More of the Music of Antonin Dvorak
- Stunning sound throughout this Philips import pressing of Dvorak’s Classical Masterpieces, with a Shootout Winning Triple Plus (A+++) side one mated to a solid Double Plus (A++) side two – exceptionally quiet vinyl too
- The orchestral passages are rich and sweet, the violin present, its harmonics gloriously intact
- We audiophiles are fortunate indeed that a violinist of Accardo’s skill and taste recorded this piece for Philips at a time when their recording technology was still capable of capturing the sound of his violin in rich, warm, sweet, clear analog
- A superb performance from Salvatore Accardo, not only competitive with the best we have heard, but superior – we know of none better
- These links will take you to some of the orchestral “sleeper” recordings we’ve discovered with Demo Disc sound
Yes, it was still possible to record classical music properly in 1980, though not many labels managed to pull it off. (Londons from this era are especially opaque and airless. We find them as irritating and frustrating as most of the Heavy Vinyl releases being foisted on the audiophile public today.)
This is still analog, with the better copies displaying much of the Tubey Magic of 50s and 60s vinyl without as much compressor distortion (the Achilles’ heel of so many of the great recordings from the Golden Era).
Accardo is an accomplished performer of the works of Paganini, but those recordings are on DG and we would not expect them to be of acceptable audio quality for our customers. We will investigate further of course, as Paganini’s works for violin are some of the most sublime in the repertoire.










