The Price of a Ring
by Patrick Waller
A cynic is a man who knows the price of everything and the value
of nothing
Oscar Wilde
Apart from boxes with the complete works of a composer, Wagner's
Der Ring des Nibelungen is one of the largest purchases that
a classical music lover is likely to make. The table below shows the
price in pounds of all the 14 complete recordings of Wagner's Ring
available in a single package for download that I could easily find
on 7
digital and/or Amazon.co.uk
on 17 March 2013. Where the same recording was available more than
once at different prices, I have quoted the lowest - for example an
identical version of Barenboim's Ring also appeared on 7 digital
priced at £44.99. For customers based in the UK, these websites
tend to have the largest coverage of labels, so I doubt there is more
choice available elsewhere.
|
7 digital |
Amazon |
Furtwängler 1950* |
7.99 |
85.99 |
Keilberth 1952* |
75.99 |
N/A |
Krauss 1953* |
82.99 |
59.49 |
Knappertsbusch 1956* |
N/A |
51.49 |
Solti 1958-65* |
75.99 |
N/A |
Böhm 1966-7* |
35.99 |
34.49 |
Karajan 1966-70 |
35.99 |
36.99 |
Swarowsky 1968 |
4.49 |
14.98 |
Boulez 1979-80 |
69.99 |
N/A |
Janowski 1980-3 |
N/A |
17.99 |
Levine 1987-9 |
35.99 |
36.99 |
Barenboim 1991-2* |
28.99 |
37.99 |
Thielemann 2008* |
7.99 |
53.49 |
Young 2008-10 |
7.99 |
53.49 |
Some caveats first. Any of these prices could be changed even before
this article appears. These websites don't label their offerings consistently
and I could have missed some recordings. Some of them may not be absolutely
complete and some may well be available for download or on CD more cheaply
elsewhere. Various re-masterings of some of the older recordings certainly
exist.
The prices shown above range from £4.49 to £85.99 - an almost
20-fold difference between highest and lowest. I bought the same 1952
Keilberth
Ring on the Archipel label which now costs £75.99
on 7 digital from Amazon.co.uk in October 2010 for £7.98 but unfortunately
it is no longer available there to download. If my memory is correct,
the Krauss version on the same label was, at that time, also available
for the same price but I already had that on CD. This is the recording
which is now the most expensive on 7 digital. In terms of recordings,
these are all "like for like" comparisons but most of the 7 digital
offerings - although not the Barenboim version - are at 320 kbps whereas
Amazon's are at 256 kbps, if that matters to you.
I have ordered the list by date of recording but there does not seem
to be a clear relationship between the age of recording and cost. The
price of the Thielemann version on 7 digital is particularly surprising
since it is one of the newest and the individual operas from the cycle
are all made available separately, each costing £7.99 per opera.
On seeing their low prices on 7 digital nearly a month ago, I purchased
the Furtwängler (in its Opera d'Oro incarnation) and Thielemann
versions although I haven't listened to all of either of them yet. The
Thielemann has been reviewed by
Tony
Duggan and the idea of modern sound and very good orchestral playing
appealed. The Furtwängler sound isn't great and Pristine are about
to give it the XR treatment but I wanted to hear this legendary performance
without paying much. Had I bought these identical downloads from Amazon.co.uk,
the total cost would have been more than eight times greater.
It's hard to understand the pricing logic of either 7 digital or Amazon
here and analogous criticism can often be applied to other download
websites although not Hyperion or eclassical.com in my experience. At
least for the moment, customers interested in acquiring a cheap
Ring
or two have the opportunity to do so. Clearly, it is really important
to shop around in such a market, otherwise you could pay a lot more
than is necessary to acquire a particular recording.
I am not personally familiar with all the recordings listed above but
I own those marked with an asterisk. Which
Ring to own is an
almost impossible question that I don't intend to address here but I
do think all those asterisked above are worth hearing.
If I had the
Ring and ruled the world, or rather ran 7 digital
or Amazon, and could charge what I wanted to, I would want to sell these
downloadable
Rings in a much more logical way. This would take
into account the age of the oldest, out of copyright, recordings and
the point that I'd often be selling the individual operas too. The Swarowsky
version might still be the cheapest and I would recognise the iconic
status of the Solti version but most of the other relatively new
Rings
would come at about the same price.
Finally, here are some, I hope constructive general suggestions for
the likes of 7 digital and Amazon, reflecting my expectations when purchasing
downloaded classical music:
• The price of a download should be less than the same CD
• One should be able to purchase all tracks individually at a sensible
price if desired
• The most user-friendly "unit" in classical music is an individual
work; it is debatable what that is in the case of the
Ring!
• Pricing should, broadly, take into account the length of the music
• Multiple versions of the exact same recording offered at different
prices at the same time should be weeded out
• Please start labelling things properly - do you know what a composer
actually does? Get rid of "discs" too - they are irrelevant and
can foul up the normal playing order
I hope you don't think me a cynic!
Patrick C Waller
Footnotes:
1. When I bought the Thielemann
Ring from 7 digital, quite a
few of the files in Acts II and III of
Siegfried were mislabelled
and I had to spend a bit of time getting them to play in the right order.
Regard this as a minor health warning.
2. Avoid using Google Chrome to download from 7 digital's website. Firefox
seems fine.
3. I thank David Barker and Brian Wilson for making valuable comments
on a draft of this article. Brian tells me he has downloaded the Swarowsky
Ring and I expect he will comment on it in his download news
series.