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Re: [ARSCLIST] Discographical puzzle
My point is that of my two copies with thr R suffix, one has take numbers
and one doesn't. So how com?
In the larger sense, does this tell us anything we need to know
(discographically speaking) about English Columbia's matrix numbering
policies?
Steve Smolian
----- Original Message -----
From: "Richard Warren" <richard.warren@xxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, January 18, 2008 4:40 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Discographical puzzle
Hi Steve,
3546 [original, no -R] has matrices A 612 and A 1186 for Boughton and
Martin, respectively, published April, 1925 (apparently no logs survive to
tell rec. date)
3546-R [copy also at Yale] is as you list: matrices are as you and the
book about Columbia 10-inch discs agree, Boughton recorded Aug. 26, 1926,
Martin rec. Aug. 31, 1926. Columbias this age do not usually show take
numbers in the dead wax, so you're lucky this one did on one side. The "R"
does normally indicate a remake or replacement.
Best, Richard
At 11:04 AM 1/18/2008, you wrote:
I've two copies of English Columbia 3546 R. One side is The Faery Song
from Boughton's "Immortal Hour," matrix A 3551-5. The reverse is Easthope
Martin's song, "The Minstrel," matrix A 3817-1. The singer is Philip
Heseltine.
The "R" indicates "remake," as far as I can tell, and replaces an earlier,
idenical coupling.
One copy has the take number after the matrix number in the dead wax, the
other the matrix number only.
What's going on here? Is one a dub? Any idea?
Steve Smolian