Starting a Classical Vinyl Music Collection


Don't have much so I'm wondering where to begin.

TIA

128x128jjbeason14

Since musical tastes tend to be idiosyncratic, maybe the best bet is to listen to a range of music on whatever streaming service you have access to. Once you've decided you like a particular piece and/or composer, you can search for the "best" recording.

 

I have a fairly extensive vinyl collection and I picked up >100 vintage classical albums from an online sales posting. The seller bought records in large lots and was searching for particular items. He jettisoned the rest of them for <$1.00/album. Admittedly, some were in bad shape but all recordings I bought were 40-50 years old.

My two cents, conductor and sound engineer matter. So when I write about "recordings," I am thinking of the best combination of recording quality, artistic expression through recording, and the interpretations of the music by the conductor. 

Of course, you'll want to consider which periods and styles of music float your boat. "Classical" can be anything from Renaissance choral polyphony to atonal 20th century, if we're sticking with a Western definition. 

An inexpensive vinyl journey is to explore anything on the l'Oiseau Lyre (Decca) label, in particular the work of Christopher Hogwood and his early music group. His Mozart, Bach, and Vivaldi interpretations are superb, and the recording is, to my taste, among the very best out there. The Mozart symphony box sets (7 vols.) are the best Mozart symphonies, imho. 

Others have mentioned Deutsche G., which is certainly huge. But I prefer, as recordings, Philips, Decca, Erato, and Argo. For more recent smaller labels, again for earlier music, try Harmonia Mundi, Hyperion, and Gimell. Also, there is a lot of inexpensive classical on CD too!

Lots of great advice here about how to expose yourself to and learn about classical music, but don't necessarily be put off if you don't like a piece or a compose at first; it may just be the recording. 

 

Paul

 

 

The Hummingguru ultrasonic record cleaner is $500. It works really well! it runs out a lower frequency than the more expensive $3000 units. I just run the record through twice and it comes out great. It’s about whole seven minutes to do that. It says to use water only. I use one drop of a record cleaning desiccant. Not anything else no alcohol.

Bent