This is much better 
                value for money from BMG. It has, emblazoned 
                on the sleeve, "Two complete Living 
                Stereo LPs on a single disc!" In 
                fact RCA some years ago issued this 
                self-same coupling on an RCA mid-price 
                release (RCA 09026-67958-2). In the 
                CD format there is absolutely no difference 
                in sound quality between the audio CD 
                in the older coupling, and the SACD 
                version played on a standard CD player. 
                Any difference is said to be dependent 
                on having an SACD player. 
              
 
              
Reiner’s recordings 
                in this series have been enthusiastically 
                received by music-lovers. At last they 
                have now been allowed to appreciate 
                what superlative playing Reiner was 
                able to conjure from the Chicago orchestra. 
              
 
              
On this well-filled 
                disc we have performances of Russian 
                orchestral repertoire. These would be 
                difficult to better anywhere and with 
                recordings which now more than adequately 
                show what the engineers were able to 
                get from Symphony Hall in Chicago. Let 
                us hope that BMG will eventually issue 
                all of the Living Stereo series of recordings. 
                They often seem to start, and then fizzle 
                out in mid-stream. There are many wonderful 
                goodies still waiting for us in the 
                RCA vaults, some of which have yet to 
                see the light of day on CD; a tragedy 
                for all, listeners, artists and the 
                company itself, through lost revenues. 
              
 
              
The Living Stereo recordings 
                were originally mixed down from three 
                tracks to two. Now that Surround Sound 
                has arrived, BMG is reissuing these 
                recordings with the three discrete channels, 
                left, right and centre being separate 
                rather than mixed down to the two channel 
                sound which we are all used to. Having 
                the central channel available improves 
                the sound quality somewhat, but the 
                effect is minimal. Indeed in some of 
                these recordings, the original engineers 
                only recorded the left and right channels, 
                so the SACD and CD versions are identical. 
                One good check of your equipment is 
                a blind test to see if you can pick 
                out the two channel recordings – I failed. 
              
 
              
Like many of Reiner’s 
                recordings, the performances have never 
                been surpassed, and the Pictures is 
                one of these. I know that there are 
                many first class performances around, 
                by eminent conductors and ensembles, 
                but for me, this one can hold its head 
                up against any comers. I would never 
                say that this is the only performance 
                to get because in such a work there 
                are so many perfectly valid ways of 
                presenting it to the public. Nevertheless, 
                the whole programme is in this category, 
                and if I was to single out one choice 
                from this disc it would be the Kabalevsky. 
                There has never been a performance to 
                compete with this one. It is simply 
                superb. 
              
John Phillips