If
you have not yet made their acquaintance,
Beulah regularly bring
us reissues of historical recordings, from 78s to 1960s stereo,
in
transfers as good as any that I have heard, removing as much surface
noise as is feasible –practically all in the case of LPs, and even for
most 78s –without impairing the tonal quality." Brian
Wilson at Music Web International
"The
Beulah
record label has always been one of the most idiosyncratic, and
therefore perhaps most interesting, of reissue marques. While the basic
character of Beulah remains the same as in its Compact Disc days, the
range of its present catalogue, driven now by the ease of downloading,
has been extended in remarkable fashion. Browsing the Beulah catalogue
is now rather like being in a 78rpm record shop: there are plenty of
recordings of short pieces available to whet your appetite for either
repertoire or artist, while at the same time there are numerous full
length works available if you wish to consolidate your collection with,
for instance, major symphonies. All of Beulah's transfers, as might be
expected of a distinguished reissue label, are of very high quality."
David Patmore writing in Classical
Recordings Quarterly
"Beulah
releases are available from other
suppliers but Qobuz offer them in
lossless sound for the same price
that others charge for mp3 –in some casesthat’sless than full bit-rate
mp3." Brian
Wilson at Music Web International
New for June
Many music lovers miss the sound
from vinyl pressings.
Many others have yet to discover how great the sound can be.
Most of our albums are mastered from vinyl LP pressings and earlier
recordings (generally before 1953) from 78 rpm discs. It is our ability
to
recreate, in the digital age, the sound from the disc era that many of
our customers find most enjoyable.
Unlike modern digital recordings
tracks in our
albums do contain some distortion, and the occasional surface noises,
but for many listeners these "defects" are soon forgotten.
Our albums are available from
many download and
streaming sites.
We highly
recommend downloading from where you can download or stream in high quality,
for
the
same price as iTunes medium quality.
ffrr at 75
On 8 June 1945 Decca released their full frequency
range recordings to the record buying public. It was exactly a year
since Decca started recording in ffrr
and during that year they engaged Sidney Beer's National
Symphony Orchestra to make recordings in ffrr.
Read Dr. Tony Wakeford's history of the development of ffrr
To mark the 75th anniversary of the advent of ffrr we are releasing four albums
by the National Symphony Orchestra during March and April.
New albums
What the Critics Say
Brian Wilson at Musicweb
International has written an
article reviewing
our 10 Beethoven 250 albums, the 4 ffrr Pioneer albums and two more
albums in our Philharmonia 75 series.
"This is another very desirable reissue in Beulah’s
Philharmonia 75 series. John Ogdon and Vladimir Ashkenazy famously drew
in the Moscow Piano Competition; Ogdon played Liszt Piano Concerto No.1
and MephistoWaltz, and Ashkenazy Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No.1 and
Dumkain e minor.
"Both these recordings are available as part of a
5¼-hour Warner set, John Ogdon –70thAnniversary Edition(3927472,
download only), but Beulah give ustwo of the finest performances in
that set in a more manageable form. Like all the best interpreters of
the Rachmaninov –including Katin, Ashkenazy, Hough and, most recently,
Trifonov , Ogdon lets the music speakfor itself without
over-‘interpretation’ ."
Brian Wilson at
Musicweb Interntional
"The main item of interest here is the recording of
The Planets. It was Boult who first made them to shine, in 1919,
according to the composer, and he recorded the music many times. Many
of those recordings remain in the catalogue, including his 1978
version, made at the age of 90. The Beulah recording offers a very
worthwhile adjunct, in a startlingly good transfer which sounds more
like mid-1950s mono than something from ten years earlier. The quality
is due to the fact that a recording engineer forgot to turn off the
limitation of the upper frequency range: thus HMV accidentally produced
their first ffrr recording. No wonder that AR thought the recording
‘more actual than anything we have had before and should almost cause
heart failure from excitement’.
"It’s interesting to note that, while most of Boult’s
chosen tempi remained constant over the 33-year span, some movements
became slightly faster over the years; this was one conductor whom age
did not weary. Equally noteworthy:
though there are slight differences,
both recordings do the music ."
Brian Wilson at
Musicweb Interntional
"The solo part of this recital contains all but two
Chopin pieces
from an album of what appear to have been random personal favourites,
released in 1959 and still well worth hearing. Katin was such a fine
and versatile pianist that, while the Bach and Scarlatti arehardly
authentic as played on the piano, theyemerge as very fine pieces, if
somewhat different from how they sound on the harpsichord. The two
Scarlatti works in particular feature the kind of sensitive playing
that makes Angela Hewitt’s Bach on the piano such worthwhile
alternatives.
