More greatest recordings you never saw before
mainYesterday, we acclaimed the welcome return of the Westminster recorded catalogue after a generation gathering dust in the vaults.
Today, we have been reminded of some of its less glorious visual moments. Supply your own captions.
The producer refused to comment.
Dvorak is not for dancing.
Sour notes.
A conductor is born.
Rare appearance by head of A&R.
Covers from here. H/t: Derek Warby.
Head of A&R? More like the VP of Marketing!
I thought it was a photo of the conductor.
The covers for the Swarowski Ring Cycle are still, and maybe always will be, the _worst_ ever (in a good way, of course). Inadvertently, they are apt for the performance, it could be argued.
This is my all-time favorite Westminster cover. The rest of the Ring covers rank just below this.
http://www.kimbawlion.com/westminstergold/WGSO-8176-3c.jpg
The background that some of your readers might be missing: while Westminster was originally a highly-regarded classical label, by the late ’60s, it had gone through a chain of acquisitions and had become a “budget” label owned by ABC, selling LPs for $1.99-$2.99 under the “Westminster Gold” moniker. The marketing team at the time decided to use broad, lowbrow visual humor to attract the attention of their presumed demographic, people who didn’t really know or like classical music much, but felt they “should” have some in their collection, and would be intrigued by records that seemed to not take it too seriously (and who, as the above Wagner cover makes clear, often featured attractive, semi-nude women on the cover). Obviously, the approach must have worked for awhile, as they continued to issue a handful of new recordings along with back catalog in such artwork, until the whole enterprise was sold to MCA in 1979.