Readers who have ploughed 
                through my previous reviews of various 
                piano roll discs from Pierian, Tudor 
                and Naxos will know that I tend to start 
                by an explicatory paragraph on the virtues 
                of the Welte-Mignon system. That’s not 
                quite as pertinent here because Pitot, 
                Hess and Chaminade all recorded for 
                Duo-Art. It’s not immediately apparent 
                from the documentation to this disc 
                for which company Landowska recorded, 
                whether Welte, Ampico or even Duo-Art 
                itself. But I’ll include the paragraph 
                here anyway for those who are unfamiliar 
                with the Welte system. 
              
 
              
The Welte-Mignon piano 
                used a series of carbon rods attached 
                to each of the keys which lowered into 
                a trough of mercury to complete an electrical 
                circuit when the pianist hit a note. 
                The circuit caused inked rollers to 
                mark a roll of paper with the note itself 
                and also the speed and depth of the 
                attacked note. Playback was possible 
                before the roll was manually perforated 
                for public consumption on a player piano. 
                Theoretically then dynamic shading and 
                pedalling could be registered by the 
                complex system but Welte-Mignon was, 
                irrespective of the secrecies and ambiguities 
                of the system, something of a world 
                leader in the player piano world. Something 
                of their eminence can be gauged by the 
                composers who went to record for them 
                – Mahler, Ravel and Debussy amongst 
                them. 
              
 
              
Dal Segno is undertaking 
                an extensive series of piano roll issues 
                based on 1992 transfers. The quartet 
                of performers here share a common sex; 
                Landowska, Hess and Chaminade are all 
                well known from their disc recordings 
                (Chaminade’s are early G&Ts currently 
                on APR), though Landowska’s piano records 
                have always been more elusive than the 
                many she made as a harpsichordist. Genevieve 
                Pitot is little known except to specialists 
                and she was mainly a transcriber whose 
                meteoric early career – she was fifteen 
                when she made the earliest of her rolls 
                here – was not sustained later in life. 
              
 
              
It doesn’t take much 
                digging about to point out the manifold 
                limitations of the player piano system. 
                Hess recorded the Scarlatti Sonata in 
                1940 and we can contrast it with her 
                1926 roll. On disc she is full of rhythmic 
                nuance, colouristic sheen, teasing accents 
                and deft rubati – playful, affectionate 
                and warm. On the roll, she is dead as 
                a dodo, rhythmically flat, dynamically 
                even, monotonous and mechanical. I would 
                advise you to contrast her commercial 
                recording of the Brahms Intermezzo Op.119/3 
                (HMV 1941 or the live 1949 University 
                of Illinois performance on APR) with 
                the player piano travesty – which is 
                the nearest you can get to a barrel 
                organ without being arrested. 
              
 
              
It’s potentially useful 
                to have items that she didn’t record 
                commercially, not least the Beethoven 
                sonata, or performances with eminent 
                colleagues such as the one here with 
                Harold Bauer (though she did record 
                on disc with Hamilton Harty, her Columbia 
                stable mate – Bauer was contracted to 
                Victor/HMV). But the odds against musical 
                pleasure are too heavy. Similarly with 
                Landowska, who contributes sonatas by 
                Mozart and Beethoven and the latter’s 
                Andante favori. The playing sounds very 
                un-Landowska like in its inert mechanistic 
                insistence and shouldn’t be taken at 
                all as an index of her piano playing 
                – the commercial disc recordings are 
                the ones to have. 
              
 
              
In Volume 2 the same 
                strictures apply to the Chaminade rolls. 
                She recorded Fauns in London 
                in 1901 and whilst it’s a very tough 
                listen (find it on APR) we can still 
                appreciate her rubati and the middle 
                voicings she brings out. The 1921 roll 
                by contrast is linear and flat and devoid 
                of rhythmic subtleties of any kind, 
                results clearly due to the medium not 
                to the messenger. But it’s useful to 
                have some examples of the young Pitot’s 
                charming morceaux. 
              
 
              
The 1992 recordings 
                were made on a concert grand in an ample 
                acoustic with a touch of ambient noise 
                and what sounds like tape hiss. Proof-reading 
                of the booklets needs to be tightened 
                and we simply have to have the original 
                release numbers. It’s really not good 
                enough to note duration time and the 
                roll date without specifics of that 
                kind. I’d also be interested to know 
                if some of the Hess rolls were issued 
                under the Duo Art name or under Audiograph’s. 
              
 
               
              
Jonathan Woolf