29 August 2017

Constant Lambert and Brian Easdale

I'm planning to present a series of posts devoted to the 20th century English composer-conductor Constant Lambert, starting with this 10-inch LP that couples scenes from his Horoscope ballet with music from The Red Shoes composed by Brian Easdale.

Lambert was a talented man, skilled at both writing and performing music. He wrote the music for Horoscope in 1937 for a production at the Vic-Wells Ballet choreographed by Frederick Ashton. It is thought that the scenario in some ways paralleled his relationship with dancer Margot Fonteyn, who assumed one of the leading roles.

Michael Somes and Margot
Fonteyn in Horoscope
Lambert was then only 32, but he had already written most of the music he would finish in his brief life, which ended in 1951, two years after these recording sessions.

This LP contains just two of the nine surviving sections of the ballet music: the gorgeous, Ravelian "Saraband for the Followers of Virgo" and a Bacchanale slightly reminiscent of another astrological work, Holst's The Planets.

Lambert actually recorded five of the ballet's scenes - three with the Liverpool Philharmonic in 1945 and these two with the Philharmonia in 1949. The Liverpool sessions are not represented on this LP, but I have included them in the download as a bonus. (Not my transfer, although I did clean up the sound.)

Constant Lambert
Lambert was also a witty critic, notably in his 1934 book Music, Ho!, which contains the oft-cited assessment, "The whole trouble with a folk song is that once you have played it through there is nothing much you can do except play it over again and play it rather louder." I've included the book in the download, courtesy of Project Gutenberg Canada.

Brian Easdale
I don't mean to slight the other work on this record, which combines Brian Easdale's prelude and ballet music from the remarkable 1948 Powell-Pressburger film, The Red Shoes. This is far and away the composer's best known work, although it does not match the quality of Lambert's score. Easdale had a long and fruitful working arrangement with Powell and Pressburger, scoring seven of their films. He won an Academy Award for this music.

This record is not the original soundtrack, which was conducted by Easdale and, in the ballet, Sir Thomas Beecham. It is a version done in 1949 by film music specialist Muir Mathieson and the Philharmonia.

Both recording sessions were held in Abbey Road Studio No. 1, and both resulted in superb sound. The English Columbia ad below suggests that the company thought that both the Lambert and Easdale 78 sets would make dandy Christmas presents in 1949, and I might have liked to receive them myself, had I not been nine months old and more inclined to the likes of "Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo."

Click to enlarge

25 comments:

  1. Link (Apple lossless):

    https://www.mediafire.com/file/37pkza7s7b73alv/Easdale%20-%20Red%20Shoes%2C%20Lambert%20-%20Horoscope.zip

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  2. Thank you, Buster! Lambert is a seriously underrated composer, and I've never heard anything by him I didn't like. As it happens I recently found a copy of the Liverpool-recorded sections of Horoscope on English Columbia 78s, so I am looking forward to hearing the two movements on your LP.

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  3. Thank you Buster for yet another fascinating post.

    Will look forward to the Lambert series.

    Cheers,

    Douglas (UK)

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  4. Thanks, Buster! I have a question about that Columbia ad. What is meant by "Auto-Couplings" as mentioned for a few albums? Does that mean 78s sequenced for automatic play of a longer work?

    --Jeff

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  5. Thanks, all, for the comments!

    Bryan - I agree he was a fine composer; I only wish I had more of his records as composer rather than conductor.

    Jeff - You are correct!

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  6. This is most interesting -- thank you for providing it!

    Constant Lambert is indeed an interesting and multi-talented figure. Among his performing skills was recitation: I believe I'm correct in remembering that out of all the people who had performed the Edith Sitwell poems for William Walton's "Façade: An Entertainment" (which I've done myself on several occasions), Lambert was Walton's own favorite.

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  7. JAC - I didn't know that about Lambert and Facade. I have Lambert's recording of the work, but I believe it is the orchestral suites sans narration.

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  8. Lambert did record some of the original Façade as reciter -- maybe even more than once. I'll check my CDs to verify what's there.

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  9. JAC - Just to be clear, I am not doubting you, just mentioning that I have a version without the spoken verse.

