Showing posts with label RCA Records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RCA Records. Show all posts

January 7, 2024

RCA Soria Series

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      Soria Series textured sleeve box detail photo
detail photo by Styrous®



Soria Series was an American ultra-premium classical albums collection within the RCA Victor "Red Seal" catalog, co-founded in 1958 by Dorle J. Soria and her husband, Italian entrepreneur Dario Pellegrino Soria (1912—1980). Before joining RCA Victor, both Sorias had illustrious careers in the record industry. From 1953 till '58, they co-founded and directed EMI's sublabel Angel Records, producing almost 500 critically acclaimed albums. Dorle Jarmel served as The New York Philharmonic Orchestra's publicity director for decades before that, while Dario established Cetra-Soria in 1948—essentially, the world's first label that released complete operas on LP.

Each Soria Series album came in a thick, heavy-duty textured sleeve (some with an elegant cut-out on the reverse for pulling the disc out), golden embossed type, and glossy full-color reproduction overlaid.     
 
 
Soria Series textured sleeve box
photo by Styrous®
 
 
Double and triple boxsets had sliding tops and decorated spines. All details, including the tracklist, were in booklets, designed and printed at the world's most expensive and prestigious publishing houses, such as Amilcare Pizzi S.p.A. in Italy and Skira Color Studios in Switzerland. They came with comprehensive essays (about composers, genres, or period instruments), definitive and eloquent libretto translations, lavish "tipped-in" colored reproductions, etc. Dorle received two Grammy Awards nominations in 1963 for covers of Julian Bream's An Evening Of Elizabethan Music and Herbert von Karajan's Tosca 2xLP (link below).

Besides the packaging, 'Soria Series' records had "standard" RCA Victor's Red Seal center labels, identical to any Indianapolis Plant's pressings of the time. (These include various combinations of 'RCA VICTOR,' 'Living Stereo,' and 'High-Fidelity' rim-text, both "nipperless" and with His Master's Voice picture logo.) Notably, domestic manufacturing was a dealbreaker for Sorias at Angel; they mainly stepped away because EMI decided to switch from European and British imported vinyl to Capitol Records US pressings.

Circa 1965, 'Soria Series' went on hiatus. Dario Soria, who quit RCA in 1970 to become Metropolitan Opera Guild's managing director, revitalized the brand in the mid-70s for the new Met Historic Recordings series. Dario retired after 1977 but continued to consult MET Opera on this archival project. In March 1980, while researching yet another release at Lincoln Center's Rodgers and Hammerstein Archives, he succumbed to a heart attack. Dorle J. Soria continued the 'Metropolitan Opera Historic Broadcasts' series. In Oct 1986, she received the Opus Magazine's "Historical Record of the Year" award for Simon Boccanegra 3xLP. Overall, fifteen Metropolitan Opera's LP boxsets came out until 1988. 'Soria Series' briefly embraced Audio CD in the '90s, and after a few 2xCD and 3xCD 'MET Operas' came out, it finally ceased activities around 1997. (Dorle Sorias passed away in 2002, at 102 years of age).

Selected albums, such as the Ernest Ansermet The Royal Ballet Gala Performances, got subsequently licensed by audiophile repress labels and appeared on CD and SACD from Analogue Productions, Classic Records, Classic Compact Discs, etc. In 2014, Sony Music released three 'Soria Series' albums as part of the Living Stereo 60 CD Collection Vol. 2 boxset.
 
 
 
     
      
     
     
     
Viewfinder links:                

Giacono Puccini ~ Tosca à la Price        
Francis Poulenc ~ La Voix Humaine & Denise Duval        
        
        
     
Net links:       
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Sunday, January 7, 2024        
        















January 13, 2014

101 Reel-to-Reel Tapes 32: David Bowie 1 ~ Hunky Dory


photo by Brian Ward
album cover detail
detail photo by Styrous®

I have hundreds of reel-to-reel, pre-recorded tapes in addition to my 20,000 Vinyl LP collection I'm selling. This is an entry about one of them (links below). Hunky Dory, the first of my David Bowie, reel-to-reel tapes, up for sale on eBay; it went up on February 15, 2014 and ran for 10 days. I will have other David Bowie reel-to-reel tapes on eBay for sale (see links below). Interested? Contact me by email not by comments, please. Thank you.

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Hunky Dory is the fourth album by English singer-songwriter, David Bowie, released by RCA Records in 1971. It was his first release through RCA, which would be his label for the next decade.

The style of the album cover was influenced by a Marlene Dietrich photo book that Bowie took with him to the photo shoot.

 reel-to-reel tape, front cover
Front cover art work:
George Underwood and Terry Pastor
of Main Artory, London
photo by Brian Ward
photo of box cover by Styrous®


In Hunky Dory, Bowie paid tribute to his influences with the tracks, Song for Bob Dylan, Andy Warhol and Queen Bitch which was inspired by the Velvet Underground. Kooks was dedicated to his son, known to the world as Zowie Bowie but legally named Duncan Zowie Haywood Jones. This is a happy album at times. It has light, freedom and great inspiration at other times.

Kooks is a pretty neat song! It is a bouncy and happy tune that makes you want to get up and move; better yet, DANCE. Fill Your Heart is in the same category; a happy song that has some terrific piano playing by, I presume, Rick Wakeman.

Oh! You Pretty Things, with lyrics, inspired by Nietzsche, that predicted the replacement of modern man by "the Homo Superior", and which has been cited as a direct precursor to "Starman" from Bowie's follow up album, The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars.  I always loved the great easy-paced tempo that made it good for slow dancing or some good, old fashioned bump 'n grind.

