Beethoven: Symphony #3, 1952 December 8
Beethoven: Symphony #5, 1954 May 23
Beethoven: Symphony #6, 1954 May 23
Schubert: Symphony #9, 1953 September 15
Dvorak: Slavonic Dance #3 (1930; apparently his only Dvorak recording)
Mendelssohn: "Hebrides" Overture rehearsal (1930)
Schumann: Cello Concerto exc. w/ Pierre Fournier, 1943 November 13-16
Schubert: Symphony #8, first movement only, 1944 December 12?
Brahms: Symphony #2, second movement rehearsal, 1947 September 16
RStrauss: Till Eulenspigel, 1944 May 15
All with Berlin Philharmonic.
Price: $32 in U.S. funds, postpaid within U.S.
Why selling: Duplication.
Reply to me by deleting the character immediately before the "@" in my
e-mail address.
--
Matthew B. Tepper: WWW, science fiction, classical music, ducks!
My personal home page -- http://www.deltanet.com/~ducky/index.htm
My main music page --- http://www.deltanet.com/~ducky/berlioz.htm
And my science fiction club's home page --- http://www.lasfs.org/
To write to me, do for my address what Androcles did for the lion
In article <6co7ka$36d$1...@news01.deltanet.com>, ducky兀deltanet.com (Matthew B. Tepper) writes:
> Tahra FURT 1008-1011, 4 CDs in box, slightly used in perfect condition.
I *could* take the opportunity of denouncing Matthew for spamming the
newsgroup ... but I'll simply observe that this is one of the best
Furtwangler collections available and that his price is very reasonable.
:-)
Tony Movshon
Center for Neural Science New York University
http://www.cns.nyu.edu mov...@nyu.edu
What!? And of my great modesty you say nothing? (Punchline to a very
old joke.)
Nope, no spam. I sent it to this newsgroup only (in other words,
rec.music.dylan and the rest had to do without it!), and decided to
tolerate it only because of my frequent and meritorious contributions
to the ongoing discussions. Besides, if I *had* decided to complain
about myself, based on my recent more tactful posts, I would only have
flamed myself just a little and told myself not to do it again.
And I can truthfully say it didn't come from Grandma's attic. Neither
of my grandmothers spoke Attic, only Yiddish.
And anyone who has Furtwangler material to sell at a discount definitely
needs to post it in here, as Tepper has. I know *I* want to hear about
it.
--
Kevin Rayburn (To email me: remove the pound # sign from my address)
In Real Life: Editor--research, alumni titles, University of Louisville
In Spare Moments: Fatherhood, Music (Classical, Jazz, World), Cinema,
1920s, W.C. Fields, Monty Python, The Prisoner, Wine, etc.
Visit my site: W.C. Fields: The Great Man:
http://www.louisville.edu/~kprayb01/WC.html
--