22 April 2020

20th Century Music for Clarinet and Piano

Stanley Drucker is one of the best known clarinet players of the recent past but he has made relatively few solo recordings. Here is one from 1971 with five excellent works from eminent 20th century composers. The Odyssey LP pairs Drucker with pianist Leonid Hambro, himself a distinguished figure.

Stanley Drucker
Drucker, born in 1929, was the principal clarinetist of the New York Philharmonic for an amazing 49 years, from 1960 until 2009. He was with the orchestra for more than 62 years - his entire working career.

Leonid Hambro
Hambro (1920-2006) made a number of recordings early in his career for such labels as Allegro, but later became known for his comedic bent. He spent a decade as the sidekick of Victor Borge, and appeared on P.D.Q Bach and Gerard Hoffnung programs. He also collaborated with synthesizer player Gershon Kingsley for a record of Switched-On Gershwin. He was a talented accompanist as well.

For this LP, Drucker and Hambro programmed Leonard Bernstein's early and enjoyable Sonata, Sonatinas from Darius Milhaud and Arthur Honegger, Debussy's brief Petite Piece for clarinet and piano, and a typically discursive but lovely sonata by Sir Arnold Bax.

I suspect that this was an independent production that Drucker and Hambro brought to Columbia, which put it out on its budget Odyssey label, mainly devoted to reissues. The sound is vivid but it does compress the dynamic range of the performance.

I transferred the LP is response to a request on a classical sharing site, but I thought some readers here might enjoy it as well.

Circa 1970s ad

12 comments:

  1. Link (Apple lossless):

    https://mega.nz/file/rBVHxIpQ#UjAMBZTp9lPE8tTLjxvuHWNBWgeA4f1T-28O44wW484

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  2. Thanks so much Buster for this original, delightful and so musical program, exploring the expressive possibilities of clarinet. Very good performances as well.

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  3. Trying to figure out what I'm seeing on that cover. Piano keys, I think, and maybe clarinet parts? Glass pendants? Prince Rupert Drops? I'm all confused...

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  4. Thanks for making this available. It looks to be a solid exploration of the byways of the clarinet repertoir.

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  5. Thanks for the comments, everyone!

    Ernie - It does look like clarinet keys superimposed on piano keys, with a sickly green tint added.

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  6. I had this LP as a kid, and fell in love with the Bernstein Sonata. Many thanks!

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  7. Those are definitely clarinet keys (and part of the body of the instrument) and piano keys. I'm not sure which keys but then I'm not used to looking at them from that angle.

    I used to be able to play through the Milhaud and Honegger items. Playing them at the level of Stanley Drucker, however, was far beyond my merely pretty-good-for-an-amateur capabilities. I can't imagine how I missed this when it was issued on LP, so I am doubly happy to find it here.

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    1. Charlot - Well, it was issued almost 50 years ago, so it's been a while. Not sure when I acquired it.

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  8. I would have thought they were spoons and butter knives! Looks pretty similar to the wacky covers that the designer Christopher Whorf did for Westminster Gold in this period.

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    1. Boursin - I do remember those Westminster Gold covers, but not fondly.

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  9. Many thanks for this rarity Buster

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