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            Sir Thomas Beecham conducts French Music 
            Music by Berlioz, Bizet, Delibes, Debussy, Saint-Saëns, Massenet, 
            Gounod, Chabrier, Fauré, Franck, Lalo, Grétry and Vidal 
            rec. 1936-1959, Paris, London. ADD  
              
            EMI CLASSICS 9099322 [6 CDs: 75:08 + 64:58 + 70:23 + 77:35 + 71:27 
            + 48:13]   
              
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                  I welcomed the opening box in EMI’s 50th anniversary 
                  tribute to Beecham which was a documentary biography of the 
                  conductor, as mediated through witnesses, critics, executant 
                  musicians and admirers. The solid business of organising his 
                  repertory has led to decisions that will doubtless lead to questions 
                  along the lines of ‘what about X’, where X = Sibelius, or Dvorák, 
                  or Handel, or even Elgar.  
                   
                  Let me note here that no new remastering has taken place. If 
                  you have previous EMI CD releases of this material from 2002 
                  and 2007 then you will rest easy with your copies; the material 
                  from disc 6 however dates back to 1991-92 work, and this disc 
                  does include some of the earliest recordings in the set – Berlioz 
                  and Massenet from 1947 - so perhaps twenty years on would have 
                  been a good time to have tried to re-master afresh.  
                   
                  Crying for what’s not in this set of boxed albums shouldn’t 
                  blind us to what is, familiar though much of it is. One very 
                  useful thing about this all-French collection is the handy, 
                  cheap and unassuming way it presents so sizeable, and various, 
                  a slice of the conductor’s recordings. Note that many are not 
                  with the RPO, but with the French National Radio Orchestra, 
                  taped when Beecham was living in the South of France. Remember 
                  that glorious sleeve cover picture of the compact Baronet shaking 
                  hands with a vast, bearded gendarme?  
                   
                  There’s little real middle ground here between the symphonic 
                  and the lollipop. The first disc leads with the Symphonie 
                  fantastique. Beecham recorded this twice with the French 
                  orchestra, and this is the stereo version. The mono was taped 
                  in 1957, though there was, I notice, a patching session the 
                  following year, which was almost exactly a year before he embarked 
                  on this completely new version. Truly Beecham’s recording schedules 
                  and shenanigans were the stuff of legend. Did any other conductor 
                  have so many recordings on the go as this man, spinning like 
                  plates in the recording booths of London, Paris and elsewhere? 
                  He never recorded the work with any of his British orchestras. 
                  You’d have thought he’d be keen to record it with the LPO in 
                  the 1930s but no, he seemed to save it up for Paris. More Berlioz 
                  completes this first disc, all with the RPO this time – Le 
                  Corsaire, dashing and debonair, and extracts from Les 
                  Troyens.  
                   
                  There’s a similar symphonic logic at work in disc two; Bizet’s 
                  genial Symphony in C leads off followed by the two L’Arlésienne 
                  suites, the former work delightfully dispatched by his French 
                  orchestra and the latter by the RPO. By the third disc we arrive 
                  at more miscellaneous matters. Delibes is represented by a characterful 
                  performance of Le Roi s’amuse from 1958, there’s a delightful 
                  Debussy Faun, a feisty Saint-Saëns Bacchanale 
                  from Samson and Dalila and also the Act V Ballet music 
                  from Gounod’s Faust, music with which Beecham was very 
                  familiar indeed; it was the first opera he’d recorded back in 
                  1929-30. In the fourth disc there is the Act I Prelude and the 
                  three Entr’actes from Carmen, a first class Chabrier 
                  Gwendoline and a sun-drenched España. Also 
                  here is one of the last recordings he ever made, Henri Rabaud’s 
                  orchestration of Fauré’s Dolly Suite. This was a work 
                  Beecham said he’d played four hands with the composer, and there’s 
                  no reason to doubt him. He spent many hours in Parisian music 
                  libraries as a young man investigating congenial old repertory, 
                  music that was to journey with him throughout his life. One 
                  such composer was Grétry, whom he loved, and he loved to perform 
                  especially Zémire et Azor. A frequent concert closer 
                  was the first Air de ballet, which gets quieter and quieter, 
                  and thinner and thinner of texture, until it seems to vanish 
                  into thin air. This 1956 version is too plush and over-sophisticated; 
                  the pre-war recording is the one to get. But it’s good to hear 
                  more from the work, the last operatic work he conducted in Britain, 
                  in Bath in 1955. This is from the last disc, but the penultimate 
                  one, the fifth, gives us the powerful Franck Symphony in D minor, 
                  coupled with Lalo’s less formidable and forbidding G minor. 
                  Beecham had made a famous 78 set of the Franck with the LPO, 
                  and had first conducted it back in 1912. To close this disc, 
                  there’s a beautiful performance of Fauré’s Pavane.  
                   
                  Lyndon Jenkins’s five page booklet sets the scene appropriately. 
                  In short, then, this collection has been well chosen, utilising 
                  established (or older) transfers, and is very competitively 
                  priced.  
                   
