For what it's worth, those Westminster recordings (both guitar and lute) were 
later bundled up and reissued as a 2-CD set.

Best,
Eugene

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Geoff Gaherty
Sent: Monday, August 12, 2013 4:33 PM
To: lute
Subject: [LUTE] Re: general public Lute awareness

On 12/08/13 3:16 PM, Sean Smith wrote:
> In other words it's hard to build up trust and the label created an 
> easy proxy for it.

Back in the '50s the recording industry was dominated by three companies 
(Victor, Columbia, and Decca in the US), and they basically dictated what 
people heard:99% mainsteream classical music.

The advent of the tape recorder allowed small labels and individuals to produce 
their own records, and many turned to early music to find repertoire not 
available from the big three.  We've all talked about how influential Julian 
Bream's early lute records were, especially his Victor Elizabethan lute record. 
 In going back through my music library (thousands of vinyls, and even a few 
acoustical 78s!) I realized that I'd totally forgotten that Bream had an 
extensive recording career _before_ that epochal disk, on one of those small 
independent labels, Westminster.  He made at least 4 LPs for Westminster, 
mostly on the guitar, but there was one of Dowland's lute music, played on the 
lute. 
Believe me, in those days there was a miniscule market for guitar music played 
by anyone other than Segovia, and ZERO market for Dowland lute solos.  
Westminster took a gamble on young Bream, and did quite well by him, but it 
wasn't until he jumped ship to Victor that his recording career really took off.

Geoff

--
Geoff Gaherty
Foxmead Observatory
Coldwater, Ontario, Canada
http://www.gaherty.ca
http://starrynightskyevents.blogspot.com/



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