
Also new today - six more remasters of classical recordings in ambient stereo. But first, the Dobrowen discs.
Haydn - Symphony No. 104 (London)
Dobrowen's 1946 recording of Haydn's Symphony No. 104 may be the only symphony he recorded from the classical era that was released. He did set down Beethoven's fifth symphony the day before this Haydn work, but that performance remains unissued. He also accompanied Artur Schnabel in two Beethoven concertos.
The Haydn is well played by the then-new Philharmonia, which had just begin recording a year before. (Its first date was led by Walter Susskind, the second by Constant Lambert.) Dobrowen's performance is not particularly romanticized, as was common practice earlier in the century. He makes the minuet of the third movement rather like a peasant dance, in keeping with the theme of the finale, which is derived from a Croatian folk song, and the first movement, which has folk-like elements.
The sound (from Abbey Road Studio No. 1, as with all these recordings) is quite good, its impact enhanced by ambient stereo processing.
Borodin - Prince Igor, Overture and Polovtsi March
Haydn's symphony, his last, dates from 1794. Almost a century later we are in a different sound world with music from Borodin's opera Prince Igor, premiered after the composer's death in 1890. The excerpts here begin with the overture, which in actuality was composed by Glazunov making use of themes from the opera.
The Polovtsian music, too, required the assistance of another composer, in this case Rimsky-Korsakov, who orchestrated it. Here we have the March. It is often coupled with the Polovtsian Dances; Dobrowen did record the Dances, but I don't have a transfer of that set. The conductor's other Prince Igor selections are vividly characterized, in keeping with the Russian romantic music contained in the first Dobrowen collection.
The Borodin recordings date from 1949 and again benefit from good sound. You can hear another take on the music via Walter Susskind's 1952 recording.
Wagner - Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg - Prelude to Act I
Wagner began working on Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg in 1868, which is about when Borodin started on Prince Igor. It became Wagner's only comic opera; also the longest opera in the standard repertoire.
Perhaps recognizing the lighter nature of the proceedings, Dobrowen takes swift tempos throughout his 1947 recording of the Prelude to Act I. This music is often given a much more weighty performance (which it can well stand). The light treatment is accentuated by the recording, which in this RCA Victor LP transfer had very little bass. That aspect of the recording is not helpful in this music, which has important lower brass lines. I rebalanced the sound to alleviate this problem, with some success.
Quite a few posts featuring the vintage Philharmonia Orchestra have appeared here lately. It's natural and perhaps unfortunate to write about symphonic performances as if they were the work of one person, the conductor, instead of 100 professionals. So let me just mention that the recordings of this period are graced by the presence of the Philharmonia's then-famous wind principals, depicted below. (The photo is circa 1950.)
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Sidney Sutcliffe, oboe, Gareth Morris, flute, Dennis Brain, horn, Cecil James, bassoon, Harold Jackson, trumpet, Frederick Thurston, clarinet |
The catalog of Dobrowen's recordings is relatively slim. EMI had pegged him as an accompanist, and he was adept at handing those assignments. He assisted such artists as Ginette Neveu, Bronislaw Huberman, Solomon, Boris Christoff, Kirsten Flagstad as well as Schnabel. Otherwise, he may have been seen as a specialist in Russian music. That said, his earliest recordings, dating from 1929, were of Grieg, Dvořák and Sinding.
The recordings in this post were sourced from my collection and needle-drops on Internet Archive. Coming up is Dobrowen's recording of Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1, in a splendid performance, again with Solomon, with whom the conductor had an evident rapport.
Ambient Stereo Remasters
As before, the links below take you to the original posts. Download links are near or at the end of the comments. We start off with three M-G-M classics from the 1950s, by request.
Copland and Weill Suites; Contemporary American Piano Music. Arthur Winograd conducts Copland's Music for Movies and a Weill suite of his own devising. Also, pianist Andor Foldes turns up with contemporary (c1940s) music by American composers.
Swanson - Short Symphony, Diamond - Rounds. Two of the best and best-regarded works by their composers on this vintage American Recording Society release - Howard Swanson's Short Symphony and David Diamond's Rounds. Dean Dixon and Walter Hendl conduct.
Solomon Plays Bliss and Liszt. Another in the series devoted to pianist Solomon. The first recording of Arthur Bliss' bravura Piano Concerto, along with Liszt's Hungarian Fantasia. Sir Adrian Boult and Walter Susskind lead the orchestras.
Link (ambient stereo, Apple lossless format):
ReplyDeletehttps://mega.nz/file/iBsDyKJY#B4kPVikeKB-vK_LdgnHfii1Jlb_P7z_x7jUHSXFEaas
Thank you for this and all the ambient upgrades.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, rev.b!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your time & effort on all your posts. You may want to check the Solomon Plays Bliss and Liszt & Copland and Weill Suites; Contemporary American Piano Music updates that you mentioned.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Robert - I meant to check that myself. Blogger has developed a tendency to drop links.
DeleteThese are fixed now. Thanks again for the heads-up.
DeleteTechnically, "Das Lebesverbot" is also a Wagner comic opera. I heard a recording conducted by Sawallisch and boasting a fine cast but the overall effect was more tedious than funny.
ReplyDeleteHi Jean - You're right! That's the one that the composer disowned, I think. Can't say I've ever heard it, but based on your comment, I won't be seeking it out!
DeleteIt's Charlot, here, not Jean, but you remember correctly.
ReplyDelete"Das Liebesverbot" was a spectacular flop and he also forbade productions of the prior "Die Feen" and the later "Rienzi" on the Green Hill.
"Die Feen" is also very long and not-so-interesting.
"Rienzi" was a big hit in its day. The overture and Rienzi's aria are still heard and recorded but Wagner cut it loose because:
Is absurdly long, even with huge cuts and grossly uneven, musically.
The title role is impossible to sing. Except by Melchior, of course. Except that Melchior never found it worth singing on stage.
It lays embarrassingly bare Wagner's early debt to Meyerbeer, something he preferred to bury for his customary crazy anti-Semitic reasons.
BTW - Yeah, what a wind section! And to think that Alan Civil was also in the horn section and had to fill in for him after his tragic, senseless death.
Hi Charlot,
DeleteMy knowledge of the early works does not extend beyond the Rienzi overture, which is certainly a good piece.
Melchior in his later career did not show any such selectivity, examples of which can be found on this blog.
I love that photo of the wind section. The original was in miserable shape. I spend some time cleaning it up, although it retains a certain cartoon cutout quality.
I don't suppose you'd be willing to make the original versions of some of these recordings available for those who don't care for the "ambient stereo" effect? Or will all of your posts be in "ambient stereo" from now on?
ReplyDeleteSorry, they all will be in ambient stereo. However, if you combine the two tracks into mono, you will get the original signal.
DeleteOh, what a shame. It's disappointing to see the continuing spread of the Andrew Rose philosophy of audio "restoration". But your blog, your choice.
Delete