22 November 2017

Kerstmis - Christmas in Flanders

There may be no better way to herald the holiday season with this gorgeous cover and the lovely and touching music it contains.

Lod. de Vocht
"Kerstmis" is Dutch for Christmas, and this 10-inch LP originated in Flanders, the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium, circa 1960.

Leading the vocal and instrumental ensembles, and I believe also arranging the music, is the Flemish composer, conductor and educator Lodewijk de Vocht (1887-1977). The choral groups are the Royal Chorale Caecilia, which de Vocht founded, and the Boys' Choir of St. Livinus's College, Antwerp.

De Vocht reached back as far as the 14th century for his materials, arranging them to present the story of the nativity.

Poster for 1940 de Vocht concert
I was enchanted by the music and charmed by the performances, and wanted to provide you with a translation of the explanatory notes, which are in Dutch. Unfortunately, the machine translation was too far afield from comprehensibility for me to even complete a rough clean up for you. At one point Google insisted that the shepherds' voices were accompanied by shawms and a noodle pack, which can't be right.

UPDATE: Flemish reader Monsieur Maurice has come to the rescue with a translation of the notes into English! Please see the comments section for a link. Thanks, Monsieur Maurice!

After some coaxing, the record yielded pleasing sound. But there are a few momentary hiccups that I hope you will forgive, this being the holiday season and all.

Happy Thanksgiving to US readers!

17 November 2017

Neal Hefti on Coral

Neal Hefti hasn't made many appearances on this blog, but his bands, arrangements and compositions are favorites of mine (well, maybe not the "Batman Theme").

Hefti made his name by composing and arranging for Woody Herman and other bands in the 40s. He directed a few sides for Mercury and Clef, but his first major contract was with Decca and its subsidiary Coral label, starting in 1951.

The young Neal Hefti
Hefti's initial output came out on singles, many of which were assembled on this 10-inch LP in 1953. It takes its title from "Coral Reef," the first instrumental the composer recorded for the label.

All songs therein are Hefti originals, mainly straight-ahead swingers that display the considerable skill and drive of his studio band. There aren't many solos, but you will hear contributions from Billy Taylor's piano and the leader's trumpet.

12-inch LP cover
Hefti moved on to RCA's new Label "X" at about the same time as this LP came out. (See my post of his Rudolf Friml album here.) But such defections don't deter record companies from capitalizing on their back catalogs, so in 1956 Coral repackaged Swingin' on Coral Reef as a 12-inch LP called The Band with Young Ideas by adding four songs from the same 1951-52 sessions. Two of these are Hefti compositions - "Waltzing on a Cloud" and "In Veradero." "Sahara's Aide" is one of the many classical Frankensongs that were popular about then, and "Charmaine" was a cover of Mantovani's British hit of the time. The latter has a vocal by the Cavaliers. I've transferred these added tunes from my copy of the 12-inch record, and have included them in the download.

Count Basie
During this time, Hefti was consolidating his reputation as a freelance band arranger and composer. He contributed "In Veradero" to the Stan Kenton band, and began his long association with the so-called "New Testament" Count Basie band. Among the first recordings for his reorganized band, Basie included Hefti's "Why Not?" and "Sure Thing," also assayed by the composer himself for this group of Coral sides. I've added the Basie recordings to the download so you can hear the considerable contrast between the two bands. The Basies are not my transfers, but I have remastered the sound.

Coral's sonics are well-balanced, but with a fair amount of reverb, which distances the band. You may notice the difference when you come to the Norman Granz-produced Basie sides. [Note (June 2023): These recordings have now been remastered in vivid ambient stereo.]

By the way, I believe the photo of Hefti on the 10- and 12-inch LPs is the same. Looks like they flopped the photo for the Coral Reef album, judging by the part in his hair.

10 November 2017

Song Settings by Finzi, Butterworth and Vaughan Williams

Gerald Finzi
Recently I have been posting recordings of the Walton-Sitwell entertainment Façade, including the original 1929 version with Dame Edith and Constant Lambert, Walton conducting. That edition came from a LP that also offered the first recordings of two notable sets of English song - Gerald Finzi's Dies Natalis and George Butterworth's A Shropshire Lad. Today I am posting my transfers of that music, together with the initial recording of Ralph Vaughan Williams's On Wenlock Edge - three landmarks in 20th century English song setting.

For Dies Natalis, Finzi set poems by Thomas Traherne, a 17th century poet and clergyman whose work is generally grouped with the metaphysical poets although his writings were virtually unknown until the 20th century. Dies Natalis is in form a cantata, with an orchestral introduction and then settings of four striking poems that convey the wonder and innocence of the newborn child.

