Andor Foldes Plays Contemporary American Music
I was surprised to discover this 1947 album of Andor Foldes (1913-92) playing American piano music. I associate his name with the music of his teacher Bartók and other stalwarts of the European canon. He was, however, a naturalized American citizen, having emigrated here in the 1930s, remaining until he returned to Europe in 1960 for professional reasons.Foldes' 1941 debut in New York was devoted to Bach-Busoni, Beethoven, Schumann, Liszt, Bartók and Kodaly, but by the time of his 1947 Town Hall program, he had added works by the Roy Harris, Virgil Thomson and Paul Bowles to the mix, likely the items on this Vox album.In addition to the three Americans, the Vox collection includes short works by Aaron Copland, Samuel Barber, Roger Sessions, Walter Piston and William Schuman. These were among the first recordings of these compositions.
The album was also among the first from the now-venerable American Vox label. (There had been a German Vox earlier in the century.) The US company started up in 1945, and made this recording the following year, per A Classical Discography. The resulting set apparently did not come out until 1947, when it was reviewed late in the year both in the New York Times and Saturday Review. Both brief notices are in the download, along with reviews of Foldes' 1941 and 1947 recitals.
![]() |
Andor Foldes |
Copland - Music for Movies; Weill - Music for the Stage
Aaron Copland's Music for Movies, which comes from 1942, assembles themes he wrote for The City, Of Mice and Men and Our Town. The best - and best known - are "New England Countryside" from The City and "Grovers Corners" from Our Town. I believe this was the first recording of this suite in orchestral form, although "Grovers Corners" had been recorded on piano twice - including by Andor Foldes in the album above, under the name "Story of Our Town." The other recording, by Leo Smit, is available on this blog in a remastered version. It is from a 1946-47 Concert Hall Society album Smit shared with Copland himself.
![]() |
Arthur Winograd at work |
Contemporary reviewer Alfred Frankenstein pronounced the Copland suite to be effective and the Weill "trash," strange considering that the latter composer influenced the former. Reviewers were more to the point back then, and held (or at least expressed) stronger opinions.
Frankenstein also opined that the "recording and performance are of the best." I can agree with the latter judgment, but the recording is another matter. It was close and harsh, so I have added a small amount of reverberation to moderate those qualities. [Note (July 2023): these files have now been remastered in ambient stereo.]
By the way, Winograd had almost no conducting experience when he began recording for M-G-M. Edward Cole had turned up at a Juilliard concert that Winograd conducted, was impressed, and offered him a recording session. This anecdote is contained in an interview with the conductor included in the download. Also on this blog, Winograd can be heard conducting music by Paul Bowles.
Both these recordings were cleaned up from lossless needle drops found on Internet Archive.
Two most interesting collections, for which many thanks; all good wishes, P
ReplyDeleteThanks, Peter - best to you as well!
DeleteBuster, thanks so much for the Copland-Weill! I had this LP in the 1960s and I'm really leated for the download.
ReplyDeleteHope you enjoy it, Larry!
DeleteSomehow Buster, you know just the right thing to post. This is just the latest example, always appreciated. Sounds like the ice in the pools should be melting later this week!
ReplyDeleterev.b - my pleasure! I am looking forward to some sun and swimming!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks dear Buster for these two excellent LPs featuring rare works. Foldes in this American repertoire is again amazing: a true musician! On the other hand, Winograd manages so well with the diversity of the two works. Under him these film scores are never anecdotic.The MGM orchestra once again sounds very good.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jean!
DeleteI have quite a few of the recordings Foldes made for Vox but this comes as a complete surprise. Thank you so much. Gary
ReplyDeleteSure, you're welcome, Gary!
DeleteBuster, your site continues to astonish and amaze. Just in case you weren't aware of this, at the Association for Recorded Sound Collections (virtual) Conference a new - and terrific - archive website was revealed based on one collector's nearly 40,000 cylinder and 78rpm record collection:
ReplyDeletehttps://i78s.org
Unfortunately, no downloads but lots of incredible songs.
Unknown - Thanks for the note and for the link! I was not aware of that new website and will check into it.
