Hi Ben,
You can get them very inexpensively on MCA (issued 1988-89):
Amazon.com: Jascha Heifetz - The Decca Masters Volume 1: Music
Amazon.com: Jascha Heifetz - The Decca Masters Volume 1...
Amazon.com: Jascha Heifetz - The Decca Masters Volume 1: Music
View on www.amazon.com Preview by Yahoo
Amazon.com: Jascha Heifetz: The Decca Masters, Vol. 2: Music
Amazon.com: Jascha Heifetz: The Decca Masters, Vol. 2: ...
Amazon.com: Jascha Heifetz: The Decca Masters, Vol. 2: Music
View on www.amazon.com Preview by Yahoo
or on DG, most likely better sound, and with an additional track:
Amazon.com: It Ain't Necessarily So: Legendary Classic and Jazz Studio Takes: Music
Amazon.com: It Ain't Necessarily So: Legendary Classic a...
Amazon.com: It Ain't Necessarily So: Legendary Classic and Jazz Studio Takes: Music
View on www.amazon.com Preview by Yahoo
--Jon Samuels
On Thursday, September 11, 2014 11:44 AM, James Roth <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Greetings, Mr. Samuels,
Since the Heifetz box set I have does not contain the Decca recordings, what or where might be the best way or place to buy them?
I love seeing the original jacket fronts and labels.
Thank you.
Ben Roth
https://rsa.fau.edu/
-----Original Message-----
From: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Jon Samuels
Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2014 11:06 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] The Heifetz box
Hi Ben,
I can partially answer your question, as I worked on the Sony Heifetz box.
The original 1994 Heifetz set did include the Decca recordings (I worked on that one also for BMG). The 2010 set was made up of copying the recordings from the earlier set (minus the Decca recordings), plus bonus material of the Bell Telephone Hour TV program, and three CDs of previously unreleased material (my contribution to the set). Some of the recordings from the 1994 set had been remastered since it came out, so in those cases, the later transfer was utilized.
Not long before the 2010 set was released DG issued the Decca records on a two-CD set, that included at least one previously unreleased track. My assumption is that DG did not wish to re-license something to Sony that they had just brought out themselves.
By the way, the Rubinstein set also has one recording missing from the later
set: the 1964 Moscow recital originally on Melodiya.
--Jon Samuels
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