Pierre Monteux (1875-1964) 
                had a major career on both sides of the Atlantic. This CD of live 
                performances usefully brings together the two principal strands 
                of his North American career. From 1919 to 1924 Monteux was principal 
                conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and he returned to 
                it regularly as a guest conductor from 1951 until his death. At 
                Boston he rebuilt the orchestra’s fortunes after the Great War 
                and the internment of the orchestra’s previous permanent conductor, 
                Karl Muck. In 1936 he was invited to take over the podium of the 
                San Francisco Symphony, acting as their principal conductor until 
                1952 and once again he rebuilt the orchestra. Indeed, his achievement 
                on the west coast was arguably even more significant than in Boston, 
                for the San Francisco orchestra had been crippled by financial 
                difficulties in the years before he arrived there and it was, 
                in effect, reconstituted on his arrival. 
              
The most important 
                  item on this disc is the 1957 performance of Le Sacre du 
                  Printemps. Monteux had conducted the notorious première 
                  of the work and he remained associated with it throughout his 
                  career. For example, it was on the very first programme that 
                  he conducted in Boston when he returned to that orchestra in 
                  1951. Incidentally, in his booklet note Robert Matthew-Walker 
                  states that after leaving Boston in 1924 the conductor “maintained 
                  a close association with the Boston Symphony until his death.” 
                  I don’t think that’s quite accurate. Monteux was pretty much 
                  ousted from Boston. Koussevitsky was engaged as his successor 
                  even before Monteux’s contract expired and he was never included 
                  on the Boston roster of guest conductors until Charles Munch 
                  succeeded Koussevitsky and almost immediately invited Monteux 
                  back.
                
In 1956 he made 
                  his last recording of Le Sacre, a studio account in stereo 
                  for RCA with the Paris Conservatoire Orchestra. In his biography 
                  of Monteux, Pierre Monteux, Maître (2003) the conductor, 
                  John Canarina laments that the record company didn’t wait until 
                  Monteux performed the piece in Boston the following year. Hearing 
                  this live account now I can only agree with him. The Paris performance, 
                  though captured in good stereo sound, is a tepid affair, in 
                  which the orchestra sounds by turns tentative and uninspired. 
                  By contrast this Boston version shows what Monteux could achieve 
                  when he had a fully engaged virtuoso band at his disposal. True, 
                  the sound is not as good as that on the Paris stereo recording 
                  – there’s a lack of front-to-back depth at times and the recording 
                  is somewhat close. Also there are times when the percussion 
                  distorts significantly. It must be said too that although the 
                  BSO plays superbly there are one or two slips, as one often 
                  finds in live performance. Thus, for instance, the bassoonist 
                  falters momentarily when he repeats his opening solo. However, 
                  the few such minor lapses didn’t spoil my pleasure and they 
                  convey the feeling of a live, unedited occasion.
                
However, to compensate 
                  for any sonic deficiencies you get a reading of real bite and 
                  rhythmic drive. As a performance this is the real deal. It’s 
                  not flashy but it has great spirit and urgency, though the tempi 
                  are never unduly pressed  – remember that, unlike many conductors 
                  who essay Le Sacre, Monteux had significant experience 
                  of directing the work in the pit. Frequently I marvelled at 
                  the fact that Monteux could inspire such an energetic performance 
                  eight days after his eighty-second birthday. And though the 
                  extrovert moments are tremendously exciting I found that just 
                  as impressive are the quieter passages, such as the openings 
                  to both Part I and Part II, where Monteux achieves fine clarity 
                  of texture. As far as I’m aware this hugely impressive reading 
                  has never been available on CD before – I think it had limited 
                  circulation years ago on a small LP label – and Guild deserve 
                  our thanks for making it available. It shows Monteux’s association 
                  with Le Sacre in a far better light than did the RCA 
                  recording.
                
The other performances 
                  all come from Monteux’s time in San Francisco and, specifically, 
                  from the fortnightly contributions that he and his orchestra 
                  made to a Sunday evening series of radio broadcasts sponsored 
                  by Standard Oil – on alternate weeks the Los Angeles Philharmonic 
                  provided the broadcasts. Robert Matthew- Walker asserts in his 
                  notes that the Rimsky-Korsakov pieces are here “brought together 
                  as a collection for the first time on CD” but I’m afraid that’s 
                  not so. All these performances, and the Borodin piece too, were 
                  included in the Music & Arts box Sunday Evenings with 
                  Pierre Monteux (CD –978 and later reissued in an expanded 
                  form as CD-1192). This collection was reviewed 
                  most enthusiastically by Jonathan Woolf.
                
The performances 
                  are all most enjoyable though the Borodin is given in a slightly 
                  truncated form, I believe, and anyway I never see the point 
                  in doing this piece without chorus. The Russian Easter Festival 
                  Overture receives a colourful and spirited reading and I 
                  also enjoyed the magical, glittering quiet start to Christmas 
                  Night. Comparing the transfers of these San Francisco recordings 
                  with those on Music & Arts, the Guild versions have more 
                  warmth and body – I suspect the transfer has been more interventionist. 
                  Purists may object but, though the Music & Arts transfers 
                  are fully acceptable, I preferred the listening experience provided 
                  by Guild. The sound quality varies somewhat: the Christmas 
                  Night recording, which is the oldest, is the most beset 
                  by surface noise. Though no recording location is specified 
                  I assume that all these performances took place in the War Memorial 
                  Opera House, San Francisco, which was the orchestra’s home in 
                  those days.
                
Don’t be put off 
                  by any sonic considerations. Without exception the performances 
                  on this CD are vital, idiomatic and full of interest. Monteux’s 
                  mastery in Russian music is at all times evident. Summing up 
                  the Music & Arts set of San Francisco Sunday broadcasts, 
                  Jonathan Woolf wrote “Sixteen hours with Pierre Monteux is no 
                  time at all, so zestful, so clear, so deft his musicianship 
                  and so sympathetic his conducting.” How true! I enjoyed that 
                  box every bit as much as he did but, even at the advantageous 
                  price, it’s a significant investment. It’s good, therefore that 
                  Guild have made available these Rimsky and Borodin performances 
                  in a much more economical package. But the raison-d’être 
                  for this disc must surely be the opportunity it affords us to 
                  hear Monteux at the helm of a virtuoso orchestra in a concert 
                  performance of Le Sacre. The sound may be imperfect at 
                  times but it’s an unmissable experience, and not just for admirers 
                  of Le Maitre such as myself.
                
              
John Quinn