Marston's introduction to early recordings began when he was five, a chance encounter of finding a group of old records and a record player in a relative’s basement: "They put on an old Caruso recording for me – it was called 'Hosanna' and it was by a forgotten composer named Granier – and I asked them to play it over and over again. I was fascinated by the tune, by the singing, the sheer sense of history I felt when I was listening to the record." In 1961, his parents took him to a performance of
Puccini's
Turandot conducted by
Leopold Stokowski at the
Metropolitan Opera in New York. This performance was to cement his interest in music and thereafter Marston spent his spare time looking for discounted
78 rpm records in Philadelphia record shops. Marston had already built a substantial library of historic recordings at the time he entered
Williams College and he used his collection to broadcast on the college radio station
WCFM. Dissatisfied with many commercial transfers of early and historic recordings he began producing transfers for broadcasting which lead in 1976 to
Columbia Masterworks engaging Marston to prepare an edition of some early
Budapest String Quartet recordings. Other commissions followed and in 1979 his restoration work on the experimental
Bell Laboratories Wide Range and Stereophonic recordings of Leopold Stokowski and the
Philadelphia Orchestra, made in 1931 and 1932, lead him to being acknowledged as one of the world's leading transfer engineers. A significant body Marston's conservation and reissue work has been issued through several labels including Andante,
Biddulph, Naxos, Pearl, RCA/BMG,
Romophone, and from 1997 on his own label
Marston Records. Among Marston's noted achievements are a collection devoted to the Victor recordings of Fritz Kreisler, released by RCA in 1995 which received a nomination in the category of
Grammy Award for Best Historical Album, the Franklin Mint Toscanini Collection, RCA’s complete
Sergei Rachmaninoff, the Philadelphia Orchestra Centennial Collection, the complete recordings of
Josef Hofmann, The Rubinstein Collection for
RCA Red Seal garnering a second
Grammy Award nomination in 2001; and the complete recordings of
Enrico Caruso for the Pearl and Naxos labels. His own record label was formed in order to reissue recordings by performers neglected by the major record companies. These have included an ongoing series devoted to the acoustically recorded complete operas on
Pathé; the collection, a three-CD collection of rare, privately-made cylinder recordings featuring some of the most important musical personalities of the late 19th and early 20th centuries; The Edison Legacy containing unpublished recordings from the Edison Archive; the complete recordings of
Feodor Chaliapin; and the completion in 2019 of the complete recordings of tenor
John McCormack, a project that begun in 1995 on the Romophone label with subsequent issues on Naxos and Marston's own label. ==References==