Somewhere I have an article about the concert. Maybe the New York Herald Tribune? Over the years I've found the 12" 4 or 5 times in various conditions. Still have one. I've never had the 10". I wonder what that says? Though I can't prove it, I've long had the feeling that copies were snared by various Victor executives as well and that the likely run, at least for the 12", was 25-50. Steve Smolian -----Original Message----- From: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Roger Kulp Sent: Tuesday, February 07, 2012 9:30 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] The Leopold Auer records According to the Victor pages at the UC Santa Barbara site,at least one of the matrices was destroyed. http://victor.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/matrix/detail/700009318/B-24115-Hun garian_dance_no._1 http://victor.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/matrix/detail/700009317/C-24114-Me lodie_no._3 I didn't know either one got out. Roger ________________________________ From: "Don Tait ([log in to unmask])" <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Sent: Friday, February 3, 2012 3:25 PM Subject: [ARSCLIST] The Leopold Auer records I wonder whether any ARSC member can give me information about one or two aspects of these discs or direct me to a place where I can find that information. I hope so. To begin with, they're well-known. As well as very scarce. Auer made them for Victor in preparation for his 75th birthday celebratory dinner in New York City in 1920. They were pressed by Victor as one 10" and one 12" single-sided discs, with custom black-and-white labels containing a photo of Auer and reproduction of his hand-written dedication of them "to my musical children," plus the musical titles in Victor's standard typography. I got copies of them from a Chicago-area violinist and teacher named Ruth Ray. Miss Ray died within the past decade, aged at least 100. She'd studied with Auer in Leipzig in 1913 (together with the equally young Heifetz). She told me that the records were distributed at Auer's 75th birthday dinner. She also said that only Auer's favorites among his pupils received copies of both records: everyone else got only one. She got both. So, my question: does anyone know how the Auer records were distributed to his pupils and colleagues at the 1920 celebration? If, indeed, he gave both to only a limited number of people? Is there a way or place to find out? And finally, is there a way to learn how many copies of the two matrices Victor pressed? And is it correct, as I've read, that the matrices of the Auer records were subsequently destroyed? Thanks to everyone. Don Tait