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              The Ernest Ansermet Collection from Cascavelle  
              (only available separately) 
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          Henri DUTILLEUX 
              (b.1916)  
              Symphony No.1 (1952) [36:55]  
              Bohuslav MARTINU 
              (1890-1959)  
              Symphony No.4 (1945) [34:04]  
              Orchestre de la Suisse Romande/Ernest Ansermet  
              rec. March 1956 (Dutilleux) and March 1976 (Martinu)  
              CASCAVELLE VEL 3127 [70:02]   
              
            
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          Ludwig van BEETHOVEN 
              (1770-1827)  
              Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op.67 (1807) [39:35] 
              Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827) 
               
              Piano Concerto No.5 in E flat major Op. 73 Emperor (1810) 
              [33:33] 
              Rudolf Serkin (piano) 
              Orchestre de la Suisse Romande/Ernest Ansermet  
              rec. 27 April 1966, RSR Geneva  
              CASCAVELLE VEL 3126 [73:11]   
              
            
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              Albéric MAGNARD (1865-1914) 
               
              Symphony No.3 in B flat minor Op.11 (1896) [37:58]  
              Vincent D’INDY 
              (1851-1931)  
              Symphony No. 1 in G Major on a French Mountain Air, Op. 25 ‘Cévenole’ 
              for piano and orchestra Op.25 [26:57]  
              Robert Casadesus (piano)  
              Orchestre de la Suisse Romande/Ernest Ansermet  
              rec. September 1968 (Magnard) and October 1955 (d’Indy)  
              CASCAVELLE VEL 3128 [63:59]   
              
            
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          Hector BERLIOZ (1803-1869) 
               
              Symphonie fantastique Op.14 (1830) [50:24]  
              Richard WAGNER 
              (1813-1883)   
              A Faust Overture (1839-40) [11:24]  
              Franz LISZT 
              (1811-1886)  
              Battle of the Huns (Hunnenschlacht) – symphonic poem (1857) [14:19] 
               
              Orchestre de la Suisse Romande/Ernest Ansermet  
              rec. June 1968, Tokyo (Berlioz); November 1950 Geneva (Wagner); 
              April 1959, Victoria Hall, Geneva (Liszt)  
              CASCAVELLE VEL 3143 [75:48]   
              
            
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            Manuel de 
              FALLA (1876-1946)  
              Nights in the Gardens of Spain (1915) [20:40]  
              Homenajes [15:19]  
              Claude DEBUSSY 
              (1862-1918)  
              Iberia (Images, No.2) (1905/1908) [18:56]  
              Maurice RAVEL 
              (1875-1937)  
              Rapsodie espagnole (1907) [14:22]  
              Arthur Rubinstein (piano)  
              Orchestre de la Suisse Romande/Ernest Ansermet  
              rec. April 1960 (Nights in the Gardens of Spain); February 1960 
              (Homenajes); September 1958 (Iberia); May 1961 (Rapsodie espagnole), 
              Victoria Hall, Geneva  
              CASCAVELLE VEL 3134 [69:18]   
              
            
 alternatively 
              CD: MDT 
               
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                  Cascavelle has celebrated Ansermet in a series of live broadcast 
                  discs of which these five form part. A boxed set, which I have 
                  also reviewed, is not part of the same edition, and contains 
                  strictly studio recordings; many invaluable, some less so, but 
                  very useful to have. This company isn’t alone and there have 
                  been reviews of the Australian Decca Eloquence discs devoted 
                  to the conductor on this site.  
                     
                  Broadcasts however are always potentially revelatory, not least 
                  of increased adrenalin levels. These five discs certainly contain 
                  a good share of excitement and drama. The first contains a really 
                  splendid performance of Dutilleux’s First Symphony performed 
                  in 1956, four years after it had been written. Martinon had 
                  premiered it, but Ansermet locates its gauzy romantic moments 
                  just as much as its more terse ones with unerring precision. 
                  As well as a debt to Honegger, we find some spectral sonorities, 
                  clarified with analytical perception by the conductor. Ansermet 
                  had been a Martinu admirer for a number of years 
                  (review); 
                  they’d been in touch since the 1930s so when Ansermet broadcast 
                  the Czech composer’s Fourth Symphony in 1967 he could look back 
                  on many years’ acquaintance with the music. Whilst this isn’t 
                  as comprehensively fine a performance as the Dutilleux, it does 
                  reveal the breadth of Ansermet’s affinity, and the solidity 
                  of his conception. Rhythmic dynamism underpins the performance, 
                  and his grip is taut, but relaxes when necessary. It’s impressive. 
                   
                     
                  The all-Beethoven disc gives us a brace of fives. The 
                  Fifth Symphony and the Fifth Piano Concerto derive from the 
                  same 1966 concert. The symphony is big-boned, a bit stolid, 
                  with a rather heavy tread. I can’t say I was captivated. The 
                  Concerto is with Rudolf Serkin and he plays straightforwardly, 
                  though occasionally a little heavily too. Much more valuable 
                  is the Magnard and d’Indy disc. I think this live 
                  performance of the Magnard Third Symphony is just that bit more 
                  electric than the studio recording [Decca 
                  Eloquence 4429992]. This broadcast was one of a brief series 
                  of trials for that commercial disc but Ansermet clearly had 
                  it under his belt. It’s mysterious, lyrical and beautifully 
                  shaped – both work and performance. If you only really know 
                  Plasson as the great Magnard conductor, try to lend an ear to 
                  Ansermet. The coupling is d’Indy’s slightly odd, diffuse but 
                  very atmospheric Symphonie sur un chant montagnard ‘Cévenole’, 
                  for piano and orchestra. The soloist is the ever-marvellous 
                  Robert Casadesus, whose playing is truly inspired. It was taped 
                  in 1955.  
                     
                  Berlioz’s Symphonie fantastique was taped on tour 
                  in Tokyo in 1968. Again this is more exciting than the studio 
                  inscription he left, and it clearly had an effect on the audience, 
                  who – according to the booklet notes – besieged the octogenarian 
                  conductor afterwards. It gathers incrementally in theatrical 
                  drama, is cannily paced and excitingly delivered. In fact that’s 
                  the common currency of this disc because Wagner’s A 
                  Faust Overture comes next (Geneva, 1950) in a powerful reading, 
                  made the more useful given that he didn’t record it commercially. 
                  The disc ends with Liszt, whose symphonic poem Hunnenschlacht 
                  is seldom heard in the concert hall. This 1959 performance 
                  is suitably fiery, even more so than his studio reading.  
                     
                  Finally we have a ‘Spanish’ compilation, and a most seductive 
                  one as well. Rubinstein is the third of a stellar trio of pianists 
                  to appear in these discs, and he plays de Falla’s Nights 
                  in the Gardens of Spain. Maybe it’s not quite as enticing 
                  as the pianist’s St Louis/Golschmann studio outing (review) 
                  but it is resonantly played and the ensemble is first class. 
                  You’ll seldom hear Homenajes conducted with the kind 
                  of astute appreciation of structure and sonority that Ansermet 
                  displays here. And Iberia receives a highly persuasive 
                  performance as well. Ravel’s Rapsodie espagnole is 
                  on a par with the commercial recording.  
                     
                  There are decent trilingual notes.  
                     
                  One’s ability to pick and choose pays dividends here. I would 
                  rank these five in order of interest – starting with the most 
                  enticing – as; Magnard, Dutilleux, the Spanish disc, Berlioz, 
                  then Beethoven.  
                     
                  Jonathan Woolf  
                     
                   
                   
                 
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
               
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