This is the only
                    complete surviving document of Fritz Busch’s Ninth. Busch,
                    who in 1922 had been appointed Generalmusikdirektor of Dresden
                    State Opera, was dismissed from that post in March 1933 due
                    to Nazi power. In June, Busch left Germany, only returning
                    at the very end of his life. Soon after his departure from
                    Germany he became affiliated with Glyndebourne; he was its
                    first music director from 1934.
                
                 
                
                
The sound is clear and has fair body, with only mild
                    muddying in the lower mid to bass ranges. Most impressive
                    of all is Busch’s structural grasp. He holds the arrival
                    points clearly in mind, and yet never undermines the emotional
                    importance of surface detail. His moulding of 
crescendi is
                    expertly managed. It is almost as if Busch can maintain Toscanini’s
                    fiery surface motion while keeping some of Furtwängler’s
                    famous long-range thought. Could Busch have been the missing
                    link between the two, the so-called Toscwängler - a horrible
                    name, I know, but Furtanini sounds even worse?
                 
                
The second movement 
Molto vivace is not as tidy
                    of ensemble as the first movement, but this is a sprightly
                    performance. Busch sets a challengingly rapid pace, and at
                    times one can sense the Danish players struggling to keep
                    to the tactus. Timpani solos are incisive, though. It is
                    the 
Adagio molto e cantabile that is richest in dividends.
                    The opening is serenely gentle and it is here that we really
                    feel the superiority of Guild’s transfer, Remastering is
                    courtesy of Peter Reynolds. 
                 
                
The
                    opening of the finale laudably avoids distortion but inevitably
                    perhaps lacks the visceral edge of more modern recordings.
                    The tutti sounds a little blunted. No mistaking the Toscanini-like
                    headlong dash around 5:50. Holder Byrding has to use all
                    of his persuasive powers to get the idea of “other” sounds
                    (joy) across. The recording clearly favours the choral tenors.
                    Eric Sjöberg, the solo tenor, is enthusiastic in his solo
                    leading into the concentrated fugue - wherein Busch generates
                    tension aplenty. There is a ragged, half-hearted choral entry
                    at around 17:30. All is forgotten and forgiven when we get
                    to the magical passage for all four soloists around 21 minutes
                    in. Rarely - if ever - have I heard a quartet of soloists
                    that works so well together and is so perfectly in balance,
                    with all four egos held on a strong leash. Worth it for those
                    moments alone, really; a more long-sighted critical appraisal
                    simply reinforces the strength and integrity of this account
                    of the Ninth.
                 
                
The 
Leonore Overture
                    is superbly paced. The strings, in particular impress, especially
                    in the lead-in to the main, fast, body of the overture. Lower
                    strings move adeptly at speed. The solo trumpet fanfares
                    do sound rather brass-bandish, but the drama remains intact,
                    and actually ignites in the tempestuous coda. This 
Leonore seems
                    to have previously only been issued on LP on Denmark’s POKO
                    Records label (PLP8401/3) and is therefore a greater rarity
                    than the Ninth which was previously on multiple labels, including
                    Heliodor and Melodiya (!) on LP and Urania on CD. The present
                    CD was issued in conjunction with two other Ninths (Toscanini/Colón
                    1941 and Furtwängler/Berlin March 1942). Jonathan Woolf gives
                    a typically perceptive 
review comparing
                    and contrasting all three here on 
MusicWeb. This Busch
                    Ninth stands magnificently on its own merits, though, despite
                    the occasional caveat.
                 
                
                
Colin Clarke
                
                see also review by Jonathan Woolf