| These popular
recordings of overtures by Franz von Suppé (1819-95) and Daniel
Auber (1782-1871) were among many distinguished recordings from the
Detroit Paray team for the American audiophile classical label, Mercury
Living Presence. The Detroit Symphony Orchestra and its venerable
music director at the time, Frenchman Paul Paray (1886-1979), together
built a distinguished reputation, particularly in the lighter French
and European repertoire, of which this disc is an superb example.
The recordings were made in the outstanding ecoustics of Detroit's
Cass Technical High School and Old Orchestra Hall in 1959.
As with the great majority of MLP's stereo releases,
the actual recordings were made using three microphones - a stereo
pair, plus a central microphone. The LP (and subsequent CD) stereo
releases mixed the centre channel into the two outer channels. Now
- and for the first time -- SACD's multi-channel capability enables
all three discrete channels to be present on the disc, allowing
the listener to hear the recordings as they were originally taped
(and as they were always intended to be heard, when future technology
permitted). Enhancing this new opportunity is the significant additional
fidelity gained through direct-to-DSD transfers from the original
half-inch analogue masters, via DSD's much greater resolution, frequency
response and dynamic range.
In addition to this first-time presentation of
the three-track original recordings, the SACD also contains a high-resolution
DSD stereo soundtrack, mixed to match as closely as possible the
original LP stereo mixes. Finally, as all Mercury Living Presence
SACDs will be 'hybrid' releases, the SACD also includes a CD stereo
soundtrack (Wilma Cozart Fine's original CD transfer), thus making
the disc compatible with all CD players.
The covers and packaging have been kept within
the famous Mercury Living Presence tradition, maintaining the logo
banner, cover art and, where possible, original liner notes.
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