It must have been quite something to have heard 
          Koussevitzky in these two Carnegie Hall concerts given just over a week 
          apart in 1942. That said, we can relive at least part of the experience, 
          deprived of the kinetic visual quotient, via these excellent restorations 
          made by Lani Spahr. Both concerts are previously unissued, which adds 
          immeasurably to the excitement. 
            
          The first concert with the NYPSO, as it then was, begins with the hyphenated 
          Corelli-Pinelli confection, the three-movement Suite for String Orchestra. 
          The wide dynamics achievable in recording direct from Carnegie Hall 
          can be measured in this performance and so too the establishment and 
          maintenance of a strong bass line. That’s certainly the case in 
          the opening imposing 
Sarabande, where most of the piece’s 
          expressive weight falls, things becoming progressively lighter, ending 
          with the deft well-articulated strings in the 
Badinerie. This 
          is the kind of thing Beecham did with Handel, and Barbirolli with Purcell. 
          
            
          
Daphnis and Chloe (Suite No.2) follows in a most exciting and 
          successful performance. There are a few exposed wind passages, some 
          of which are a touch awkward, and the New York strings are more Russian 
          in tone than the French-honed Bostonians Koussevitzky customarily directed, 
          but the results are still idiomatic. The concert concludes with Shostakovich’s 
          Fifth Symphony. A number of American-based maestros all rushed to perform 
          one or other of Shostakovich’s symphonies; one thinks of Rodzinski, 
          Stokowski and the vacillating Toscanini, most prominently. In Koussevitzky’s 
          case he at first turned down performance of the Fifth, leaving it instead 
          to his Boston assistant, the fiddle-player Richard Burgin. A performance 
          of the work by Stokowski doubtless piqued his interest and perhaps his 
          gladiatorial instincts. In any case this is a major addition to Koussevitzky’s 
          discography. He first performed it in Boston in 1941, but never otherwise 
          took it into the studio. There’s real tension here. Note that 
          a Boston performance of the Fifth under Koussevitzky, which survives 
          in the archives of the Library of Congress, will be released in due 
          course on WHRA. Excellent note writer Tom Godell has great regard for 
          this New York performance but reserves even higher praise for the yet-unissued 
          Boston one. I prefer Stokowski to Koussevitzky in this work - so far, 
          at least. 
            
          The second disc houses the second concert. Both the chosen works in 
          this 1 March performance operate on a blistering scale. There is something 
          about the New York performance of 
La Mer that sets it apart from 
          the famous studio recording Koussevitzky left of it in Boston. That 
          ‘something’ is the sheer intensity of the thing. Koussevitzky 
          delineates a performance that outrivals Toscanini for its hot-blooded 
          but sensuous, indeed voluptuous power. It’s quite stunning in 
          its impact - both weighty and yet quicksilver, surging and glistening, 
          visceral and vertiginous. Truly remarkable. Because it’s more 
          of a known quantity his performance of Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony 
          may not impress quite as much, but it’s really a question of degree. 
          True, it’s less revelatory, and tends to serve to amplify his 
          known strengths in this repertory - driving attacks, manipulation of 
          tempos, whipped-up drama - but it’s well worth hearing, not least 
          in the context of the outstanding 
La Mer. 
            
          Indeed this finely engineered twofer is very strong both for its excellent 
          repertoire and often magnificent performances. 
            
          
Jonathan Woolf 
            
          Finely engineered, excellent repertoire and often magnificent performances.  
          
          
          Masterwork Index: 
La 
          Mer ~~ 
Shostakovich 
          symphony 5 ~~ 
Tchaikovsky 
          symphony 5