The question here 
                  is transfer quality. These are such well known and admired traversals 
                  that commentary is pretty much redundant and Primrose admirers 
                  tend to concentrate on the superiority or otherwise of the Goehr, 
                  pre-War London Casadesus/Handel or this American 1946 remake, 
                  and the various recordings Primrose left of the Walton and Berlioz. 
                  All are pretty much self-recommending whatever your particular 
                  preference, notwithstanding the changing timbral nature of Primrose’s 
                  tone - its greater, tensile Heifetzian quality and faster vibrato 
                  in the post-War years.
                To business then. 
                  Is it this Mark Obert-Thorn transfer of the Casadesus/Handel 
                  the preferred one or the Rick Torres for Biddulph? You can find 
                  the Torres transfer on LAB146 devoted to the great violist’s 
                  recordings and you will find that it is palpably inferior to 
                  this Naxos. The new release has greater body, immediacy and 
                  definition and catches Primrose’s tone with greater fidelity. 
                  As for the Walton I can only compare this latest transfer with 
                  the last EMI LP pressing, on Treasury EH2912761. Naxos certainly 
                  preserves more surface noise but, pound for pound, shilling 
                  for shilling, the Naxos edges it by virtue of its greater presence, 
                  without any artificial spotlighting.
                There’s a difference 
                  in transfer philosophies when it comes to the Berlioz. The leading 
                  contender is Dutton CDEA 5013 in which Mike Dutton used the 
                  78s to transfer. But Mark Obert-Thorn has gone for a transfer 
                  from LPs with their wider dynamic range. It’s a move that has 
                  paid off in this instance. The Naxos sound is brighter, and 
                  captures far more of the frequencies enshrined in the recording. 
                  In fact the Dutton sounds positively subterranean next to the 
                  newcomer with congealed bass frequencies all too honestly retained 
                  and an amorphous sense of the Boston Symphony’s string section. 
                  With the Naxos you can very readily appreciate the string choir’s 
                  separation and the greater sense of aeration in their transfer. 
                  There’s also some scrunch in the Dutton that one doesn’t find 
                  with the Naxos.
                Given the competition 
                  A/B listening hands the palm to Naxos. The release also inaugurates 
                  a new Great Violists series, which is very welcome. Primrose 
                  has been well covered in re-releases, though can someone please 
                  find evidence of his Fricker and Rubbra concerto performances? 
                  In the meantime can I hope that Naxos gets to grips with Lionel 
                  Tertis’ imperishable legacy. Biddulph has announced a set of 
                  his Columbia 78s but his earlier acoustic Vocalions have been 
                  shamefully treated over the years. It’s time for a recording 
                  engineer and a company with vision and commitment to get to 
                  work and restore that body of recordings to the living catalogue, 
                  where it belongs.
                Jonathan Woolf
                see also Review 
                  by Christopher Howell