                  Jonathan Woolf  
                   
                  see also review by William 
                  Hedley 
                
 Full track list 
                  CD 1 [75:08]  
                  Hector BERLIOZ (1803-1869)  
                  Symphonie Fantastique, Op. 14 (1830) [52:28]  
                  French National Radio Orchestra  
                  rec. Salle Wagram, Paris, 30 November – 2 December 1959  
                  Overture: Le Corsaire, Op. 21 (1831) [7:51]  
                  Royal Philharmonic Orchestra  
                  rec. No. 1 Studio, Abbey Road, London, 7 November 1958  
                  Les Troyens: Trojan March [4:26]  
                  Les Troyens: Royal Hunt and Storm [10:00]  
                  Royal Philharmonic Orchestra; Beecham Choral Society  
                  rec. No. 1 Studio, Abbey Road, London, 23 March and 19 November 
                  1959  
                   
                  CD 2 [64:58]  
                  Georges BIZET (1838-1875) 
                   
                  Symphony in C (1855) [27:36]  
                  French National Radio Orchestra  
                  rec. Salle Wagram, Paris, 28 October and 1-2 November 1959  
                  L’Arlésienne – Suite No. 1 (1872) [19:05]  
                  L’Arlésienne – Suite No. 2 [17:06]  
                  rec. Studio No. 1, Abbey Road, London, 21 September 1956  
                   
                  CD 3 [70:23]  
                  Léo DELIBES (1836-1891) 
                   
                  Le Roi s’amuse – Ballet Music (1882) [13:38]  
                  rec. Salle Wagram, Paris, 12 and 16 May 1958  
                  Claude DEBUSSY (1862-1918) 
                   
                  Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune (1894) [10:27]  
                  rec. Studio No. 1, Abbey Road, London, 25 March 1957  
                  L’enfant prodigue – Cortège and Air de Danse (1884) [4:16] 
                   
                  rec. Studio No. 1, Abbey Road, London, November 1959  
                  Camille SAINT-SAËNS (1835-1921) 
                   
                  Samson et Dalila : Danse des Prêtresses de Dagon (1877) 
                  [2:26]  
                  rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 20 October 1958  
                  Samson et Dalila : Bacchanale [7:22]  
                  rec. Studio No. 1, Abbey Road, London, 23 November 1959  
                  Hector BERLIOZ  
                  La Damnation de Faust: Danse des Sylphes (1846) [2:59] 
                   
                  La Damnation de Faust: Menuet des Follets [5:39]  
                  rec. Studio No. 1, Abbey Road, London, 25 March 1957  
                  Jules MASSENET (1842-1912) 
                   
                  Cendrillon: Valse (1899) [5:29]  
                  rec. Salle Wagram, Paris, 9 October 1957  
                  Charles GOUNOD (1818-1893) 
                   
                  Faust: Ballet Music (1859) [13:32]  
                  rec. Salle Wagram, Paris, 9 October and 3 November 1957  
                  Royal Philharmonic Orchestra  
                  CD 4 [77:35] 
                  Georges BIZET  
                  Carmen: Prelude and Entr’actes [10:33]  
                  rec. Salle Wagram, Paris, 10-12 January 1958  
                  Emmanuel CHABRIER 
                  (1841-1894)  
                  Overture: Gwendoline [9:24]  
                  rec. Salle Wagram, Paris, 9 September 1957  
                  Gabriel FAURÉ 
                  (1845-1924)  
                  Suite, Dolly, Op. 56 [17:37]  
                  rec. Salle Wagram, Paris, 1-4 December 1959  
                  French National Radio Orchestra  
                  Camille SAINT-SAËNS  
                  Le Rouet d’Omphale, Op. 31 (1872) [9:22]  
                  Emmanuel CHABRIER  
                  Joyeuse Marche (1888) [3:44]  
                  rec. Studio No. 1, Abbey Road, London, 23 and 25 March, 1957 
                   
                  Royal Philharmonic Orchestra  
                  España (1883) [6:05]  
                  rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 30 November and 19 December 1939 
                   
                  London Philharmonic Orchestra  
                  Georges BIZET  
                  Patrie, Op. 19 [12:33]  
                  rec. Walthamstow Assembly Hall, London, 12 October 1956  
                  Roma – Carnaval (1868) [7:14]  
                  rec. Salle Wagram, Paris, 9 October 1957  
                  Royal Philharmonic Orchestra  
                  CD 5 [71:27]  
                  César FRANCK (1822-1890) 
                   
                  Symphony in D minor (1888) [38:29]  
                  Edouard LALO (1823-1892) 
                   
                  Symphony in G minor (1886) [26:59] 
                  Charles GOUNOD  
                  Roméo et Juliette: Le sommeil de Juliette (1867) [3 :14] 
                   
                  rec. No. 1 Studio, Abbey Road, London, 5 October and 23 November 
                  1959  
                  French National Radio Orchestra /Thomas Beecham 
                  Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Thomas Beecham  
                   
                  
                    
                 
             
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