The possible players are: Roland Berger (Dehmal horn) or Wolfgang Tomboeck sen. 
(I think Uhlmann horn), and definitely Franz Soellner as assistant (they use 4 
horns for this kind of symphonies), and Volker Altmann or Willibald Janezic on 
2nd horn & definitely Hans Fischer as assistant. All using F-pumpenhorns horns 
exclusively. I doubt if any player pitched his horn to A using the pig-tail 
crook. Using such kind of tools was out of use then.

Tomboeck sen. can be recognized by the more penetrating immaculate sound, while 
Bergers sound was fuller.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
Am 26.01.2010 um 20:09 schrieb Bruce Gordon:

> I revisited Carlos Kleiber's legendary 1975 recording with the Vienna  
> Phil.  It is an exciting performance, to say the least.  The tempos  
> were brisk enough that I needed to check the turntable to be sure it  
> wasn't set to 45 rpm.  The horn playing was beyond luminous--precise,  
> powerful, and incisive.  Does anyone know who was playing, and what  
> the equipment would have been?  Evidently, there was a videodisc of  
> this, but it is NOT to be confused with the available dvd of Kleiber  
> with Concertgebouw.
> 
> Bruce
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