Note-less 
                and silent as to provenance the purchaser 
                is on his own with these two Cologne 
                (but see below) recordings of Kleiber’s 
                Dvořák. Kleiber was joined by Antonio 
                Janigro for the Cello Concerto though 
                Janigro is now probably best 
                remembered as conductor of I Solisti 
                di Zagreb. 
              
 
              
In point of fact he 
                had been a particularly distinguished 
                cellist and was devoted to this concerto. 
                He recorded it for Westminster with 
                Dean Dixon conducting the Vienna State 
                Opera Orchestra. Whilst it’s really 
                more a matter of academic interest than 
                anything (at least until that disc is 
                returned to currency, if it ever should 
                be) Janigro responds that much more 
                vocally and intensely in the live recording 
                with Kleiber. It’s by no means a cast 
                iron performance. The Cologne horn section 
                seems to have been rather fragile – 
                as was the section in the previous year 
                in the companion Ninth Symphony - and 
                there is poor playing in the opening 
                movement of the Concerto, though the 
                principal flute is excellent. Tension 
                can dissipate as well from time to time 
                though Kleiber holds things on a rhythmically 
                tight rein. Janigro’s tone is tightly 
                coiled and he’s not free of reproach 
                when it comes to tidiness but it’s a 
                whole-hearted reading, let down by some 
                disc bumps and far too much knob twiddling 
                in the Cologne studio to contain tuttis. 
                The warmly flowing slow movement is 
                very acceptable and there’s ardent and 
                expressive playing in the finale though 
                also one or two clipped notes in the 
                recording set-up. 
              
 
              
The Concerto has been 
                released before on Arlecchino. 
              
 
              
Technical problems 
                are as problematic in the Symphony – 
                perhaps rather more so in fact. It was 
                released on Movmento Musica back in 
                1986. The audience is a typical bronchial 
                November one and the sound is rather 
                scuffy, the recording as such occasionally 
                wearyingly braying. This must surely 
                have been recorded on tape but it sounds 
                to me as if Archipel has found an LP 
                source from which to transfer because 
                there is a passing but dislocating and 
                entirely repairable locked groove in 
                the first movement. Thoroughly poor 
                show to have left this for our delight. 
                There’s also a problem in the scherzo, 
                from 6.30 onwards - it sounds like a 
                clipped note – but significant enough 
                to warn prospective purchasers. The 
                performance is notable for one thing 
                in particular and that’s the awesome 
                string playing Kleiber elicits in the 
                slow movement where, for one hallucinatory 
                moment, I swore I was listening to a 
                vocal choir not a string one. Quite 
                astounding. Elsewhere he packs in some 
                swoony dynamics in the opening that 
                take a bit of getting used to and the 
                playing is not always watertight. This 
                label claims that this was the Cologne 
                orchestra but authoritative sources 
                elsewhere claim it to be the Berlin 
                State Opera and I’ve amended the track 
                details accordingly. 
              
 
              
Obviously it would 
                take a very strong coupling of these 
                two works to entice purchasers who might 
                not otherwise respond to Kleiber’s name. 
                For the latter it’s a strong purchase; 
                for generalists there are strong caveats 
                along the way. Sample the slow movement 
                of the New World if you can, 
                though. Hear a magician at work. 
              
 
               
              
Jonathan Woolf