This most interesting disc was released three years before the 
                  recent death of violinist Aida 
                  Stucki (1921-2011). In later years she was known more for 
                  being the teacher of Anne Sophie Mutter, than for her own profound 
                  strengths as a soloist, but fortunately this disc, and others, 
                  attests to her fine level of musicianship. She was born in Cairo 
                  to a Swiss father and a Sicilian mother and studied successively 
                  with Ernst Wolters, a distinguished pupil of Bram Elderling, 
                  and then Stefi Geyer – who was closely associated with Schoeck 
                  and Bartók – and finally with Carl Flesch. 
                  
                  This equipped her splendidly both technically and interpretatively. 
                  She’d worked on the Beethoven concerto with Flesch, and in 1949 
                  Hermann Scherchen invited her to perform it on a concert tour 
                  in Switzerland. This radio broadcast is a precious surviving 
                  document of their collaboration and an early example of the 
                  young Stucki’s acumen. Certainly the surviving discs sound not 
                  to have been in especially good condition; indeed the notes 
                  mention the legion of problems they suffered. However whilst 
                  the sound remains dim even after restoration, the orchestral 
                  lower strings very woolly and the horns hooty, fortunately Stucki 
                  comes through very clearly. 
                  
                  There is 20 seconds of unannounced spoken studio introduction, 
                  not separately tracked, and then Scherchen directs the opening 
                  paragraphs with a quite relaxed grace, though he speeds up later. 
                  Stucki plays with reserved intensity, and they dovetail very 
                  well, even at a basically slowish tempo. Stucki plays the Kreisler 
                  cadenza to considerable effect, emerging from it to muse introspectively. 
                  The slow movement is played with great sympathy and attention 
                  to detail, whilst the finale reveals an avuncular and genial 
                  quality that ends the performance in high, good spirits. The 
                  meeting between Stucki and Scherchen was clearly mutually satisfying. 
                  
                  
                  The coupling however is not more Stucki, but a 1953 commercial 
                  recording of Bach’s Concerto in E major. The conductor is again 
                  Scherchen, but here the soloist is Walter Barylli, better known 
                  as a quartet player. I reviewed 
                  his Mozart performances on Preiser 90760. This is a nicely considered 
                  performance, spruce, not especially emotive, and Barylli reveals 
                  a silvery intelligence when required, not least in the Adagio. 
                  The only slight oddity is the prominently over-recorded harpsichord 
                  continuo. 
                  
                  This is a revealing and attractive disc, of some historical 
                  significance, not least because the Stucki is one of the rare 
                  survivors of a catastrophic purge of Radio-Beromünster’s archive. 
                  
                  
                  Jonathan Woolf