When 
reviewing 
    the Klemperer box of romantic symphonies and overtures I remarked upon the 
    odd omission of his recordings of the Overture and Dream Pantomime from Humperdinck’s 
    
Hänsel und Gretel. Well, here they are, although Humperdinck’s 
    name is omitted from the box cover and neither piece comes from the twentieth 
    century. They are indeed as good as I remembered, serious performances that 
    nevertheless have plenty of sparkle when required and bring out many of the 
    delightful felicities in the scoring; there are subsidiary themes here which 
    often go unremarked in other performances. It is extraordinary if, as Richard 
    Osborne states in his booklet notes, Klemperer never conducted this work in 
    the opera house; one would have thought that during his lengthy career in 
    German theatres before 1933 he could hardly have avoided it, especially since 
    his wife frequently sang the part of Gertrude and the Witch. 
      
    The remainder of the works in this collection are undeniably from the twentieth 
    century, and the earliest recording here is the suite from Hindemith’s 
    ‘choreographic legend’ 
Nobilissima visione.
Richard 
    Osborne tells us that this was a last-minute substitute for the Hindemith 
    Horn Concerto, the recording of which had to be abandoned when Klemperer and 
    Dennis Brain failed to agree over the proper tempi for the performance. Brain 
    subsequently recorded the work with Hindemith himself conducting. I cannot 
    find that the Klemperer recording of the ballet was ever issued during his 
    lifetime, or indeed before it appeared on CD in 2000; perhaps Walter Legge 
    was at a loss to find a suitable coupling. It is a very good performance indeed, 
    with only a slight lack of full string tone to indicate the age of the mono 
    recording which otherwise is admirable in all respects. The Philharmonia at 
    this time were making a number of recordings of modern scores, including Hindemith 
    and Bartók with Karajan and Britten with various conductors; in later 
    years such studio ventures into modern territory would become rarer. 
      
    Klemperer himself had commissioned Weill’s 
Kleine Dreigroschenmusik 
    following the successful stage première of the 
Dreigroschenoper 
    the year before, and gave the first performance at the Kroll Opera in Berlin 
    during his final years in pre-Nazi Germany. He always had a warm affection 
    for the work, and this comes across in this delightfully insouciant performance 
    which is superbly inflected by the Philharmonia players with just the right 
    degree of sleaziness, never overdone. Klemperer also espoused the music of 
    Stravinsky during these years, but the only recordings he ever made were those 
    included here of the 
Pulcinella suite and the 
Symphony in three 
    movements. He takes a very serious view indeed of the latter at an unexpectedly 
    slow speed, bringing out the ominous nature of the writing but at the expense 
    of some of the more abrupt violence that Stravinsky himself revealed in his 
    recording of the score. 
Pulcinella, on the other hand, has a lighter 
    touch which allows for Klemperer’s sly and mordant humour to come through. 
    Klemperer paid his own compositional tribute to Stravinsky’s take on 
    Pergolesi in his own orchestral suite on pieces by Rameau, which has a similarly 
    quirky and consciously ‘modern’ approach to the music. 
      
    The second disc in this set gives us three examples of Klemperer’s own 
    compositions. Like many conductors of his generation, Klemperer desired to 
    make a reputation as a composer; unlike his contemporaries, he was rather 
    diffident about putting his works forward for recording or performance. He 
    spent some forty or more years working on an opera entitled 
Das Ziel, 
    but the only piece from the score that was published was the 
Merry Waltz 
    included here, probably the best-known of his compositions (not that that 
    is saying much) and the only one that attracted the attention of other conductors 
    including Leopold Stokowski. The 
Second Symphony was recently recorded 
    for CPO by Alun Francis, as part of a valuable disc that also includes the 
    
First Symphony and a number of other shorter works including the 
Merry 
    Waltz. 
      
    Shortly after early performances of the 
First Symphony Klemperer sent 
    a copy of the score to Benjamin Britten, whose response is documented in Richard 
    Osborne’s booklet: “I feel that your ideas are often very good. 
    But, dear Doctor, I am not always so sure that the notes you have chosen are 
    always the right ones to express what is so clearly in your mind.” One 
    has to admit that Britten’s instinctive response was right; one can 
    sense the purposefulness of the ideas that underlie the 
Second Symphony, 
    but at the same time remain unconvinced that Klemperer is at his best in trying 
    to convey these to the listener. The result is rather Mahlerian in texture 
    - late Mahler, rather than the composer’s earlier more romantic style. 
    The basic themes are not particularly memorable; and, although the music is 
    often entertaining and sometimes demonstrates a real depth of emotional feeling, 
    the most effective moments come when Klemperer is closest to models such as 
    Shostakovich; an almost exact quotation of a phrase near the beginning of 
    the 
Fifth Symphony. The Sibelius-like brass chords which interrupt 
    the progress of the slow movement are also significant. 
      
    Klemperer’s 
String Quartet is a curiously inconsequential work; 
    the opening fugue has hardly begun before it tails off into decidedly un-fugal 
    material. The same lack of continuing sustained development is apparent as 
    in the 
Second Symphony. There is some decidedly insecure playing in 
    parts of the symphony, seemingly recorded in a solitary session although there 
    is some unexpectedly lush string playing. The players, drawn from the New 
    Philharmonia in the quartet, seem to be more comfortable with the music itself. 
    The quartet has never been recorded subsequently, so this is our only opportunity 
    to hear it. 
      
    The final one-and-a-half discs in this collection contain an extensive biographical 
    documentary - near two hours long. Memories of Klemperer from those who worked 
    with him are combined with extracts from his BBC 
Face to face interview 
    with John Freeman and snippets from the EMI archives. There are also extracts 
    from various recordings which often continue - somewhat disconcertingly, because 
    just on the borders of audibility - beneath the dialogue. As is the inevitable 
    nature of such things, the text verges on the hagiographic, with little indication 
    of the many problems that Klemperer caused to his fellow performers beyond 
    oblique mentions of truculence and bullying. Klemperer’s jokes, delivered 
    in an almost impenetrable accent, are never as funny as his audiences seem 
    to find at the time. The documentary is nevertheless valuable in resurrecting 
    some rare recordings - previously unpublished rehearsal sequences from 
Don 
    Giovanni, and a section of a remarkable 1929 recording of the 
Dance 
    of the Seven Veils from Strauss’s 
Salome which shows the 
    results that Klemperer could obtain from his Berlin players in the late 1920s. 
    It demonstrates that his recordings made in London some thirty years later 
    were not just a matter of superlative playing but also of deeply-felt involvement 
    by the conductor. 
      
    
Paul Corfield Godfrey 
      
    Not just a matter of superlative playing but also of deeply-felt involvement.  
    
    
    Masterwork Index: 
Pulcinella
    
    Recording details
    Kingsway Hall, London, 
128-30 March and 16 May 1962: 
218 
    February, 14-18 May 1963 and 20 February 1964: 
330-31 October and 
    2 December 1961: 
67-8 May 1954 [mono]: 
727-29 September 
    1960: Abbey Road Studios, London, 
43 March 1969: 
516-17 
    February 1970