Joan Cross
The performance is by soprano Joan Cross and the Boyd Neel Orchestra, dating from October 1946 and January 1947. The legend is that neither the composer nor the singer were happy with the results, and today the set is seldom heard. There is something to that: Cross was a noted actor, but wonder and innocence were apparently not in her artistic arsenal. Still and all, the records are not as bad as one might think. They convey Finzi's gorgeous string writing well, and the singer is sympathetic, clear and in tune.

The full power of Finzi's work would not be displayed on record until 1964, when it was taken up for EMI by tenor Wilfred Brown and the composer's son, Christopher. This remains my own favorite, one I played for myself the night my first child was born nearly 40 years ago.

Gervase Elwes
Both Vaughan Williams and his younger colleague George Butterworth set poems by their contemporary A.E. Housman, drawn from his popular collection A Shropshire Lad. The older composer set six of the poems for tenor, piano and string quartet. The work is here performed by tenor Gervase Elwes, the work's dedicatee, with pianist Frederick Kiddle and the London String Quartet. Elwes and Kiddle both took part in the first performance, in 1909. The recording dates from 1917, and is thoroughly remarkable. Elwes is more declamatory than is the norm a century later. His sense of time is flexible; he and the instrumentalists draw out the concluding "Clun" to powerful effect. It's impossible not to reflect that the sense of loss and impending doom - always implicit in Housman - were especially pronounced during the recording sessions, which took place three years into the horrific first world war.

George Butterworth
Butterworth himself was a victim of the war, killed in the Battle of the Somme in 1916 at age 31. He left relatively few works; notably this collection and the orchestral work The Banks of Green Willow. Both he and Vaughan Williams set Housman's ironic "Is My Team Ploughing?" As you might expect, given their similar styles and close association, the settings have some similarity. Vaughan Williams left out the poem's two stanzas that dealt with football, to Housman's irritation. The composer thought the poet ought to be happy he left out a passage with the clunky couplet "The goal stands up, the keeper / Stands up to keep the goal."

Butterworth set 11 poems from A Shropshire Lad; this is the first set, which strictly speaking is called Six Songs from A Shropshire Lad. The second set, not included here, is Bredon Hill and Other Songs.


Roy Henderson
The present recording comes from 1941, with Roy Henderson, one of the finest baritones of his generation, and Gerald Moore, the most famous accompanist of the time.

The sound on all these issues is well balanced and pleasing - even the Vaughan Williams from a century ago. Using modern tools, it's possible to get good results from many such acoustic recordings, within the limits of their constricted frequency range.

03 November 2017

Edith Sitwell's 1949 Façade

The other day I was listening to some early-30s radio recordings of George Gershwin performing his own music, and was struck by how different his rendition of the first piano Prelude was from the version done by his follower Oscar Levant in the 1940s. Levant makes the piece sound like an Americanized Satie, while Gershwin shows it to be from the ragtime tradition.

I'm probably not alone in preferring Levant's evocative playing to Gershwin's brisk run-through - even though there is something that tells me I should prefer the composer in his own work.

This, too, is the case with William Walton's settings of Edith Sitwell's poetry. Do I have to like Walton's own 1929 recording of Façade, with Sitwell and Constant Lambert as reciters, recently presented here? Or can I admit to a strong predilection for this 1949 outing by Sitwell and a chamber orchestra led by the young Frederik (here spelled Frederick) Prausnitz?

In truth, I also prefer Dame Edith's recitation on this 10-inch LP to her efforts 20 years before. While she does not have the breath control of her younger self, she seems more engaged with Prausnitz's flexible reading of the score.

1948 Horst P. Horst portrait of Edith Sitwell
Then again, this is not to say that Walton would approve. Reader JAC, who knows the piece intimately from having performed it several times, commented on the 1929 version: "Study of the score reveals that Dame Edith never mastered the specific rhythms that Walton wrote, particularly the syncopations; sometimes she wasn't even in the right measure."

Columbia's 1949 recording was designed to be a 25th anniversary edition of Façade's first public performance. The cover notes by Osbert Sitwell describe its genesis and the scandal that attended that premiere. Columbia's Goddard Lieberson indulges in some hyperbole about Sitwell, and the whole thing is presented as being produced "in cooperation with the Museum of Modern Art," although it's not clear what's MOMA contribution had been. The very good recording comes from Columbia's 30th Street Studio.

Columbia engaged the wonderful Jim Flora for its cover. His idiosyncratic drawings are well in tune with the spirit of the proceedings, with his letter forms a particular delight.

Frederik Prausnitz
A final note: this may have been conductor Prausnitz's first record session. He went on to be typed, at least in the recording studio, as a 20th-century specialist. His next record, also for Columbia, was of Carl Ruggles, in 1954. He went on to conduct scores by Wolpe, Sessions, Schoenberg, Riegger, Musgrave, Gerhard, Dallapiccola, Carter and Busoni for Columbia, EMI and Argo.