I’m not sure if 
                    all Fausts at the Met were outstanding but all the ones I’ve 
                    heard from this time – including an earlier one from Beecham  
                    - certainly have been. The French Wing was certainly an august 
                    one at the house when such as Beecham and Monteux were in 
                    charge. 
                  This performance 
                    from February 1955 features the genial and splendid conducting 
                    of the seventy-nine year old Monteux – he and Beecham seem 
                    to have favoured relatively relaxed readings there – and Monteux 
                    proves once again how much we owe to broadcast survivals such 
                    as this to augment and cement our appreciation of him as an 
                    operatic conductor. Take a listen, for example, to the sheer 
                    class and elegance of his conducting in Act II’s Ainsi 
                    que la brise. He presides over a rip roaring cast – De 
                    Los Angeles, Peerce, Siepi, Merrill, Mildred Miller and Thelma 
                    Votipka - who sang Marthe for Beecham as well - and Lawrence 
                    Davidson. The results are consistently exciting and illuminating.
                  A few words about 
                    the cast. Peerce was a pugnacious singer but had poor French. 
                    His beefy Rien! En vain shows how he means to carry 
                    on – a rather belligerent confidence suffuses his singing. 
                    The strong Italianate cast to his singing makes itself apparent 
                    in Salut! Demeure chaste et pure where French elegance 
                    is in short supply but Italian beef is not. Siepi’s Act I 
                    Mais ce Dieu scene with Faust is eloquent, almost in 
                    fact avuncular. The voice itself is finely controlled and 
                    well deployed across the range and he makes a characterful 
                    and impressive stage presence. There’s no mugging in Act II’s 
                    Le veau, much to its advantage and even in Act V’s 
                    La jour va luire he not only resists the lure 
                    of stentorian pronouncement or adamantine tone but remains 
                    sympathetic and credible. He’s one of the most worthy features 
                    of this set and is a Méphistophélès to reckon with the greats. 
                    De Los Angeles shows exceptional refinement and elegance; 
                    everything sounds perfectly secure. Trills are perfectly centred 
                    in Ah! je ris de me voir. In her Act III conclusion 
                    she is more than merely plausible theatrically. Some may perhaps 
                    baulk at the crystalline purity of it all but against such 
                    beauty of tone most will have no defence. Votipka proves entirely 
                    reliable, indeed more, in her Act III Seigneur Dieu and 
                    she and Siepi have some richly warm moments together. I rather 
                    enjoyed Merrill’s performance – it’s not blustery at all and 
                    though his French pronunciation is not secure he makes a convincing 
                    turn out of Valentin. 
                  We can hear throughout that the choir tends 
                    to be rather woolly. Some entries are rather muffed but they 
                    do show spirit and a few dodgy moments are soon swept up in 
                    the collective mêlée. The recording is not at all bad but 
                    the broadcast date of 1955 is not really so distant in any 
                    case. There are no notes, just a track listing. I tend to 
                    favour the Beecham Met over this by a small margin but for 
                    admirers of conductor and singers this Monteux-led performance 
                    is an engrossing one.
                  Jonathan Woolf
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