Ferretfancy reminds us of the Heliodor label, Philips's cheapo wonder label. They had some wonderful Ferenc Fricsay and Karl Bohm.
Ferretfancy reminds us of the Heliodor label, Philips's cheapo wonder label. They had some wonderful Ferenc Fricsay and Karl Bohm.
Indeed. Heliodor was DG. Philips had a couple of bargain labels: as well as Fontana there was also that one with white borders (was it called Philips Great Classics or some such? I remember the Monteux Eroica rehearsal and the Böhm mono Figaro on that label, and a few other good things too.)
For me the best bargain label of the lot - at least for a couple of weeks each year in WHSmith's sale in the large branch near me - was Supraphon. It was possible even on modest birthday/Christmas money to buy armloads of wonderful things when they had the whole Supraphon catalogue marked down to 6/11 reach (a notch under 35p a record).
Correction - it was called Philips Classics Favourites - there was some good stuff in that series. I remember my Dad had the Griller Quartet playing Mozart string quintets, as well as things like the Monteux and Böhm records that I had myself.
Ah yes, those Philips Classics Favourites were very distinctive. They also included reissues of CBS recordings, so there were Beecham and Bruno Walter recordings of Mozart which were rather good.
Taling of Fontana, I still have some of their 10 inch LPs.
The other very good Philips series was Universal, and I still have quite a few of those.The only snag was that the sleeves had nothing about the music, instead they had a brief history lesson about what was happening in the World when the music was being written, interesting but hardly relevant. Incidentally, I was always wondered why Philips pressings were usually reliable, but Decca were not. I soon found out why when Decca started having their pressings done in Holland.
Pye Golden Guinea LPs often had very sharp and rough edges. Philips, on the other hand, were beautifully smooth.
Classics for Pleasure is the bargain label I remember most from my early teens. The LPs had a habit of ending up in bargain bins at my local supermarket and selling for almost nothing. And what about the Decca HEAD series? I'm almost certain Preston and Dorati's classic Messiaen set was first issued on that. I used to love the EMI Angels as well; one of my first buys on that label was Barbirolli's Verdi Requiem.
As for Collins, their finest hour was surely Gillian Weir's Messiaen cycle.