The Philadelphia Orchestra: An Annotated Discography
By (Author) Richard A. Kaplan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
16th January 2015
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Discographies and buyers guides
016.78420266
Winner of 2016 Association for Recorded Sound Collections Awards for Excellence - Best Discography in the category of Historical Research in Recorded Classical Music.
Hardback
538
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
The Philadelphia Orchestra is the most-recorded orchestra in the United States, and its recordings have contributed much to its reputation as The Worlds Greatest Orchestra. In The Philadelphia Orchestra: An Annotated Discography, Richard A. Kaplan documents more than 2,000 commercial recordings made by the Philadelphia Orchestra over almost a century. The discography contains a chronological list of recordings, detailing works performed, conductors, soloists, dates, venues, producers, and matrix information for 78-rpm recordings. Each entry lists all issues of the recordings, including 78- and 45-rpm discs, long-playing records, and compact discs. The discography documents for the first time the recordings made by Columbia on sixteen-inch lacquer discs during the 1940s and 50s. Opening with an overview of the Orchestra's relationships with recording companies and the search for suitable recording venues, chapters cover anonymously and pseudonymously-published recordings, including those of the Robin Hood Dell Orchestra of Philadelphia, the experimental 1931-32 Bell Labs recordings, videos and movies in which the Philadelphia Orchestra performed, live recordings, and recordings of ensembles of the Philadelphia Orchestra. A separate chapter lists live-concert downloads made available directly through the Philadelphia Orchestra Association. Appendixes cross-reference the recordings by composer, conductor, and soloists; a final appendix lists the many Philadelphia Orchestra LP collections published by Columbia and RCA. This book is a valuable resource for collectors, scholars, and anyone interested in recording history and the history of the Philadelphia Orchestra.
[N]umerous interesting comments...are sprinkled throughout this book, making it not just a necessary reference for all future discographers but a good read for nostalgic record collectors. Kaplan has submitted a list of addenda/errata, all minor, for a second printing. . . .Alongside Norths two books, this makes a formidable reference series. * Fanfare Magazine *
The Philadelphia Orchestra: An Annotated Discography represents exhaustive research and fills a major void in the literature. . . .[T]his book is recommended to all collectors of classical orchestral recordings, especially admirers of this legendary orchestra and the various conductors involved. * ARSC Journal *
Richard A. Kaplan, a native of Philadelphia, served as associate professor of music theory at Louisiana State University and as a former orchestral clarinetist. He currently works as a freelance journalist and music critic for Fanfare Magazine.