  | 
            | 
         
         
          |  
               
            
 availability 
              CD & download: Pristine 
              Classics  
              | 
           
             Claude DEBUSSY (1862-1918) 
               
              La mer (1905) [22:09]  
              Maurice RAVEL (1875-1937) 
               
              La valse (1920) [13:23]*  
              Modest MUSSORGSKY (1839-1881) 
               
              Pictures at an Exhibition (1874, orch. Ravel, 1922) [32:08]+  
                
              L'Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, *Paris Conservatoire Orchestra/Ernest 
              Ansermet  
              rec. Victoria Hall, Geneva, March 1951, +December 1953; *La Maison 
              de la Mutualité, Paris, June 1953  
                
              PRISTINE AUDIO PASC 289 [67:41]  
           | 
         
         
          |  
            
           | 
         
         
           
             
              
                I was all set to dismiss this release as superfluous. After 
                  all, Ansermet re-recorded all this material in excellent stereo 
                  - La mer, in fact, twice. The rationale for resuscitating 
                  these earlier versions seemed murky. However, the dazzling 1953 
                  Pictures at an Exhibition testifies to what the Decca 
                  engineers could do even working in monaural. That said, it has 
                  taken Pristine Audio's digital processing to reveal the full 
                  extent of their full accomplishment. The reproduction is truthful 
                  in timbre, easily encompassing a full range of dynamics. Only 
                  a touch of congestion on the full-throated brass chords of Catacombs 
                  betrays any limitations.  
                     
                  Ansermet's performance gives the score's pictorial elements 
                  full measure, while maintaining an unbroken musical line, both 
                  within and between movements. The serious movements at the start 
                  - Gnomus, Bydlo, and The Old Castle - are 
                  evocative. The saxophone in the last-named is plangent yet contained. 
                  By contrast, the scherzando movements - Tuileries, 
                  Ballet of the Unhatched Chicks, and Limoges - 
                  are perky and alert. Baba-Yaga is vigorous and mobile, 
                  yet unpressured. The Great Gate of Kiev begins with dignified 
                  restraint and opens out more grandly as it proceeds.  
                     
                  The Suisse Romande orchestra, as usual in its "core" repertoire, 
                  plays with commitment - the more so, I suspect, for its not 
                  being a sleek virtuoso ensemble. The clear, unified strings 
                  muster some impressive dynamic surges and these are captured 
                  well. The woodwind is expressive and piquant, with pointed articulation. 
                  The principal horn's voicing of the second Promenade 
                  is clunky and dispirited, but the solo trumpet is excellent 
                  in Samuel Goldberg and Schmuyle. The brass choir, as 
                  suggested, is firm and well-balanced.  
                     
                  The other items sound comparatively run-of-the-mill. La mer 
                  is surprisingly clear for 1951 but the climaxes don't fill out 
                  and expand as they would in stereo - or, for that matter, as 
                  they do in the Pictures. The violins sound dry in exposed 
                  moments.  
                     
                  Ansermet's lithe, even balletic interpretation sounds more spontaneous 
                  than in his remakes. The conductor impulsively pushes the music 
                  forward here and marks the rhythms more strongly there. The 
                  calmer passages make a good contrast, though the recording militates 
                  against "atmosphere". I'm pleased, however, to hear the composer's 
                  added brass parts, which most conductors don't use, at 5:59 
                  in the finale; without them, the passage is bare and aimless. 
                   
                     
                  A change of venue doesn't benefit La valse. The Paris 
                  Conservatoire Orchestra was officially the "Orchestra of the 
                  Concert Society of the Paris Conservatory", a professional group, 
                  not the school orchestra. It suffered, according to John Culshaw's 
                  memoir Putting the Record Straight, a rampant deputy 
                  system that worked against achieving any consistent level of 
                  polish. Its recordings stand as testimony. Remarkably, and despite 
                  the mushy "placement" of numerous after-beats, Ansermet still 
                  projects the piece in a broad, coherent arc, though the introduction 
                  and coda are noticeably deliberate.  
                     
                  Veteran discophiles will be curious about this Pictures. 
                  For the general collector, however, Ansermet's shimmering, demonstration-quality 
                  remake on Decca Eloquence will be the more logical choice; avoid 
                  the toppy Weekend Classics issue. Also strong contenders are 
                  the higher-octane accounts of Ormandy (RCA), Giulini (DG), or 
                  Ozawa (RCA).  
                     
                  Stephen Francis Vasta  
                  Stephen Francis Vasta is a New York-based conductor, coach 
                  and journalist.  
                     
                  Masterwork Index: La 
                  mer ~~ Pictures 
                  at an exhibition 
                   
                 
                
                                                                                                                                                  
                
                 
                 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  
                 
                 
                 
             
           | 
         
       
     
     |