Here's a customer review on SA-CD.net who claims the college in Edinburgh was used for the final movement. (Read the first paragraph.) Now that I think about it, it does ring a very faint bell....
Russell,
Thanks for posting this—the plot seems to be thickening. When you say it rings a faint bell, you mean you've heard this claim made elsewhere, that the last movement was recorded in Scotland? Any idea where you heard it?
Some of this reviewer's assertions have me scratching my head. He says in paragraph one, "The Ely Cathedral recording sounded nothing like a cathedral acoustic - it was close miked and rather dry." As someone who's made many recordings in cathedrals, I disagree. It sounds exactly like a recording made in a cathedral, with the microphones pulled in. I hear a T60 reverb time of at least four to five seconds in all the movements, including the last one.
Seeking more information, I timed all the movements on both the Royal Edition CD and the Unitel DVD. They're all within ten seconds of one another except the
Urlicht, which is 30 seconds longer on the CD than the DVD, which suggests, at least, that they used a different take.
I did re-audition portions of both recordings side-by-side and must admit that the balances are quite different in the two fifth movements. Interpretively, the CD version's fifth movement also seems somewhat less "intense" than that on the DVD. If they did record the last movement on the CD in a smaller church in Scotland, they could have added artificial reverb until it matched the sound from Ely. They didn't have convolution reverb back then, but the big EMT plates were surprisingly good when used carefully.
BTW, if anyone knows what the reviewer meant by "The
reverberant but
dry Manhattan Center acoustic..." [italics mine] when referring to the 1963 recording, please advise.
James