Many of the recent 
                Toscanini re-issues have been Carnegie 
                Hall recordings. Restoration engineers 
                have tended to shy away from the more 
                notorious Studio 8H tapes. Rumour holds 
                that these are all brash, and subject 
                to all of the limitations of the extremely 
                dry acoustic for which the studio was 
                infamous. This disc will go a long way 
                to dispel these myths which were probably 
                due to poor transfers to vinyl in days 
                gone by. 
              
 
              
In addition, it is 
                now well known that Toscanini’s record 
                producers, being somewhat in awe of 
                the Maestro were unable to persuade 
                him to moderate his then extremely rapid 
                tempi. There is a famous story, told 
                after his death, that Walter Legge told 
                him that his tempi were all too extreme. 
                The conductor was supposed to have said 
                that he wished his own record producers 
                had had the courage to talk to him like 
                that. 
              
 
              
On this CD we have 
                all of the hallmarks of Toscanini at 
                about this time: aggressive phrasing 
                and high speeds. What we don’t have 
                however is the harsh unyielding sound 
                of the now old vinyl pressings. True, 
                the acoustic is somewhat drier than 
                the Carnegie Hall recordings but it 
                is not in the least unattractive. In 
                any event the compensation is a ‘no 
                nonsense’ presentation of the composers’ 
                scores, without an ounce of sentimentality 
                in sight. 
              
 
              
The Haydn 88th 
                particularly gains from this approach, 
                and whilst it in no way displaces Furtwängler’s 
                Berlin Philharmonic recording from 1951, 
                it gives an altogether different approach 
                to the score. The Mozart 40th 
                is in much the same vein with fast speeds 
                and no lingering. It is well known that 
                at the time of these recordings, the 
                NBC Orchestra had just been established 
                by the NBC to take advantage of the 
                enormous commercial potential of the 
                classical music radio concerts. How 
                things have changed! 
              
 
              
After the two symphonies, 
                there are what could be considered three 
                short encores. These are all brilliantly 
                played and show just what a virtuoso 
                orchestra the NBC ensemble was at its 
                inception. Apart from two Beethoven 
                symphonies these are all first recordings 
                made by the orchestra in Studio 8H. 
                They were to move to Carnegie Hall in 
                May 1940, so if you want to hear what 
                these old recordings sound like do go 
                ahead. You will be in for some direct, 
                unfussy performances at an extremely 
                low outlay, which will impress you greatly. 
                Of this I have no doubt. 
              
John Phillips 
                
              
see also 
                review by Jonathan Woolf