Vesuvius erupted in 
                A.D 79 burying Pompeii in lava and pyroclastic 
                flows. In the case of small to medium 
                scale eruptions the scene of potential 
                devastation can span as much as four 
                miles but the Vesuvian eruption of that 
                year was catastrophic. But not as catastrophic 
                as this release from Walhall. 
              
 
              
This is a broadcast 
                of a 1950 production – I use the word 
                loosely – of Handel’s operatic masterpiece 
                Giulio Cesare given in the Teatro 
                Grande, Pompeii in 1950. It might, however, 
                have been A.D.79 given the appalling 
                splinter of noise that masquerades as 
                music. It’s unquestionably the case 
                that 1901 Zonophones from the dawn of 
                recording history sound immeasurably 
                better. So I’m afraid there’s no point 
                discussing this performance, which sounds 
                awful anyway, what little one can hear 
                of it. Somewhere there is Tebaldi and 
                also Cesare Siepi, a fine singer. One 
                can hear that the opera has been cut, 
                mauled, re-ordered, shorn of numerous 
                recitatives and da capo arias and presented 
                as butch verismo. The sound is 
                unbelievably bad: constricted, distorted, 
                full of rumble, radio station and static 
                interference and utterly intolerable. 
              
 
              
Beyond the jokes there 
                are serious points to be made:- 
              
 
              
1. Potential purchasers 
                will be drawn to the full-length photograph 
                of Tebaldi on the booklet cover. 
              
2. First Time on 
                CD, Walhall announces, enticingly, 
                on the front cover. 
              
3. They claim 24 Bit 
                96 KHz remastering. 
              
 
              
I have no objection 
                to material even as awful as this being 
                released but:- 
              
 
              
1. Walhall should note 
                exactly where its source material comes 
                from. 
              
2. Notes should be 
                provided. 
              
3. If Walhall is going 
                to dangle Tebaldi as bait and claim 
                24 Bit 96 KHz remastering then they 
                have a duty and a responsibility to 
                alert potential purchasers as to the 
                dreadful state of the tapes. It’s highly 
                likely that purchasers will be misled 
                by talk of 24 Bit 96 KHz into thinking 
                that these tapes are presented in a 
                reasonable state of preservation. The 
                complete opposite is the case. They’re 
                effectively unlistenable. 
              
4. All reputable companies 
                dealing in historical material carry 
                warnings as to preserved sound. I think 
                of Arbiter, Music & Arts and Tahra, 
                for instance, who routinely and minutely 
                detail sonic imperfections, often when 
                they are slight. 
              
 
              
In short this is an 
                unforgivably appalling release. It’s 
                too much, I suppose, to expect that 
                the producers, company and distributors 
                will feel ashamed of themselves – but 
                they should. I strongly suggest to them 
                that this disc is either withdrawn or 
                repackaged responsibly, in the way I 
                have described. Nothing less will do. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf