This disc is actually just as interesting for what it does 
not show
                us as for what it does. Just as in the earlier issues of this
                fascinating Naxos Historical series, you will find hardly any
                hard evidence of Furtwängler’s artistic 
development.
                It is almost as if he had sprung fully formed like Minerva from
                the head of Jove. 
                
                But we must remember that the conductor only began his recording
                career at a point in time when he had already been Chief Conductor
                of the Berlin State Opera for six years and of both the Berlin
                Philharmonic and Leipzig Gewandhaus orchestras for four. His
                was certainly not a case, therefore, of a conductor learning
                on the job in the recording studio. 
                
                We must also keep in mind that in general in this early period,
                with the exception of a rather 
unexceptional 
Beethoven
                fifth symphony from 1926, Furtwängler was given no opportunity
                to make recordings of the longer, more complex works for which
                he is still revered today - even though one suspects that, with
                his well known reservations about the impossibility of ever setting
                down definitive musical interpretations, he would not necessarily
                have been unhappy with that particular limitation. As a result,
                much of the relatively unchallenging music that he recorded in
                the 1920s and 1930s - well known overtures, dances, Wagnerian “bleeding
                chunks” and other orchestral showpieces, all offering little
                scope for any subsequent refinement - cannot be subjected to
                the same intensive musicological analysis in the search for development
                as, to take just a single example, do his dozen extant later
                recordings, both studio and live, of Brahms’s First Symphony. 
                
                So what of the contents here? It is apparent from the very opening
                of the 
Lohengrin prelude that the Berlin Philharmonic
                was in very fine form in 1930, with especially beautiful playing
                from the strings. They respond admirably to Furtwängler’s
                flexible approach and the undulating main melody makes an exceptionally
                striking impression. The conductor’s humanity is as apparent
                as his innate feel for the Wagnerian idiom and, just for once,
                the music feels like it is properly and organically related to
                the subsequent drama rather than being performed as a stand-alone
                demonstration piece. The particularly well balanced orchestra
                shines too in the 
Tristan und Isolde extracts - seamlessly
                conjoined by expert restoration engineer Mark Obert-Thorn. Furtwängler
                creates a real sense of inexorability and tragedy in the music,
                and the strings stand out for their combination of delicacy coupled
                with great strength at the music’s climax. Powerful drama
                is again at the heart of this 1933 performance of Siegfried’s
                funeral music, so movingly played, with the tension ratcheted
                up until it becomes almost unbearable: a recording that forces
                one to listen to the score afresh. 
                
                The two Brahms Hungarian dances go with a real swing. Furtwängler
                plays up the 
zigeuner rhythms in a brisk performance of
                no.1 that has an exciting acceleration towards the end. No.10
                may not be the most obvious of choices, but is once again performed
                with flair and aplomb. 
                
                The 
Die Fledermaus overture was last of these tracks to
                have been recorded and it shows in the much brighter and livelier
                sound. 
Pace Colin Anderson whose booklet notes dismiss
                it as the least spontaneous and rewarding performance on the
                disc, I responded to it far more positively and found it jaunty,
                witty and sophisticated. Conductor and orchestra treat this music
                seriously and perform it with loving care - is that, perhaps,
                an antithetical quality to spontaneity? 
                
                I do agree with Mr Anderson, however, on the remarkably fine
                performance of 
Till Eulenspiegel’s merry pranks,
                a piece far more familiar to concert audiences then than now.
                This is a flexible, witty, frequently quite spiky and acerbic
                and, I noted in particular, spontaneous-sounding performance
                - though I am happy to confirm that, at least in this instance
                and for this reviewer, spontaneity does 
not exclude lavishing
                that extra degree of loving care on the music. This track is
                the highlight of the disc. 
                
                Once again, this very useful series - at, let it not be forgotten,
                a most attractive price - serves to draw our attention to an
                era of German history in which the highest standards of musicianship
                and music-making co-existed with some truly appalling events
                in the wider society - economic and political meltdown, followed
                by the coming to power of the Nazi Party and its concomitant
                brutalization of civil life. The fact that, in the eyes of many
                to this day, Wilhelm Furtwängler himself personifies that
                paradoxical situation continues to make him one of the most controversial
                - and fascinating - artists of his time. 
                
                
Rob Maynard   
                
                Other reviews in this series