ending to this piece defines the word climactic.
The 1967 recital from Brooklyn College is in spectacular sound - indeed it sounds more like the Horowitz I heard live than many of his digital recordings. Horowitz plays the music (including Beethoven's Sonata, Op. 101, five Scarlatti Sonatas, Chopin and Rachmaninoff) in much the same manner as his existing Columbia recordings. Two exceptions are Chopin's Barcarolle, which is played tenderly and in contrast to his other rather tempestuous recordings, and Horowitz's own Carmen Variations, which has a different coda. Both the 1951 and 1967 recordings are unedited, so this is the real Horowitz without any interference: imperfect and utterly compelling.
Where this set falls short is documentation. While the liner notes are reproduced on the back of the mini-LP jackets, you'll need a magnifying glass to read them - and not all the LPs had notes. The 200 page booklet includes track listings, recording dates (some of which are not accurate), another photo of each LP cover, a perceptive essay on Horowitz by Jon Samuels, and a chronology of Horowitz's life. The chronology contains errors, and there is a humorous misspelling on one of the LP jackets. The track listing of Volume 55 does not match the contents of the disc. (I detect the work of interns.) It's not realistic these days to expect that Sony/BMG can give Horowitz the red carpet treatment that Arthur Rubinstein was accorded in 1999 (although Horowitz certainly deserves it), but is it too much to ask for adequate and accurate documentation? The above complaints demote this set from five stars to four.
One further note: The Horowitz material issued in 2009, including the 1986 Berlin Concert and the two Private Collection recitals (an additional CD is planned for 2010) are not included in this set. 2009 is the twentieth anniversary of Horowitz's death. It's nice to know he hasn't been forgotten.
"
12 CD's out of 70 required polishing, otherwise WONDERFUL
Robert Wade Cottingham | Dallas, TX | 12/15/2009
(3 out of 5 stars)
"Review of Vladimir Horowitz Complete Original Jacket Collection, 70 CD box, released winter 2009
Scratches and Scuffs on Brand New Discs
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I'm rating 3 stars for the careless handling by the manufacturer of the delivery media, namely compact discs. The music is fantastic, and just having all the little jackets and the music in this archive set is wonderful.
Many Liner Notes NOT INCLUDED
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The complete omission of most of the original liner notes of the RCA albums is uncool, cheap, and ridiculous. A CD should have been included with PDF's of all the original liner notes.
Bad News
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Anyway the quality of these discs, or the poor quality control, surprised me a little. I really expected all 70 discs to be scratch-free on visual inspection. I returned my first 'Horowitz Complete Original Jacket Collection' last week, because I couldn't accept the very fine scratches on 8 of the 12 or so discs I inspected. When this replacement set arrived today, I really hoped it would be a keeper.
More Bad News
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I opened my replacement set, and inspected all 70 discs, and set aside 12 that had noticeable fine scratches or scuffs on the playing area.
Good News
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I was able to clean up all 12 scuffed discs, using the cloth and solution that comes with the Apple IClear kit for computer screen cleaning, and fairly hard elbow grease (but not in any way damaging the discs or introducing new scratches). So the scratches weren't scratches, but some kind of scuff from an unknown material, that I was able to polish away. But I'm letting you know, don't be surprised if your set includes a bunch of non-perfect discs, if you happen to care about that.
How To Eliminate These Scuffs If You Have Them - The Problem is the Jackets
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(12/17/09) After completely cleaning all the discs with problems, I noticed the next day a couple of them were scuffed/smudged again! I realized the material causing the scuff is coming from the jackets. Specifically, glue, I guess. Anyway, you can turn all the single CD around so the playing surface faces the COVER not the back, and then
the playing surface won't come into contact with the parts of the jacket that have 'bad glue'. Whether the glue will compromise the label side of the CD's I don't know yet. Don't flip over the double CD's, as they are already positioned in a safe way. Bottom line, cheap quality control on this product has allowed bad gluing of the jackets. Also, many of the jackets are not even well sealed, they are kind of coming apart a bit, like a letter envelope not completely sealed.
Repeat, this is already my SECOND set with these exact same problems, and I choose to work with it, rather than return it.
Why Such Mediocre Quality Control?
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My theory is that Sony's current concept of quality control for this product allowed me to get TWO of these boxes in a row with around 10 percent of discs NOT in brand new, mint condition - because CD's are dying. That's my theory. Higher quality control would cost too much, and isn't justified for the relatively teeny tiny market that exists for this product.
This review is obviously slanted toward buyers interested in the condition of the CD's.
Happy listening!
"