CD36 has Gershwin not Sibelius
CD67 is missing the whole of the Bassoon Concerto
errors common to more than one copy.
Peter
WHAT!? You mean -- a record company made a MISTAKE?? Heavens!!!
-- 
Matthew B. Tepper:  WWW, science fiction, classical music, ducks!
My personal home page -- http://home.earthlink.net/~oy/index.html
My main music page --- http://home.earthlink.net/~oy/berlioz.html
To write to me, do for my address what Androcles did for the lion
War is Peace. ** Freedom is Slavery. ** It's all Napster's fault!
"CD 36 contains the wrong music. New CDs will be sent to (the)
distribution centre on (sic) this week.
CD 46 has the incorrect information in the booklet. In the booklet it
says Handel Water music, track 10-13. This music does not appear on
this CD. However, Handel's Water Music does appear on CD86, tracks
13-18.
CD66 has the incorrect information in the booklet. This CD has 6
tracks and shouldn't say that tracks 7-9 are the Mozart Bassoon
Concerto.
CD67 has the incorrect information in the booklet. This CD has 6
tracks and shouldn't say that tracks 7-9 are the Mozart Bassoon
Concerto."
Oops............
Peter
So does this mean that a Karajan recording of Rhapsody in Blue does
exist?!
Actually, I'm semi-serious. He did conduct it once, with Weissenberg
as the pianist, and I think there might even have been an announcement
that he was going to record it.
Alan
You're wrong.
In this case, it looks like they made *two* mistakes.
--Brian
Not true- if EMI had made the same mistake that I once discovered in a
sealed Tahra CD, the owner might have a handy empty box, which could
be used for note pads, paper clips, etc.
In 1989, I decided to buy a boxed set devoted to recordings by a particular 
symphony orchestra, but the outer cardboard box (into which the jewel boxes 
and very thick booklet were to be inserted) were missing.  My source didn't 
have another copy of this unusual item, so in desperation I wrote to the 
label, asking if I could somehow beg a copy of that outer box.
It didn't take very long before I received, air mail, a package containing 
*two* copies of the box, in case one of them should get damaged, with a very 
friendly cover letter from the person mailing it.  That item sits on my 
collections shelf to this day.
The boxed set? "Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, 1914-1989."
The label? BIS.
Compare and contrast with my futile attempts to get the cabinet and limited 
printing booklet for BMG's Toscanini Edition.
I was purchasing CDs from a store in Washington DC (now long out of 
business) when the last of the Toscanini Collection CDs were issued. 
They had the cabinet in stock and so I purchased one from them. The 
limited printing booklet however wasn't available separately.
Thomas Liebert