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Overtures in Hi-Fi
Track-listing at end of review
*Orchestre de L’Opéra-Comique, Paris/Albert Wolff
Paris Conservatoire Orchestra/Albert Wolff
rec. La Maison de la Mutualité, Paris, France, June 1951 (La Princesse
Jaune, Benvenuto Cellini), September 1954 (Masaniello, Le cheval
de bronze, Fra diavolo, Les diamants de la couronne), June 1955
(Le Corsaire, Le roi Lear, Le carnaval romain, Les francs-juges),
November 1957 (Si j’e´tais roi, Zampa, Donna Diana, Pique Dame,
Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor, Le domino noir). ADD mono/stereo
DECCA ELOQUENCE 480 2385 [70:19 + 74:00]
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The term ‘Hi-Fi’ dates from the 1950s, when Columbia launched
the LP, succeeding where RCA had failed twenty years before.
Decca made their first stereo recording in 1954 – Ernest Ansermet
and L’Orchestre de la Suisse Romande in a programme that included
the overture to Benvenuto Cellini. I’ve reviewed several
of the Ansermet sets from Eloquence and, almost without exception,
they’re very desirable indeed. Music-lovers will remember just
how sought after these LPs were; the works at the heart of this
set of ‘hi-fi overtures’ made up one such classic.
The conductor Albert Wolff, appointed director of the Opéra-Comique,
Paris in 1922, makes a strong case for this music which, with
the exception of the Berlioz, is largely ignored today. And
although Saint-Saëns’ The Yellow Princess falls into
this category the overture gets an effervescent outing, as does
that to Berlioz’s Benvenuto Cellini. Both are in mono,
but one’s ears soon adapt to the narrow soundstage and limited
dynamics; in any case, the ease and authority of the music-making
transcends such limitations. The Saint-Saëns isn’t particularly
memorable, but Cellini is imbued with a an arresting
sense of drama. It may seem a tad deliberate at the outset,
but there’s a marvellous ebb and flow here that surges to a
very high tide in the thumping finale. The goosebump-inducing
bass drum isn’t there but, goodness, everything else most certainly
is.
The shift to stereo in Le corsaire isn’t as much of a
shock as one might expect, testimony to the high standards Decca
achieved in the dying days of mono. That said, the natural,
more spacious recording is most welcome; wiry strings are now
silky and – voilà – Decca has discovered bass! The scurrying
strings and very audible timps are essential ingredients in
this thrilling performance, which has an unforced momentum that’s
impossible to resist. And just listen to that virtuoso brass
playing – wonderful stuff.
As for the dark-toned, more inward world of Le roi Lear,
Wolff and his band are no less engaging and insightful. The
lower strings have a richness and body that’s quite exceptional
for a recording of this vintage. That said, I did find the dirge-like
passage that begins at 4:37 surprisingly soupy and sentimental;
it’s most disconcerting, given that Wolff’s Berlioz is otherwise
clear-eyed and purposeful. It’s a minor detour, for the rest
of this overture – with its many echoes of the Symphonie
fantastique – is as dramatic as one could wish for.
Ditto Le carnaval romain, with its delicate pizzicati
at the start and animated tunes that build to an impassioned
apotheosis. The sonorous brass in Les francs-juges have
seldom sounded so glorious, the rhythms so supple. And listen
out for that discreet bass drum, superbly caught. The first
disc ends with Adam’s Si j’étais roi (If I were king).
It has a balletic delicacy and charm that’s most beguiling,
and – despite a slight tizziness in the tuttis – the Decca engineers
have done a spectacularly good job here.
The second disc is no less enticing. The Rossinian point and
sparkle of the overture to Hérold’s Zampa is a delight,
even if the brass fanfares are a little blatant at times. And
although it’s forgotten, Reznicek’s comic opera Donna Diana
is blessed with a terrific overture that’s more widely known.
It’s apt to sound like Suppé in places, but what it lacks in
subtlety it more than makes up for in rhythmic verve. Speaking
of Suppé, Pique Dame gets a very polished performance
here. Not quite in the same league as Charles Dutoit’s on Decca
414 408-2, but there’s a Gallic hauteur to Wolff’s reading
that’s entirely apt. As for the brass playing, it’s superb throughout.
Very occasionally – as in the quiet introduction to Die lustigen
Weiber von Windsor – the recording does betray its age with
a higher than usual noise floor. That’s soon forgotten in the
stream of sweet-toothed tunes that follow. Indeed, there’s an
echt-Viennese lilt to the rhythms that’s most endearing,
the French orchestra playing with real character. They’re no
less assured in the Auber, although the tuttis in Le domino
noir are a tad fierce. The last four pieces are in perfectly
good mono; Masoniello – the original title for
La muette de Portici – and Le cheval de bronze
are suitably thrustful, the bass nicely weighted. The snare
drum rolls and solo trumpet in Fra diavolo are splendid
too, the musical frippery of Les diamants de la couronne
paraded with more style than the music’s rumty-tum character
might deserve.
Musically the Saint-Saëns and Auber pieces are probably the
weakest here, but the rest of this collection more than makes
up for that. And lest you think 140 minutes of this music amounts
to cruel and unusual punishment, you’ll be pleasantly surprised
at how easy it is to listen to both discs in one sitting. This
is joyous music-making and the recordings really are ‘Hi-Fi’
in the best sense; the liner-notes are good too. Indeed, the
whole package is just too tempting to resist.
Dan Morgan
Track=listing
CD 1
Camille SAINT-SAËNS (1835-1921)
La Princesse Jaune (1872)* [6:15]
Hector BERLIOZ (1803-1869)
Benvenuto Cellini, Op. 23 (1838)* [10:26]
Le corsaire, Op. 21 (1844) [8:01]
Le roi Lear, Op. 4 (1831) [16:10]
Le carnaval romain, Op. 9 (1843) [8:34]
Les francs-juges, Op. 3 (1826) [12:45]
Adolphe ADAM (1803-1856)
Si j’étais roi (1852) [7:27]
CD 2
Ferdinand HÉROLD (1791-1833)
Zampa (1831) [8:17]
Emil Nikolaus REZNICEK
(1860-1945)
Donna Diana (1894, rev. 1933) [5:51]
Franz von SUPPÉ (1819-1895)
Pique Dame (1864) [8:17]
Otto NICOLAI (1810-1849)
Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor (1845-1846) [9:00]
Daniel-François-Esprit AUBER
(1782-1871)
Le domino noir (1837) [8:10]
La muette de Portici (Masaniello) (1827) [8:17]
Le cheval de bronze (1835) [7:41]
Fra diavolo (1829) [8:32]
Les diamants de la couronne (1841) [9:05]
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