About a month ago, I featured excerpts from Prokofiev's score for the ballet
Cinderella, from the Royal Opera House Orchestra under Warwick Braithwaite. Now here, on request, are two of the three suites that the composer authorized from the score - also from the ROH Orchestra, this time under Hugo Rignold.
The Braithwaite recording was made in conjunction with the ballet first Western performance, which was by the Sadler's Wells Ballet in 1948. Frederick Ashton's staging became a mainstay of the company, and in 1957 was the basis of an American television program, which was likely the impetus behind this second recording.
 |
Margot Fonteyn and Michael Somes |
The televised production was in the prestigious NBC series Producers' Showcase, broadcast live and in color from 1954-57. It marked the second time that the ballet company had appeared in the series. First was
Sleeping Beauty in late 1955, followed by the May 1957
Cinderella staging. Both featured Margot Fonteyn and Michael Somes in the leading roles. A DVD of the
televised Cinderella is available; you can see an excerpt on
YouTube.
 |
Hugo Rignold |
Although the NBC telecast was on April 29 and the recording session for this LP was the following week, they employed two different conductors. Robert Irving led the orchestra for the TV show, as he had for the most recent performances at Covent Garden. But Hugo Rignold, then new to the company, was in charge for the recording session at Kingsway Hall. What is more peculiar, later in May Irving took the Royal Philharmonic into the studio to make a competing recording for EMI. While this was presumably done for contractual reasons, the Royal Ballet's administration could not have been happy to see its longtime (1949-58) music director become a competitor.
The online biographies of Irving and Rignold both state that they were music directors of the Royal Ballet in 1957 and 1958, so it is unclear who was in charge when this record was made. In any event, Irving was off to the US in the latter year to take up residence with the New York City Ballet.
Rignold stayed with the ballet until 1960, when he moved to the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Previously he had been with the Liverpool Philharmonic. Rignold had a background in popular music, so he was not (and is not) taken very seriously as a classical conductor. Nonetheless, this present effort is well done, and moreover is nicely recorded. This was during a period when RCA Victor's sessions were handled by English Decca's production staffs.
 |
First Red Seal cover |
The record first came out in mono in 1957. I believe the initial stereo issue was this 1965 pressing in RCA's budget Victrola series. I own a mono Red Seal pressing (cover above), but have never seen an early stereo Red Seal and Philip Stuart does not list such an issue in his UK Decca discography. All stereo Red Seals that I have seen date from the 1990s or later (and use the mono back cover). The Irving recording for EMI also was first issued in mono, which is the format of my copy on American Angel.
The download includes several photos from the television production, a few brief reviews of the Rignold LP, and front and back scans of both the Red Seal and Victrola covers.
Link (Apple lossless):
ReplyDeletehttps://mega.nz/#!7BEHyaoI!FwYSQFuQTpdhYZ0OP-2E5aZoMdDeQ1Kz-BL-DaJ8vYg
Bravo! Thanks as always.
ReplyDeleteA splendid production; many thanks indeed for this now somewhat neglected recording.
ReplyDeleteP
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Buster. Much appreciated. Your transfer is brighter than mine and doesn't have the distortion.
ReplyDeleterev b, Oeter, Geoconno - Please enjoy the music!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks once more for this post.
ReplyDeleteI have been discovering this quite interesting conductor also with Russian music (Rimsky-Mussorgsky).
Not to say about an excellent Delibes (Sylvia/Coppélia).
He also recorded the ballet from Gounod's Faust...do you have , dear Buster, this LP?
Hi centuri - I am sorry, but I don't have that record. Thanks as always for your comment!
Deletecenturi - A pleasant surprise - the Rignold Delibes recording turned up in a pile of Living Stereo records in my basement. I'll transfer it when I get a chance. I don't seem to have the Gounod, but you never know what might appear in the stacks.
DeleteThx for your reply dear Buster !
ReplyDeleteThank you, Buster.
ReplyDeleteRich
Thanks Buster. I'm just a little too young to remember Rignold in the pit, but these are stylish performances, with the ROHO playing music they knew (and still know) inside out. Any comparison with Irving shows that Rignold, while perfectly competent, just lacks that extra frisson of style.
ReplyDeleteI assumed the very good recording, since you mention Decca engineers, was made by Reg Wilkinson at Walthamstow, but I think I detected the familiar rumble of the Piccadilly Line under Kingsway Hall (just around the corner from Covent Garden).
I'm afraid the problem for me is that ballet suites are slightly annoying because they rarely follow the sequence of the entire work; my memory always expects a different number. Nevertheless a good recording to have. I realise that I must have seen it in shops and never bothered to buy it - my loss, now remedied thanks to your generosity.
Andrew - I was going to transfer both the Irving and Rignold recordings, but I realized I don't have a stereo copy of the Irving disc. Both were made in Kingsway Hall, according to the discographers.
DeleteA fascinating post, as always. You are having something of an unofficial Prokofiev ballet festival at the moment, Buster - for which many thanks.
ReplyDeletePhillip - I love Prokofiev and I love ballet music, so I am parked at the intersection of the two.
Delete