Changes was the major hit from this album with Bowie on sax again. Queen Bitch is, well, bitchin'! What more can I say?

Quicksand is a very beautiful but a very strange song. It has a lovely string orchestra with cello and piano backup. It has a dreamy quality to it but the lyrics completely throw me off. But, as with very many other songs whose lyrics I've not understood or liked, I've loved it for its musicality and the lyrics have become abstract for me. I've included them below.

Andy Warhol is, of course, a pretty whacky tune! It has an echoey sax, electronics and vocal fooling-around dialogue intro (almost a minute). Once into the song, it's ONLY guitars with some nice tambourine work and hand-clapping. There's some really terrific guitar work in it. I've always thought it a bit Español because of the hand-claps and tambourine. A very good song for a mellow or slow dance. I like it a lot and it's probably my favorite on the album.

Life On Mars? is a slow, dramatic song with a great piano (by Rick Wakeman) and an orchestral backup. Neil McCormick of The Daily Telegraph ranked it as #1 in his 100 Greatest Songs of All Time list. The BBC Radio has described Life on Mars? as having "one of the strangest lyrics ever" consisting of a "slew of surreal images" like a Salvador Dalí painting. The line "Look at those cavemen go" is a reference to the song "Alley Oop", a one-off hit in 1960 for American doo-wop band The Hollywood Argyles. The BBC Radio 2 called it "a cross between a Broadway musical and a Salvador Dalí painting." (I think that's a pretty good review. if you ask me.) There's a really cool promotional video for the song Mick Rock filmed and directed at Earls Court, in London, England, on 12 May, 1973, to accompany the release of the song as a single. It features a heavily made-up Bowie performing the song solo against a white backdrop, in a turquoise "ice-blue" suit designed by Freddi Buretti (link to the video below).

There is a postcard in the reel-to-reel box for information on other reel-to-reel tapes in the RCA catelogue.  Pretty cool stuff for a vinyl junkie. 

RCA catalog order card
photo by Styrous®




 reel-to-reel tape, back cover
photo by Brian Ward
photo of box cover by Styrous®




reel-to-reel tape back cover detail
photo by Brian Ward
photos of tape box back cover by Styrous®




I love the " . . . less complicated piano parts" notation

" . . . less complicated piano parts"
reel-to-reel tape back cover detail
photos of tape box back cover by Styrous®




reel-to-reel tape back cover detail
photo by Brian Ward
photos of tape box back cover by Styrous®




photo by Styrous®



 reel-to-reel tape label detail
detail photo by Styrous®


Quicksand Lyrics:

I'm closer to the Golden Dawn
Immersed in Crowley's uniform
Of imagery
I'm living in a silent film
Portraying
Himmler's sacred realm
Of dream reality
I'm frightened by the total goal
Drawing to the ragged hole
And I ain't got the power anymore
No I ain't got the power anymore

I'm the twisted name
on Garbo's eyes
Living proof of
Churchill's lies
I'm destiny
I'm torn between the light and dark
Where others see their targets
Divine symmetry
Should I kiss the viper's fang
Or herald loud
the death of Man
I'm sinking in the quicksand
of my thought
And I ain't got the power anymore

[CHORUS]
Don't believe in yourself
Don't deceive with belief
Knowledge comes
with death's release

I'm not a prophet
or a stone age man
Just a mortal
with the potential of a superman
I'm living on
I'm tethered to the logic
of Homo Sapien
Can't take my eyes
from the great salvation
Of bullshit faith
If I don't explain what you ought to know
You can tell me all about it
On, the next Bardo
I'm sinking in the quicksand
of my thought
And I ain't got the power anymore


Track listing:

All songs written by David Bowie, except where noted.
Side one:
  1. "Changes" – 3:37
  2. "Oh! You Pretty Things" – 3:12
  3. "Eight Line Poem" – 2:55
  4. "Life on Mars?" – 3:53
  5. "Kooks" – 2:53
  6. "Quicksand" – 5:08
Side two:
  1. "Fill Your Heart" (Biff Rose, Paul Williams) – 3:07
  2. "Andy Warhol" – 3:56
  3. "Song for Bob Dylan" – 4:12
  4. "Queen Bitch" – 3:18
  5. "The Bewlay Brothers" – 5:22

Personnel:


Credits: 

    Hunky Dory was recorded at Trident Studios in Soho (in the West End of London), in April of 1971 and was released on the 17th of December, 1971, by RCA Records.

    A GEM Production
    ℗1971
    RCA Limited, Record Division,
    RCA House, Curzon Street, London W1.
    ©1971 RCA Limited
    Remixed at Trident Studios, London.
    Printed in England by Robert Stace.


    Music links:

    Andy Warhol on YouTube
    Life on Mars?   on YouTube
    Hunky Dory (full album) on YouTube
    Kooks on YouTube
    Queen Bitch on YouTube
    Quicksand on YouTube
    Changes on YouTube
    Changes (live) on YouTube
    Oh! You Pretty Things on YouTube


    Dates the David Bowie reel-to-reel tapes will be on eBay:

    February 15, 2014    Hunky Dory
    March 15, 2014    Man Who Sold the World, The
    May 15, 2014    Aladdin Sane
    June 15, 2014    Pinups
    July 15, 2014    Space Oddity


    Links:

    David Bowie ~ Hunky Dory on eBay

    other reel-to-reel tapes on eBay



    Styrous® ~ January 13, 2014

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