Showing posts with label Lawrance Collingwood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lawrance Collingwood. Show all posts

28 August 2009

Elgar by Lawrance Collingwood


In January 1934, Edward Elgar supervised recordings of his music by telephone from his sick bed. He was to die only a month later.

The conductor of that 1934 session was Lawrance Collingwood, who returned to the studio 20 years later to make this recording of Elgar's music. Collingwood was a house conductor and producer for EMI for many years, as well as principal conductor at Sadler's Wells and a composer. Most of his recordings were accompaniments, but he did make this and one later Elgar LP.

I have included the contemporary Gramophone review by Trevor Harvey in the download, and I agree in general with his assessment - the Serenade for Strings performance is bland (and sounds curiously modern because of it), but the Bavarian Dances are quite well done and the Nursery Suite has a very beautiful violin solo in the last number. I also agree that the LP is well recorded - although I did have to do some readjusting of the sound balance to bring that out.

The download also includes (English) Columbia's two-page Gramophone ad for its September 1954 releases, including discs featuring Karajan, Cluytens, Kletzki, Anda, and Gieseking.

This record has not been reissued to my knowledge - but I imagine someone will let me know if it is otherwise available.