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  10. Buster-

    Gratified that I figured out auto-couplings! And feeling sorry for people who bought 78 albums of symphonic works that didn't do this. How common was it? I've only seen "auto-coupled" sets, but I'e only owned American issues. I'm sure the fadeout/pause/drop/needle noise was annoying if you were listening to a symphony, but if the album was configured so that you had to get up and turn the darn record over...oh dear...NOT COOL as the kids would say...

    --Jeff

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  11. Jeff - I am no expert on 78 sets, but I think that auto-coupling was mainly an issue with classical albums. I don't know when automatic changers were introduced, but it may not have been until the 40s. They of course were also useful for pop 78s used for dancing. The problem for manufacturers and retailers with classical albums was the need to stock both automatic and manual formats. Later on (and depending on your age, you may remember this), manufacturers had to choose to make opera sets on LP available in auto or manual format, as well. (At that point, they chose one or the other.) For those who, like me, only had a manual turntable, auto format was a pain. You had to keep fishing out a different record for every side. We looked down on auto format because auto changers were hard on records (or so we thought).

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  12. Buster, I never thought that you doubted me! Just trying to add to the information, as I find Lambert an intriguing figure even if not a "major" one. He himself seems to have had doubts about his status as a composer, but he had real success as a conductor, with major ballet and opera companies. (And he had an apparently quite intense affair with Margot Fonteyn, in addition to his two marriages.)

    Both CDs I have feature him in multiple roles. One, on Symposium, has Walton conducting 11 items from Façade, with CL and Sitwell reciting (1929 recording), CL conducting his Rio Grande and his film score Things To Come, and conducting music by Warlock and Berners. The other, on Dutton, has him conducting Bliss, Gordon, and himself; the Façade recording again; and a track of him talking about ballet for the BBC in 1924.

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  13. JAC - Thanks, I had no desire to annoy one of my valued commenters! Now that you mention it, I wonder if I have that Symposium CD myself. (Goodness knows where it might be.) I have the LP versions of the Bliss (I think he was the Things to Come composer) and Gordon items, among other items that I hope to transfer, if there is interest.

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  14. Right you are (of course) about Bliss being the Things To Come composer. In typing from the CD cover, I breezed past a parenthetical credit (in my defense, much less prominent than the other composer credits on the back cover).

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  15. Thanks so much Buster for this rare LP. Constant Lambert is an excellent composer and an interesting conductor. I keep in mind his original "Rio Grande" as well as his arrangement of "les Patineurs" by Meyerbeer.

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  16. centuri - I wish I had that version of the Rio Grande. I do have the Meyerbeer.

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  17. Dear Buster,

    I'll look forward to these posts. One small correction: at the time the Lambert/Easdale was recorded the full score of 'Horoscope' was indeed thought lost, but a copy was later rediscovered and the complete ballet was recorded c.2004 by Barry Wordsworth.

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  18. Buster--

    Thank you for the further follow-up about auto-coupling and arrangement of record sides in general. (And my apologies for pulling this discussion off-topic, but I hope others don't mind.) I hadn't realized this issue survived into the LP era but of course it did. I grew up in the era of the "aircraft carrier" (as the collectors now call them) hi-fi stereo/radio console. As far as the multi-disc sets in our house were concerned, it didn't really matter in which order you played "The Supremes' Greatest Hits" on our Magnavox. That said, I have learned a lot about recording technology, promotion, etc. from your blog and am always glad when you include this kind of information. Thanks again, and I'm done now!

    Jeff

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  19. David - Yes, I should have said the five surviving sections. I believe the full score, sets, etc. were lost when the ballet had to evacuate the Netherlands at the German invasion. Four additional sections were later discovered, as you note.

    Jeff - Always happy to discuss esoterica.

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  20. The 78rpm version of this set is available here: https://www.78rpmcommunity.com/beta/music/album/61/the-red-shoes-ballet-music-78rpms

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  21. what format are these file in as i cannot get then to play on any of my players

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  22. Apple lossless, as noted above. Try iTunes.

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  23. sorted got the files to play in video lan

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  24. the most bizarre format IMHO is Drop sequence. watching that player in action is definitely a white knuckle flight as each record drops into the hole in the player furniture to be collected and reloaded once the group is turned over

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