Joseph Batten, Columbia's (formerly Edison-Bell's) house musical director, discusses these abridged sets in his 1955 autobiography Joe Batten's Book. Sullivan's full scores were so jealously guarded by the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company that even their own conductors were not allowed to see them and had to work from annotated piano scores instead. Batten, who among many other remarkable achievements had taught himself orchestration, made his own arrangements from the few individual instrumental parts that he was able to procure, sometimes reconstructing the string parts more or less by ear, and fell back on the piano when all other resources failed.BillH_NJ wrote:And I just got the Columbia abridged Mikado as well. I already had a couple of records from the set, but now I have the full set with album. It is unusual in that some sides were recorded with piano accompaniment rather than orchestra.
Oliver Mundy.