DeleteAN EXPERIMENT IN CULTURAL SHOCK THERAPY
ReplyDeleteA 30-something woman with an "I Love The Beatles" plate on the front of her new Kia, saddened me when she told me there was no greater music than that made by the Fab Four 20 years before she was born. I decided a corrective to this amnesia about what preceded this now 50-plus year old music might be the following 20-version medley of "I Want to Be Happy" recorded between 1925 and 1967. As good as McCartney's "Yesterday" is, I can't imagine it inspiring the diversity of performances you will find here. Detailed notes are included with the download.
https://we.tl/t-cKbscc5ADA
By the way, I bought the Winograd performances of Copland as a teenager and have always treasured them. MGM was as fine a label for classical music as it was pop. I finally found Carlos Surinach's MGM album devoted to Silvestre Revueltas. I'll send it in m4a if you want. It's still the best record of his music I have ever heard.
Hi David - It's interesting, when I read your note, a version of "I Want to Be Happy" popped into my head. I'll be interested to see if you have it in your mix. Please do send the Revueltas. I've been trying to remember the first time I heard Revueltas - probably the Eduardo Mata LP on RCA, which I think I must still have.
ReplyDeleteIf the version you were thinking of isn't in the mix, please feel free to add it. I can't tell you how many fabulous versions of "I Want to Be Happy" I had to omit.
ReplyDeleteThe late novelist and poet Jim Harrison wrote that whenever he thinks of Spain he thinks of Federico Garcia Lorca, and his assassination as a homosexual by a Franco firing squad in August 1936. Silvestre Revueltas wrote a three-movement homage to the poet in 1937 whose slow movement always moves me to tears. It's a highlight on this long out-of-print 1956 MGM LP devoted to the Mexican composer's music conducted by Carlos Surinach. Revueltas wrote this in Spain where he was sent as part of a cultural delegation by his government in support of the Spanish Republic in 1937. Mexico was one of only two countries that recognized the Republic. The rest of the world turned its back--just as it seems to be doing in Palestine now. Is it any wonder why the composer died of alcoholism in 1940? I've looked for this album for years and finally purchased a copy. Here it is, in Buster's preferred m4a format. At WeTransfer for a week or until Buster transfers it to a more permanent download format.
ReplyDeletehttps://we.tl/t-ufoou7w19P
Thanks, David - Much appreciated, as always.
Deletethese are right up my alley! thanks for Copland!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, SD!
DeleteAs always, these are intriguing albums. I have the Copland in the cheap reissue with the notes on the front and no cover art. The Foldes I have never previously encountered.. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteHi Eric - I wasn't aware that MGM had reissued it in the back-to-front blue cover series.
DeleteTwo of the Weill tracks were used as filler on the CD reissue of Weill's opera Der Jasager (one of the very few MGM classical recordings to have made it into the digital age), and there's a note in the booklet about the condition of the master tapes which says that they were recorded in Los Angeles.
ReplyDelete"Gold" is totally intriguing, as it's a boogie played by a '40s sounding swing band with almost R&B-ish undertones. Some "chamber orchestra" – closer to Woody Herman's Four Brothers than a string quartet!
Boursin - Thanks for the recording info. I'm surprised at the LA locale.
DeleteMerci beaucoup pour ces belles découvertes !
ReplyDeleteBien à toi.
Thierry - Avec plaisir!
DeleteThese are treasures. Thank you Buster!
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure, Richard!
DeleteLinks (ambient stereo, Apple lossless format):
ReplyDeleteCopland and Weill Suites (Winograd)
https://mega.nz/file/vMtnzKyK#5hqW5X87B2Osu4mp6yFzT3tog31TgPIaEV5NrJl0Ne0
Contemporary American Piano Music (Foldes)
https://mega.nz/file/eQsVXTZR#-lmZjg7Kida2dSl8Mddo7vz5V3oZUfFD0H-EY4wwJgM
Bonjour. Can it be re-up ? Thank you so much for your work.
ReplyDeleteI have now added the link to the bottom of the post itself.
ReplyDeletethanks
ReplyDelete