Fred Gaisberg records the Great Caruso and kickstarts the modern record business – our new podcast episode out today

It’s the spring of 1902. Italian tenor Enrico Caruso is due to sing in Covent Garden later in the year, and Fred and Will are still in Milan desperate to record him. Their plan – in what predates the now-ubiquitous music industry ‘360’ marketing deal by over 100 years – is to print the master discs onto shellac and release the records in London in time for Caruso’s Opera House appearance, thereby capitalising on his huge popularity. Fred wants to pay him £100 for ten records, but his bosses in London balk at the cost. But Fred does it anyway. It’s a huge gamble. But Fred’s risk is vindicated: his Caruso recordings kick-start the music industry in a way he could only have dreamed of. Overnight, the public are hooked. Finally, the record industry comes alive.

Links:

Enrico Caruso

https://www.operanews.com/Opera_News_Magazine/2013/7/Features/The_Great_Caruso.html

More on Caruso

https://www.myitalianfamily.com/resource-center/enrico-caruso-opera-singer-sketch-artist-collector-and-more

Caruso’s first ever recording, April 1902 – Studenti, udite

Caruso’s sketch (note the HMV logo in the background)

https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Enrico_Caruso

You can subcribe to the podcast on all good podcast platforms including: Spotify  Apple and Acast.

We hope you enjoy listening as much as we’ve enjoyed recording them

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