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Hector BERLIOZ
(1803-1869)
Le Corsaire Overture, Op. 21 [8:09]
Edvard GRIEG (1843-1907)
An Old Norwegian Romance with Variations, Op. 51 (1890) [17:53]
Vincent d’INDY (1851-1931)
La Forêt Enchantée. Symphonic legend after Uhland,
Op. 8 (1878) [13:42]*
Camille SAINT-SAËNS (1835-1921)
Symphony No 3 in C minor, Op.78 (1886) [36:07]**
Denis Vaughan (organ), Tom McCall and Douglas Gamley (pianos)**
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, BBC Symphony Orchestra */Sir Thomas
Beecham
rec. 7 March 1951, Royal Albert Hall (Berlioz); 27 November 1955,
Royal Festival Hall (Grieg); 21 October 1951, BBC Maida Vale Studios,
London (d’Indy); 20 October 1954, Royal Festival Hall (Saint-Saëns).
ADD
SOMM BEECHAM32 [76:11]
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More riches from Somm’s Beecham archive, which means more
novelties to add to Beecham’s discography, more excitement,
and more brio.
The disc begins with a performance of Berlioz’s Le
Corsaire overture from 1951, neatly bisecting the three
commercial recordings he made of it, which were set down in
1947, 1954 and 1958. It exudes by turn, wit, lyricism and dynamism.
The electricity generated, as well as the warmth in the central
panel, encourages the Royal Albert Hall audience to admiring
applause. There’s a small typo, of which Somm is aware,
in that the jewel box and track-listing proclaim Grieg’sAn
Old Norwegian Folksong with Variations but Robert Matthew-Walker
knows better and correctly calls it An Old Norwegian Romance
with Variations in his notes. Beecham had first conducted
it a week or so before recording it in the studio. This Royal
Festival Hall performance follows that studio recording, though
Beecham’s allegiance to it didn’t last much longer
and he dropped it from his repertory. What must have appealed
to him, an acknowledged Grieg exponent, was its freshness and
verdant lyricism, qualities he was able fully to extract via
the alluring string phrasing of his fiddles and the tactile,
warm contributions of his RPO famous wind players. What may
ultimately have counted against the work is a perceived diffuseness
for all its geniality and approachability; and though he certainly
did programme relatively long works such as this - it’s
nearly 18 minutes long in his performance - it’s not altogether
easy to fit into a coherent concert shape.
D’Indy’s La Forêt Enchantée
is a live broadcast taped in the BBC’s Maida Vale studios
in October 1951. He had first conducted it back in 1907 and
performed it eleven times altogether, though this was the last
such occasion. The orchestra is the BBC Symphony, and the interpretative
stance is evocative, insightful, and shows a convincing grasp
of its legendary ethos. There’s a touch of overload, but
it’s not at all bad. This was one work here that escaped
Beecham’s attention in the recording studio, as opposed
to the broadcasting studio. Another such was Saint-Saëns’
Third Symphony. It was recorded live in the Festival Hall in
October 1954. He had first conducted it in 1913 - the composer
was present, and had jousted with the conductor at rehearsals
concerning tempi - and was to do so 11 more times up to this
concert. It’s a thoroughly spirited traversal though not
overwhelmingly so; certainly you need to put out of your mind
any comparison with sonic spectacular stereo LP versions of
slightly later. The sound remains perfectly reasonable for the
time, though the percussion sound is rather boomy. Beecham is
thoroughly au fait with the idiom - you’d have
thought he might have recorded it in the late 1950s in Paris,
but he didn’t - and the results extend still further our
appreciation of his repertoire in general and the Franco-Belgian
part of it, as perpetuated in this excellent disc.
Jonathan Woolf
see also review by John
Quinn
Masterwork Index: Saint-Saëns
Symphony 3
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