I'd wanted a Berliner for a while so thought I'd give this one a go.
Recorded in London 29.12.98 "Waltz Caprice" - Violin Solo by Mr J Jacobs
Thanks Don, I've since gone back and looked at the record, I missed off a number one when reading the date, so it was in fact recorded in December of 98, not the February, still quite early in the recording of London Berlinersdonniej wrote:Congratulations on a great find! The early London records are also made of some unusual materials, which adds to their intrigue.
I don't believe they started recording in London until the summer of '98 and the recording angel appeared in the fall. If I'm mistaken then hopefully someone else will chime in.
Logically, what John says is of course perfectly true; however, it was general practice at the time to use the expression 'X solo' where the instrument X was playing with a piano. I have seen and heard (in announcements) many similar examples: e.g. 'Violin solo, Imitation of Bagpipes and Scotch Air' (Charles d'Almaine on a Columbia cylinder of 1899, with – probably – Fred Hylands on piano) and 'Bassoon solo, In Cellar Cool' on an Edison-Bell (British) cylinder of about 1900, played by E. F. James who had taken part in the very first of Henry Wood's Promenade Concerts in August 1895. I am not sure whether this is still an acceptable usage, but one does find similar illogicalities even now: thus the term 'violin sonata' can be applied just as readily to violin-and-piano works as to the pieces which Bach, Ysaye etc. wrote for violin alone. Musical terminology, like many other aspects of language, is not always rational; after all, as Fritz Spiegl long ago pointed out, piano trios are not written for three pianos, and Schubert's Trout Quintet does not include even a single trout.jboger wrote:Why is it called a violin solo when clearly there is piano accompaniment? Bach wrote partitas for solo violin. Paganini wrote caprices for solo violin. Clearly the violin has the lead, but does that make this a "solo violin" performance as inscribed on the disk?