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Love's Old Sweet Song: Twenty Five Singers in Popular Ballads
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Love's Old Sweet Song: Twenty Five Singers in Popular Ballads

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Love's Old Sweet Song: Twenty Five Singers in Popular Ballads
Music Price: $11.98
As of Jul 20 1:09 EDT (details)

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StudioAsv Living Era
Release DateJuly 26, 1994
UPC Code743625513028
Buy this item$11.98 at Amazon.com
As of Jul 20 1:09 EDT (details)
1 Audio CD, In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.,
 

Tracks

  1. The Last Rose Of Summer - Landon Ronald
  2. For You Alone - Enrico Caruso
  3. By The Waters Of Minnetonka (An Indian Love Song) - Landon Ronald
  4. The Green Hills O' Somerset - Peter Dawson
  5. She Wandered Down The Mountainside - Rosina Buckman
  6. The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise - Charles Hackett
  7. By The Bend Of The River - Grace Moore
  8. I Know Of Two Bright Eyes (Myrrha) - Walter Widdop
  9. A Fairy Went A-Marketing - Clara Butt
  10. Myself When Young (In A Persian Garden) - Norman Allin
  11. Love's Old Sweet Song - Amelita Galli-Curci
  12. Bird Songs At Eventide - John McCormack
  13. Ciribiribin - Lucrezia Bori
  14. The Song Of Songs - Richard Crooks
  15. Homing - Percy B. Kahn
  16. The Blind Ploughman - Fyodor Chaliapin
  17. The Fairytales Of Ireland - Florence Austral/Hils Nelson
  18. Ich Liebe Dich, My Dear - Armand Crabbe
  19. I Love You Truly - Dusolina Giannini
  20. Love Sends A Little Gift Of Roses - Gerald Moore
  21. Danny Boy (Londonderry Air) - Dora Labette
  22. Kashmiri Song (Pale Hands I Loved) - Richard Tauber
  23. Deep River - Marian Anderson
  24. Leanin' - Harold Williams
  25. A Perfect Day - Rosa Ponselle

User Reviews

Average user review: 3.0 (2 reviews)

rating: 4 QuoteRemember-Mckinley was president when these tunes were newQuote
In the 1890s and the early years of the 20th century sound recordings were very new and very fascinating to the population at large..Being able to hear a recording of a popular song,or listen to a piano roll transcription was,at the time,considered something of a miracle...Alas,since the technology was new the recording process was primitive...VERY primitive...often entire orchestras played into a recording horn,and the resulting sound reminds one of listening to something in a tunnel...very little could be done to make the sound pristine,and because of it the recordings from that period all have an antique and primitive atmosphere to them...recordings that old,and not saved upon tape,or disc,often poorly kept and poorly maintained,tend to deteriorate ,and,in many cases with regard to the items presented upon this album,the original"master"recording is lost,and only a copy remains,often a badly deteriorated,commercial copy..scratches,recording anaolomies,as well as warpage and general age have taken thier toll..Some would think,rather foolishly as it turns out,that such modern restorative processes such as"Cedar" might erase the imperfections,the scratches,the warpage,the cracks and hisses,but this is just not so...
For those of you old enough to have had long-playing records,45s,or 78s,just imagine that the ONLY copy of a particular album or song title is your old,scratched,worn disc...not some master tape or disc held in a vault somewhere,but your old beat up copy...Imagine further that you submit this old beat up copy for restoration...Sure,it may sound better afterwards than it did before,but,all in all,it still sounds pretty bad,at least by modern standards...
This is the sort of sound reproduction one gets on this album...Efforts were made to restore these sides(contrary to the opinion of another review found here about this album)but when one is dealing with recordings 100 or so years old,made when recording tecniques were primitive,and ,in some cases,having to attempt restoration on a used COPY sold to and played by someone like you and I way back when,restoration to a"perfect" sense is just not possible..Indeed,even if "perfection"could be achieved,the original sound of some of these old sides never was too good to begin with..
Be this as it may,the sides presented here are historic,to say the very least,and representative of what the public of the 1890s liked to hear...Listening to these sides,imperfections and all,gives one a sense of that time,a sense of the enormous technological gulf between these recordings and the ones available today,and,perhaps most importantly,gives us an overview of the sort of entertainment that drove our great great grandparents wild...
If you can get over the primitive sound of these recordings,or get yourself used to it,then give this album a try... March 9, 2007

rating: 2 QuoteLoves Old Sweet Song Leaves a Bitter TasteQuote
While the performances on this CD are great the transfers from the original recordings are about the worst i have ever heard. No care whatever was spent in dubbing these records to Cd. The originals in my collection sound many times better than these. I bought this for convenience but find it too terrible to listen April 26, 2003

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