The Solti Beethoven Eroica with the VPO was produced and engineered with two different teams, one mono and one stereo. Christopher Raeburn and Gordon Parry for the mono and John Culshaw and James Brown for stereo. Decca engineer John Dunkerley told me that in the early days of stereo, they would usually assign the A team to the mono and the B team to the stereo, since the mono would be the version most people bought. This was recorded in May, 1959, only a year after Decca started releasing stereo records, but five years after they started recording in stereo (along with mono). So I am not too sure which was the A team. Wilkie did not do many recordings in Vienna, with Gordon Parry and Jimmy Brown (who moved to Vienna after marrying an Austrian woman) doing most of the engineering. Wilkie did do some. Dunkerley also told me that when there were two different teams doing the mono and stereo versions, they would often choose different takes and make different edits, so that the two recordings, mono and stereo could actually be significantly different performances.
BTW, at the same session, Decca recorded an album of Suppe Overtures (SXL2174) with the same performers and recording teams. The records may have been mastered and cut differently. My copies of both are wb groove ED1 pressings, with the Beethoven 3ED stamper, and the Suppe 57E stamper. I need to take a listen to see whether my copies have the same issues that Adrian mentions. I also have a 15ips 2 track tape dub of a master copy of the Beethoven. I've never listened to the vinyl and tape back to back to compare. Will need to do that.
Larry
BTW, at the same session, Decca recorded an album of Suppe Overtures (SXL2174) with the same performers and recording teams. The records may have been mastered and cut differently. My copies of both are wb groove ED1 pressings, with the Beethoven 3ED stamper, and the Suppe 57E stamper. I need to take a listen to see whether my copies have the same issues that Adrian mentions. I also have a 15ips 2 track tape dub of a master copy of the Beethoven. I've never listened to the vinyl and tape back to back to compare. Will need to do that.
Larry