transformingArt wrote:
Also, all of the recordings appeared on the RCA-Victor album, "Caruso - Metropolitan Revivals" were actually dubbings; they were NOT pressed from the original masters but made with "transcribed" masters which were electrically amplified.
Being more specific, the first pressings of this album (Which featured a photograph of Caruso listening his records sitting with his MET colleagues on its front cover) was pressed from original masters, but after about few pressings, the masters showed apparent signs of wear, so RCA Victor decided to press it with "transcribed masters", dubbed from the pressings they had in their archives. This second (transcribed and amplified) album features a caricature style drawing of Opera stage on its cover. The cover was later redesigned to show the record album itself on its cover - an Album inside an Album!
Maybe I have one of the early runs of that set, then. They didn't sound like dubs to me, the last time I played any of the records. One of them in there, the Addio dolce svegliare quartet from La Boheme I thought compared favorably to an original pressing. That would have been one that also might not have been pressed to oblivion. Some of the others, I could see that the old metals might have already had too much wear for continued use.