Da Bar: list of concerts



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Feels like the right thread.

More proficient than I was expecting.

Orio POV : facetime app with fatty clapping along :sunglasses:

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I cannot confirm or deny this.

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rather narrow rep but he had very few concerts and did not practice after his 20’s lol.

legend

Probably too busy banging skanks.

very interesting character. Probably was just chilling at home and listening to his wife nag. Makes sense why you would not want to prax after.

I wish there was a catalogue of carnegia hall recording company discs. Can’t just be Ho and Barere who thought ahead enough to preserve their legacy outside mostly shit commercial recs.

I think very few recs were made because the artist paid for the recs.

it wasn’t some secret bootleg operation… but recording in da hall was illegal. Lol. Given the cost of running it it makes sense dat da artists covered da fees.

I bet Rach would have loved that service. Probably would have listening to his recitals once and den broke da discs cause a few notes out of place lol.

I wonder when that racket started. 45 or 6? Just 5 years earlier imagine the shit could be captured. Woh!

earliest discs were 1945.

damn. Imagine they started 1929? oooooo fuck yeah.

imagine my aunt had a dick? Wow.

(bruh)

About the Carnegie Hall Recording Company

The Carnegie Hall Recording Company is one of the most interesting and elusive aspects of Carnegie Hall’s history. It was founded by Len Frank in the 1930’s in Carnegie Hall Studio 305-6. Frank had access to CBS microphones hanging in Carnegie Hall that were used for radio broadcasts from which he recorded various artists performing at Carnegie Hall. We believe he obtained access to the microphones through his associations with CBS or Bell Telephone Laboratories. There was noWebLilacs2 official agreement with Carnegie Hall nor did Carnegie Hall receive payment for the recordings and to date nothing in writing has been located explaining in full the company or its relationship to Carnegie Hall. The Carnegie Hall Recording Company studio at Carnegie Hall existed from the 1930s until 1960.

“How many recordings were made has not been determined,” explains Kathleen Sabogal, Assistant Director of the Archives at Carnegie Hall. “Most have disappeared. The Carnegie Hall Recording Company Collection consists of 38 lacquer discs with the Carnegie Hall Recording Company label that have been purchased on eBay or from private collectors.”

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what was the earliest known surviving disc? I have not seen anything before 1945.

Same here. Uncared for laquers probably toast by now anyhow.

One from 1943 apparently but it was a “one off”
man.

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It looks in good shape. Maybe that stuff survive!

we can only hope but in the meantime our best bet is just waiting for da next Poonytatone release tbh.

Objectively better den a full on Rach recital.

I mean, have you tried busting a nut to this:

In or outside a first cousin porn situation?