" The Schumann, Brahms and Rachmaninov, too, were well
worth
reissuing, while the Mendelssohn works which conclude the programme
were staples of the Decca catalogue for many years; there’s an
inexpensive download, complete with nostalgic cover shot, coupled with
the Mendelssohn piano concertos, with the LSO and Anthony Collins
(4834047). The two shorter concertantepieces were originally coupled
with Liszt Totentanzon an LP which the great Trevor Harvey strongly
recommended. Who am I to demur? The 1954 sound has worn extremely well."
Brian Wilson at
Musicweb Interntional
"Very little is required in recommending these classic
recordings. The Dvořák is one of my favourite recordings –somewhere at
the back of the cupboard I have the DG reissue, still available as
download, with Bloch and Bruch, though more expensive than when it was
a budget-price CD, and more expensive than this Beulah reissue, which
sounds hardly inferior to that official transfer.
Recommendable as the DG coupling is, Beulah go one better with the
Schumann.
"That, too, remains available on a Regis CD, with
music by Britten and Debussy, but, again, the Beulah coupling has the
edge and, though the Regis CD sells for around the same price as the
Beulah download, the Regis download costs more in lossless sound. With
very good Beulah transfers of both concertos, why hesitate?"
Brian Wilson at
Musicweb Interntional
"Askenase’s Chopin was always, undeservedly, somewhat
overshadowed by Rubinstein. The Concert Rondo here serves as a reminder
of his recordings of the two piano concertos; that of No.2, with
Leopold Ludwig from 1960, is available on Beulah 1PS9, with solo Chopin
works from Rubinstein and Paderewski download/stream from Qobuz. The
Rondo originally appeared on LP with a recording of the first piano
concerto which had the misfortune to appear at the same time as the now
classic Pollini recording; I’m pleased that Beulah have at least
rescued this free-wheeling performance.
"Above all, this Beulah album is worth having for the
Rachmaninov alone. Even with so many recordings to its name, the
concertocomes over very enjoyably in this perky performance, and the
1962 sound has come up sounding very well. If the piano is recorded
very prominently, that’s appropriate in this music by a pianist
composer; the balance is much less tilted in Weber’s favour in the
music by her namesake."
Brian Wilson at
Musicweb Interntional
"Wanda Landowska was a pioneer harpsichordist, so it’s
surprising to hear her play Mozart on the modern concert grand –so much
so that the Gramophone review of this LP (RCA RB16017) inadvertently
attributed her playing to her usual instrument. That error apart, AP
wrote a well-considered rave review of this recording.
" Nowadays we might prefer to hear these sonatas on
the fortepiano, asper Kristian Bezuidenhout’s recordings for Harmonia
Mundi, but Landowska on the piano reminds me of Angela Hewitt’s Bach
–never overdone, tastefully phrased, with a lightness of touch, and
unobtrusively decorated, but still bringing out the strength of these
early works...so this Beulah single album selection is very welcome.
Brian Wilson at
Musicweb Interntional
"The Mozart Horn Concertos which Dennis Brain recorded
with Herbert von Karajanin 1953 are abiding classics of the recorded
repertoire, which continuedselling at full price on LP and CD for many
years longer than most recordings. Beulah have already given us Nos. 3
and 4 on an earlier Philharmonia 75 recording(4PS58). If you have that,
you should find the addition of this album irresistible, with the
addition of the Hindemith and Richard Strauss works a bonus.
"Others may have equalled Brain in the Mozart, but
never excelled him, and the rest of the programme is of much more
thanhistorical value. Even the 1947 recording of the Strauss Concerto
No.1 has come up sounding as well as could be –after their accidental
encounter with ffrr in 1945 (Boult at the BBC, above), HMV returned to
their old ways, but the 1947 sound, the oldest here,is more than
tolerable.
"The ability to listen to the music via a decent
DACmakes it all the more important to remind readers that Qobuz
offer
Beulah recordings in lossless flac, equivalent in quality to my press
previews, rather than the mp3 offered byother suppliers."
Brian Wilson at
Musicweb Interntional
There may be many recordings of VAUGHAN WILLIAMS Job–A
Masque for Dancing, but it never seems to have established itself,
perhaps because VW wrote so much beautifulmusic that it has tended to
be side-lined in favour of the more immediate appeal of The Lark
Ascending. I first got to know it well from Sir Adrian Boult’s EMI
recording."
"His 1953 (mono) Decca ...Best of all, it’s on a
Beulah
collection Twentieth Century Classics 4 (4PDR20), with Rawsthorne
Street
Corner and HindemithViolin Concerto."
Brian Wilson at
Musicweb Interntional
Ballet music at Beulah
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Ballet music page
Brass and Military
at Beulah
Visit our new brass and military music page
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Visit our new early music page
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Visit our new jazz page
Light Music at Beulah
Visit our new light music page
Piano music at Beulah
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Visit our new opera page
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