26 January 2023

Solomon's Final Recordings

A debilitating stroke ended the career of the great English pianist Solomon (1902-88) in late 1956, a few months after he had made several concerto recordings with the Philharmonia Orchestra and conductor Herbert Menges.

Today's post gathers those four works together - Beethoven's first and third, and the Grieg and Schumann concertos. These are all mainstays of the repertoire, just as Solomon's recordings have been standards by which others have been judged for nearly 70 years.

This is a follow-up to my recent post of Solomon in works by Bliss and Liszt, which was well received. Some personal sentiment enters into it as well, for I have owned all these recordings for several decades, and remain fond of them.

The artist who recorded these four concertos was different from the phenomenon who had dispatched the difficulties of the Bliss concerto seemingly effortlessly. These final sessions were afflicted with technical problems that left the pianist almost in despair. Solomon's biographer, Bryan Crimp, wrote that the Grieg concerto sessions "proved to be a desolate and wholly demoralizing experience, with Solomon's incapacity at its worrisome height, possibly exacerbated by the intensive work of the previous days." Even so, none of these travails are evident on the final product. The success of the recording, Crimp noted, "is a reflection of the skill and patience of all concerned: producers and editors, orchestra and conductor, but above all to the supreme effort of the soloist." The slow movement is a particular delight, with lovely horn playing, presumably by Dennis Brain.

Herbert Menges
The conductor Herbert Menges had been Solomon's friend since they were fellow piano students of Mathilde Verne. Menges had been associated with the Old Vic and was the conductor of the Brighton Philharmonic and its successors. EMI engaged him fairly frequently as a concerto accompanist, and these performances are successful in that regard.

Contemporary reviews of these recordings generally fall into two camps - those who were satisfied with the pianist's refinement and poetic playing, others who longed for more passion, which Solomon may no longer have been able to summon. Reviewing the Beethoven first concerto in the American Record Guide, C.J. Luten writes, "He has a pearly, singing tone, a genuine legato, and a fine mechanism. Moreover, his general culture and musical manners are as refined as anyone could wish for. His work invariably gives the pleasure of order and beauty of sound. Solomon's playing would be unforgettable if only he had temperament."

The wonder is that these performances have seldom been out of the catalogue since they were issued, a few years after they were made. Despite what Luten wrote above, I find the Beethoven concertos to be entirely successful, as is the Grieg. But to me, the Schumann finale would benefit from the some of the fire Solomon brought to the Bliss concerto, but may have no longer been able to ignite.

On the LP, Beethoven's first concerto is paired with his Sonata No. 27, which Solomon also handles well. (Note that the Sonata also appears on the transfer of the Beethoven third concerto that I used.) The sonata comes from an August 1956 session, also in stereo.

The recordings were all made in Abbey Road Studio No. 1 and are in true stereo, which is one of the delights of the set. Later reviewers would complain that there was little "stereo spread," having become accustomed to the use of multiple microphones in orchestral recordings. But these simply-miked performances have a convincing coherence that is unobtrusively right. My only cavil is that there is little bloom on the strings, possibly an artifact of the studio, which is not all that large. 

The HMV covers
I did not transfer my well-used records for this post, relying instead on good copies I found on Internet Archive and refurbished for the purpose. The Beethoven Concerto No. 1 is from a US Angel pressing, the Concerto No. 3 is from a EMI reissue from the 1960s, and the Grieg and Schumann are from a Classics for Pleasure 1976 reissue. The downloads include complete scans along with the original HMV covers. The latter were designed in a simple, elegant form by Atelier Cassandre, which did quite a few such covers for EMI at the time, probably through its French associate, La Voix de son maître. The download also has many reviews of the three LPs.
 

14 comments:

  1. Links (Apple lossless):

    Grieg and Schumann Concertos
    https://mega.nz/file/HVE2yS5R#So3cz28MpR5OdKK8YGE-a_7QpWldjpMUJtF1Y_tZhVM

    Beethoven - Concerto No. 1
    https://mega.nz/file/LdEi3KgS#Kf7FobS4FrlRhJd3GAGKeP1snSbx3_9lKVsKUstFmgw

    Beethoven - Concerto No. 3
    https://mega.nz/file/7YMUQagJ#ho0Ucgcd3Bt5DAiZFoNtfLo0FaJUYsYOWmZ3EK40Rnw

    ReplyDelete
  2. I have been silent for quite a while because Norton 360 inexplicably defines this site as a security risk.

    I will be happy to hear these performances again after many years. (I had them on Angel when young.) Admittedly, he lost a degree of the excitement of his early days but you can't complain about the technique.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Charlot - Ah, Norton has devined my nefarious plot to sow good music across the web! Welcome back - you are always a pleasure to hear from.

      Delete
  3. Thanks a lot Buster for refreshing our memories...there are so many versions of these reference concertos. These LPs definitely worthwhile: Menges is really dialoging with Salomon. I really enjoy this interplay and their phrasings, seconded by a delightful Philharmonia orchestra. Salomon remains all through an outstanding musician. The sound is excellent too.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Jean - so true about the number of versions available. These are so good they remain high in my estimation. Couldn't agree more about your observations.

      Delete
  4. Please read SOlomon of course....

    ReplyDelete
  5. Merci beaucoup pour ces disques superbes. Je connaissais bien et appréciais beaucoup la conjonction Solomon/Cluytens dans Beethoven mais l'entente entre Solomon et Herbert Menges est excellente. Et le Philharmonia des ces années 50 était quand même exceptionnel. Merci encore. Bien à toi.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thierry - La biographie de Solomon dit qu'il n'aimait pas autant les accompagnements de Cluytens que Menges. Merci pour votre note, comme toujours !

      Delete
  6. Many thanks late -- just back hols. Profound playing, best, purest B concertos ever. For 'temperament' read false emoting ! I still have 'Music For Pleasure' cheapo LP issue 1&2, a teenage wonder for me. I have EMI and Testament CD versions and shall be interested to compare yours.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. zoot - I have the rest of the cycle coming up. Let me know how the sound of the stereo recordings compares to the CDs. Thanks for your note!

      Delete
  7. Buster. Put four digital transcriptions B1 in Audacity. One UK EMI is quite acceptable but seems to be mono. German EMI is in stereo but rough and distorted in places and has right channel bias. I assume these are from original mono and stereo tapes. The Testament is best but seems to have some extra filtering and has a slight digital twang. I assume from LP ? Yours is fine considering source -- US pressings were never the best -- although LP noise inevitable but it also has right bias which must then be inherent. None of these are in the fine sound quality one might expect from EMI at this time. The stereo is indeed very narrow and odd considering the exaggerated novelty ping-pong tendency of much early stereo. I suggest two close together mikes angled -- sort of binaural. Best.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. zoot - I think you are quite right about the recording technique. I noticed the right bias, but decided not to mess with it. Thanks for checking all these sources! Very helpful. FYI - of my files, only the Concerto No. 1 is from a US pressing. The others are UK.

      Delete
  8. A princely pianist - wonderful to have so much of his artistry here. Many thanks Buster.

    ReplyDelete