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Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)
Symphony No.9 in C major D944, Great (1825-28) [45:33]
Edward ELGAR (1857-1934)
Enigma Variations Op.36 (1899) [28:57]
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
Symphony No.35 in D major Haffner K385 (1782) [19:45]
Gioachino ROSSINI (1792-1868)
Overture: The Thieving Magpie (1817) [9:27]
Richard WAGNER (1813-1883)
Götterdämmerung - Siegfried’s Funeral Music
(1876) [8:47]
British National Anthem [1:02]
Johannes BRAHMS (1833-1897)
Variations on a theme of Haydn Op.56a (St Anthony Chorale) (1873)
[16:38]
Felix MENDELSSOHN (1809-1847)
Violin Concerto (fragment of movement 2 and finale) (1844) [11:21]
Nathan Milstein (violin)
Schubert: Philadelphia Orchestra, 16 September 1941, Philadelphia
Elgar: BBC Symphony Orchestra, 3 June 1935, London (live)
Mozart: Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York, 4 and 5
April 1929, NYC
Rossini: La Scala Orchestra, 12 May 1946, Milan (live)
Wagner: Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, 1934, Salzburg (live)
Brahms and British National Anthem, Philharmonia Orchestra,
October 1952, London (live)
Mendelssohn: Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York, 29
March 1936, NYC (live)
Arturo Toscanini
GUILD GHCD 2384-85 [74:48 + 67:53]
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The novelty value in Guild’s latest historical release
resides not so much in the performances, most of which are well
known, but in the fact that Toscanini conducts six orchestras
in performances ranging from 1929 to 1952. Should this tempt
you, and should the programme prove enticing, then you might
overlook the quixotic nature of the compilation and respond
instead to the music-making.
The first disc contains Schubert’s Ninth Symphony in the
commercial, studio inscription made in Philadelphia in 1941.
Surviving NBC broadcasts are numerous, dating from 1939, 1945,
1947 and 1953 and there’s a 1936 Philharmonic-Symphony
Orchestra of New York performance as well. They are all pretty
similar. Toscanini included the work in his first orchestral
concert back in 1896 and he had long familiarity with it, so
it would be interesting to know if he took the slow movement
then as gracelessly, and despotically, as he does here. The
uninflected linearity of his conducting is certainly a tribute
to implacable will, but it’s not much of a tribute to
Schubert. His Elgar Enigma Variations (live, Queen’s Hall,
June 1935) is also direct and intense, but it’s far more
flexible and he sounds far less tense than in Philadelphia.
The famously parochial local criticisms of Toscanini’s
‘Un-English’ interpretation brought forth a chorus
of indignation led by such as Landon Ronald, then probably Elgar’s
greatest living interpreter. Listening to it again one notices
the breathless legato, the dynamic power and the stoic intensity,
a true ‘symphonic’ cohesion, though for that one
sacrifices genuine depth in BGN, which is far too cool.
The second disc opens with Mozart’s Haffner Symphony
(New York, studio, 1929) in a perfectly reasonable performance
but a dull old transfer. Rossini’s Thieving Magpie
overture comes from La Scala in May 1946, and is full of brio
and excitement albeit courtesy of a crude recording. Siegfried’s
Funeral Music is from the Vienna Philharmonic, live in
Salzburg in 1934 and in swishy sound, but powerful evidence
of his Wagnerian credentials, albeit in miniature. The British
National Anthem prefaces a rather stop-go performance of Brahms’s
St Antony Chorale (Philharmonia, 1952), or as we’d better
ponderously call it, the Variations on a theme of Haydn,
Op.56a. Toscanini certainly adopts a rich variety of tempos,
not always to the good of the music. Then there’s a ‘bonus’
(as described in the booklet), an eleven minute plus excerpt
- part of the slow movement and the whole of the finale - of
Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto with Milstein from New York
in 1936. Congestion, overload and a half second dropout don’t
do much to enhance this torso.
This is a mixed bag of a twofer. The conceit of six orchestras
is a decent enough gambit, and the programme ranges quite widely
over time, place and repertoire. The transfers are no more than
adequate, however.
Jonathan Woolf
Masterwork Index: Engima
Variations
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