1979 Telarc Digital records label Tchaikovsky 1812 DG-10041 Pressed in Germany

Sold Date: March 1, 2015
Start Date: February 22, 2015
Final Price: £20.00 (GBP)
Bid Count: 9
Seller Feedback: 1815
Buyer Feedback: 45


I finally need to dispose of my vinyl collection due to deteriated hearing. These were all purchased new by me "back in the day" and have only ever been played a best available kit at the time. Naim, linn rega etc I have checked how people grade these and I will be very fair in my description without going into full breakdown, the photos should be the best indicator but I will detail the discs. Please ask any questions, I'm no expert in what matters, I just (used to), listen to music. Postage is by courier and in standard lp mailer and is at actual cost plus ebays 10%. Postage to islands/highlands will be more.
Will post to europe region £7 for 1 lp, double album may be more, will combine postage.  All records will be posted in boxes not flat sleeves, more expensive but much better. Uk postage, can get possibly 4 single sleeve lps to a box for total £4.80, will calc at end of sale.
Album as above, 1812 DG-10041 Pressed in Germany 1979
Cover is in outstanding condition with virtually no shelf wear or marking, inner gatefold is perfect.
Plain sleeve is fine.
Disc is in nr mint unmarked condition and has been played a maximum of 10 times.
Hopefully you can read the centrefold which goes to explain why this sounds the way it does. A whole battery of live cannons where used in the digital recording. Take a look at the groove width and you will get an idea of the sound. This record gives a serious workout to both turntable and speakers it is unbelievable and will take out your windows if not careful, check it out on Discogs.

On 24-Feb-15 at 11:01:20 GMT, seller added the following information:

I was looking to see if this been produced on CD and came across this review;


Album Classical Album Review (en)

Telarc's Tchaikovsky: "1812" Overture is a landmark in American classical music recordings -- if it was not the first digitally recorded classical album in American history, it would place in perhaps the first five such albums. It was originally issued on LP, and the grooves on the record were so violently waggy and far apart that it was as much fun to look at the grooves spin around on the vinyl as it was to listen to it. In the compact disc edition of Tchaikovsky: "1812" Overture, the LP, as interesting as it was, is nowhere to be found in the production chain -- this is straight from the digital master tapes to the digital disc with no analog steps along the way. Erich Kunzel is not the kind of conductor who gets all hot under the collar if he has to play The Stars and Stripes Forever at an upcoming Fourth of July concert and is hating life because it's his two-thousandth go 'round with the piece. Kunzel is sympathetic to the reality that such pieces are popular because they are meaningful to all kinds of listeners; these works are popular because they are loved, and you just don't go around trampling on things that people love, because it's like you're trampling on their hearts. By the time this 1812 Overture was recorded in 1978, Kunzel had already conducted this piece plenty of times. When Kunzel takes on the "1812," it always sounds fresh and new, as though it was his first time through it, except that it is assured and polished. Tchaikovsky: "1812" Overture effectively put Telarc on the map, and it's damn right that it should have -- it's a boisterous, exciting, fun, and a still somehow artistically transparent performance, right down to the final digital cannon shot. The Capriccio Italien is a common disc mate for the "1812," but the "Cossack Dance" from Mazeppa is not. The two pieces are certainly a better choice than Beethoven's sprawling Wellington's Victory or some such, and these appetizers are played with a gusto equal to that of the main course. While some experts prefer the famous 1963 Antal Dorati recording of the "1812" and insist that none better has been, or could ever be, made, Kunzel and the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra seem to have done the impossible here and superseded it. In any event, this really should be the first choice for people who want to add the "1812" to their collection; just make sure you keep an eye glued to your speakers so when those digital cannons go "BOOM" your audio equipment doesn't become "cannon fodder." You've been warned.