This, let me say right at the beginning, is a wonderful disc. 
                It records a complete concert that Stokowski gave at the age of 
                88. One might have been prepared for the musical insights of a 
                man who had recorded the second movement of Franck’s symphony 
                almost 50 years earlier in 1922 and who had conducted the first 
                US performance of Alexander Nevsky in 1943. But the sheer 
                vigour, energy and imagination of these performances set down 
                by a man approaching his tenth decade, leaves one - or, at any 
                rate, this one - nonetheless amazed.  
              
As 
                  one perceptive Dutch reviewer pointed out at the time, this 
                  would “probably be the last time one will hear the Franck symphony 
                  under the direction of a conductor who was born before the premiere 
                  of 1889 took place”. Putting things into that kind of useful 
                  perspective might make one expect an unsurprising, traditional 
                  interpretation of music that had, by the middle of the twentieth 
                  century, become something of an orchestral warhorse. But here 
                  we get nothing of the sort! 
                
In 
                  an earlier review of Stokowski conducting his own Bach transcriptions 
                  on disc, I quoted him as once saying that “through imagination, 
                  through feeling, through… some instinctive quality that some 
                  artists have, we have to try to understand and reproduce and 
                  give to the listening public what we consider was in the 
                  mind and soul of the composer…”. And it turns out that, 
                  asked by orchestra members at rehearsals for this very concert 
                  why he was amending Franck’s orchestration, he said much the 
                  same thing – that he “didn’t expect César Franck to agree with 
                  what he did but, once he heard it, he would have agreed”. 
                
Some 
                  might, of course, see the suggestion that some conductors have 
                  a special insight into a composer’s mind, allowing them to go 
                  beyond the mere printed notes on the page, as simple egotism. 
                  Yet, to Stokowski, there was no automatic dichotomy between 
                  the creative composer and the re-creative conductor. To him, 
                  both served a higher purpose, with the conductor assuming, if 
                  necessary, the responsibility of divining the music’s ideal 
                  form that the - perhaps fallible - composer would have set down 
                  in the score if only he’d been able to. 
                
In 
                  the case of Franck’s symphony, that meant, in the first place, 
                  tinkering with the orchestration. As a transcriber of organ 
                  works for full orchestra himself, Stokowski would have been 
                  very aware of the frequently made charge that Franck’s orchestration 
                  can be so heavy and powerful (organ like?) that it sometimes 
                  drowns out significant instrumental voices. Hence he decided, 
                  for this concert, to double the parts for the English horn and 
                  the contrabassoon. Anticipating his probable requirements, the 
                  orchestra had already hired a third harpist before the first 
                  rehearsal! 
                
The 
                  second means of “improving” the score, meanwhile, was to be 
                  far more flexible with tempi. To an extent, of course, 
                  all conductors will have particular quirks in that regard – 
                  musical trademarks, if you like, that distinguish their own 
                  interpretations from those of others. Just looking at some of 
                  the Franck symphonies on my own CD shelves demonstrates how 
                  the score has, over the years, seen some quite striking variations 
                  in approach. 
                
              
Sometimes 
                that is manifested consistently across the whole work. At one 
                extreme, for instance, we have the skittish Paul Paray and the 
                Detroit Symphony Orchestra with the fastest timings for every 
                one of the three movements: 16:00/8:48/9:10 – making 33:58 in 
                all. At the other end of the spectrum we find the Carlo Maria 
                Giulini’s very grand, deliberate account with the Vienna Philharmonic 
                Orchestra, recording the slowest times for every single movement 
                at 21:30/12:21/12:50 – no less than 46:41 altogether!  
              
Even 
                  with the less consistently extreme approaches – from, on my 
                  shelves, Beecham, Barbirolli, van Otterloo and Monteux – individual 
                  conductors will have their personal idiosyncrasies: Barbirolli’s 
                  speedier than usual allegretto or van Otterloo’s especially 
                  urgent finale. But what is virtually unique to Stokowski’s account 
                  is the way in which the tempo variations are so marked, in all 
                  three movements, even between one musical phrase and the next. 
                  Yet another contemporary reviewer observed that the conductor 
                  was willing “to sacrifice such matters as strictness of form 
                  and unity of movement so expressly to emotional aspects that 
                  the threshold to the sentimental was crossed more than once”. 
                  Stokowski, in fact, makes even the notoriously wilful Willem 
                  Mengelberg – who gives Paray a good run for his money and even 
                  beats him to the finishing line in the finale – look predictable 
                  in comparison. 
                
Many 
                  of the characteristics of the Franck performance are also apparent 
                  in the Prokofiev. Stokowski clearly revels in – and hence feels 
                  far less need to alter - the imaginative orchestration that 
                  the composer used to differentiate the participants in the drama. 
                  Appropriately harsh dissonance characterises the brutal Teutonic 
                  Knights while suitably rich, mellow harmonies illustrate the 
                  Russian peasants who resist their aggression. While Eisenstein’s 
                  1938 film may never have become a cinematic blockbuster - Stalin 
                  quickly ordered it shelved when he made a temporary pact with 
                  Hitler - Prokofiev’s tremendously vital score has certainly 
                  become an orchestral and choral showpiece – exactly, in other 
                  words, the sort of work that Stokowski loved to perform. Predictably, 
                  the exciting Battle on the Ice goes very well, with the 
                  conductor exercising more subtle control over dynamics than 
                  many of his peers, but the spikier and more acerbic Russia 
                  under the Mongol yoke and The Crusaders in Pskov are 
                  also very distinctive. 
                
The 
                  Groot Omroepkoor are clearly a very fine ensemble. They sing 
                  the Teutonic Knights’ Latin chants well, though, through no 
                  fault of their own, when they come to the Russian language they 
                  cannot match the innate Slavic sensibilities of native ensembles. 
                  Similarly, soloist Sophia van Sante is technically very secure 
                  but somehow fails to generate the visceral thrill we can get 
                  from a Russian mezzo at full throttle. These are, though, minuscule 
                  failings overall. 
                
The 
                  members of the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra were 
                  apparently, after some initial puzzlement at his approach, completely 
                  won over by Stokowski and play their collective hearts out for 
                  him, whether in the unfamiliar miniature Ravel overture (apparently 
                  considered of so little significance that it even fails to win 
                  a listing on the disc itself!) or the more frequently performed 
                  works. Captured in first class sound and with complete clarity, 
                  they were clearly a very competent band who responded with the 
                  most intense concentration to their guest conductor’s no doubt 
                  characteristically fluttering fingers. Stokowski subsequently 
                  responded by thanking them “for the brilliant, powerful, sensitive 
                  and flexible concerts you played…” and, on the basis of this 
                  CD, every one of those adjectives was most certainly justified. 
                
With 
                  some very interesting booklet notes by David Patmore, this disc 
                  becomes an essential purchase – not just for Leopold Stokowski’s 
                  large (and growing) body of admirers but also for those who 
                  love this music and for whom these revelatory accounts should 
                  be required listening.
                  
                  Rob Maynard