This album is included in the following sets:
This set contains the following albums:
- Producer's Note
- Full Track Listing
- Cover Art
Presenting Gabriel Fauré at his very finest
First in a Fauré series remastered by Peter Harrison
In Summer, 1953, the Nixa Record Company
issued two LPs of Fauré's chamber music and this re-release has been
sourced from an original pressing of one of those two discs (the other
is intended for next month's release).
Copies of the discs are rare, so the restorer has to work from what he has. Like many such LPs, the pressing quality is indifferent and the disc itself badly worn in places (by the 8 gram 'lightweight' pickups of the time!) and with a huge amount of clicking and swishing which needed considerable work to minimise.
Some residue may still be heard on critical listening; but I think that the artistic performances justify the re-release and I'd urge anyone who isn't familiar with these musical by-ways to give them a try: they're pieces that are well worth getting to know.
- PMH
The Guilet Quartet's Fauré Chamber Music
XR-Remastered for finest sound quality
Copies of the discs are rare, so the restorer has to work from what he has. Like many such LPs, the pressing quality is indifferent and the disc itself badly worn in places (by the 8 gram 'lightweight' pickups of the time!) and with a huge amount of clicking and swishing which needed considerable work to minimise.
Some residue may still be heard on critical listening; but I think that the artistic performances justify the re-release and I'd urge anyone who isn't familiar with these musical by-ways to give them a try: they're pieces that are well worth getting to know
Peter Harrison
Ray Lev joins the Pascals for Fauré's Piano Quintet
XR-Remastered for finest sound quality
When I'm considering a recording for restoration, I usually check the contemporary reviews and ratings to see how it was judged at the time of its original release. In the case of this pancake Nixa disc, I wonder what it was they reviewed, and on what equipment? For, frankly, the LP was very rough. Yet this wasn't mentioned. Was it just so common in 1953 as to be not worth mentioning?For example, the most obvious fault, not remarked on at the time, was a strong hum: not just 50Hz or 60Hz, but both! (Either is all too common, but both? - it's the first time I've encountered this. Not mentioned in the reviews.)
After double de-humming and heavy doses of the usual restoration medicine (end of side 1 particularly bad), the underlying recording was revealed. In all their horror were nasty shrieky strings and a piano swathed in cotton-wool and apparently in a different studio. Minor miracles were achieved jointly by Andrew Rose and self to resolve this and the result, after many, many hours of work and a final touch of Ambient Stereo, is what you'll hear here. Amazingly a very nice performance has finally been revealed, perhaps for the first time since it left the studio!
Peter M Harrison
The Robert Masters Piano Quartet plays Fauré
XR-Remastered for finest sound quality
Remember the Quad 22 Control Unit from 1958? Peter Walker designed a truly great hi-fi unit of apparent simplicity that concealed a wealth of function, particularly for getting the best reproduction from 78rpm discs. Push one button and you selected the disc input suitable for LPs; push two and you were also selecting the correct equalization for Parlophone 78s. A complicated-looking table in the manual gave the correct button settings for each record label; however it also cautioned, "Exceptions occur, particularly when records are made from shared masters".
A common delusion is that the LP era rationalised the various playback equalisations and magically all the record companies had adopted the RIAA standard: end of problem. Not so. There were five years of LP production before RIAA was established and during that time - as with 78s - anything goes. And anything went. Pick up an early Decca FFRR LP and ask: what equalisation should be used to replay it correctly? - and the answer, amazingly, is one of three possibles: Early FFRR (Pre '53), FFRR ('53-'55), RIAA ('56 onwards). And these periods overlapped. And that's for a major label. (I hope to return to the subject of Decca eq in a later note.)
Move now to a small label, possibly using more than one generic cutting firm each with different setups; add in the "shared masters" comment we mentioned above from Quad; and the question of 'correct' playback equalisation becomes impossible to answer.
In restoring the four LPs of Fauré's chamber music this problem was particularly acute. 'A Polymusic recording' says the label on the Nixa disc. What eq did Nixa use? No idea. Was this LP pressed from a shared master disc or a copytape master from Polymusic? Scratches in the runout area of the disc suggest the former - in which case the question becomes: what eq did Polymusic use? Even less idea. In such cases the restoration engineer is left with having to use two sensitive but fallible tools - his ears - together with experience, and guesswork. And all that could be said is: hope you like the result.
At least, that was the situation until a couple of years ago and the development of such techniques as Andrew Rose's XR process which - to over-simplify enormously - helps resolve equalisation problems throughout the recording chain by reference to modern recordings of undoubted quality. Again however, and this must be stressed, it is only another tool: its use has to be carefully judged, and it mustn't be abused. But hopefully we are now able to present you with restorations from the early LP period that are, to adapt Peter Walker's slogan for Quad: "a bit closer to the original sound".
Peter M Harrison
FAURÉ Quartet No. 1 for Piano and Strings in C minor, Op. 15
FAURÉ Sonata No. 2 for Cello and Piano in G minor, Op. 117
Recorded late 1951 (?) early 1952 by Polymusic
First issued, 1952, in USA on Polymusic 1007
First issued, 1953, in UK by Nixa Record Company Ltd on QLP 4007
Producer and Audio Restoration Engineer: Peter Harrison
Gaby Casadesus, piano
Members of the Guilet Quartet:
Daniel Guilet, Violin
William Schoen, Viola
David Soyer, Cello
David Soyer, Cello
Leopold Mittman, Piano
FAURÉ String Quartet in E minor, Op. 121
FAURÉ Violin Sonata No. 2 in E minor, Op. 108
First issued, 1952, in USA on Polymusic 1008
First issued, 1953, in UK by Nixa Record Company Ltd on QLP 4008
Total duration: 45:43
Guilet Quartet:
Daniel Guilet, violin
Henry Siegl, violin
William Schoen, viola
David Soyer, cello
Daniel Guilet, violin
Gaby Casadesus, piano
FAURÉ Piano Quintet in C minor, Op. 115
First issued, 1951, in USA on Concert Hall Society CHS1093
First issued, 1953, in UK by Nixa Record Company Ltd on CLP 1093
Producer and Audio Restoration Engineer: Peter Harrison
Additional XR equalisation and Ambient Stereo processing by Andrew Rose
Total duration: 30:00
Ray Lev, Piano
The Pascal String Quartet:
Jaques Dumont, Violin
Maurice Crut, Violin
Leon Pascal, Viola
Robert Salles, Cello
Recorded Spring 1955
Producer and Audio Restoration Engineer: Peter Harrison, disk2disc
Additional XR remastering by Andrew Rose, Pristine Audio
Cover artwork based on a photograph of Gabriel Fauré
Total duration: 32:57
Robert Masters, Violin
Nannie Jamieson, Viola
Muriel Taylor, Cello
Kinloch Anderson, Pianoforte