It is not my desire to load up Dennis' inbox unneccessarily, but I wanted to submit a revision. I think the DG screed to which I was referring claimed that Karajan covered more repertoire than any other conductor. How he could have beaten Stokowski and Ormandy in that regard, I don't know, and the way in which he covered some of it was disingenuous. I remember long ago attending a music class where we examined the score of Webern's Opus 1 "Passacaglia" along with Karajan's DG recording of it. The recording was not even close. He disliked the Second Vienna School lit and resented being asked to record it, and sabotaged it deliberately. Stokowski and Ormandy would have just said "no," and of course Ormandy made some very nice recordings of some of that literature. UD On Thu, Nov 29, 2012 at 9:06 AM, Don Cox <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > On 28/11/2012, Aaron Levinson wrote: > > > I believe Johnny Hodges may have as well but I cannot be absolutely > > positive about that. Acoustical era to digital that is. Perhaps Eubie > > Blake did too... > > > Hodges died in 1970, so cannot have made digital recordings. > > Eubie Blake died in 1983, so might have. > > Regards > -- > Don Cox > [log in to unmask] >