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Erich Kleiber
Carl Maria
von WEBER (1786-1826) Euryanthe: Overture (1823) [9:10] Wolfgang Amadeus
MOZART (1756-1791)
Symphony No. 33 in B flat major K.319 (1779) [20:01] Pyotr TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)
Symphony No. 6 in B minor Op.74 ‘Pathétique’ (1892)
[46:30]
Kölner Rundfunk-Sinfonie-Orchester/Erich
Kleiber
rec. Funkhaus, Saal 1, WDR Cologne, 20 January 1956 (Weber),
23 November 1953 (Mozart), 28 March 1955 (Tchaikovsky) MEDICI
ARTS MM003-2 [75:51]
The Viennese Erich Kleiber, father of Carlos, was first turned
on to conducting when he heard Mahler conducting his Symphony
No.6. After a distinguished career in Germany he left in
1934, unable to tolerate Nazi interference with his programming.
He took up residence in Buenos Aires and became an Argentinean
citizen for a decade, returning to Europe in 1948. In 1954
he accepted the position of conductor at the Berlin State
Opera in East Berlin, but resigned in 1955 again unable to
work under the imposed conditions. These recordings were
made in the final phase of Erich Kleiber’s career, when he
was still working as a guest conductor in London and Vienna,
as well as other European centres such a Stuttgart and Cologne
in particular.
The 1956 recording of the Weber Overture is part of his final
visit to the Cologne orchestra and one of his last recordings.
He died a week later on 27 January 1956. While the sound
on all of these recordings is somewhat thin and dated, Euryanthe in
fact comes up rather well, and betrays no flagging of energy
in the lively opening and final sections. Only the strings
from 3:40 in have a strange wandering quality and some suspect
intonation in places. These central, slower parts are eloquent
enough however, with plenty of that attention to detail for
which Kleiber was famous.
While avoiding anything modern, the programming in this disc
reflects Kleiber’s musical tastes to a certain extent. He
was recognised as a great Beethoven and Mozart conductor,
apparently having little interest in Bach or Brahms, and
his enthusiasm for Mahler and Bruckner having waned somewhat
towards the end of his career. He was an unremitting perfectionist,
seeking to re-create the music exactly as written by the
composer: “There are two enemies to good performance: one
is routine, the other is improvisation.” While this credo
might have worked through many a performance, the results
in Mozart’s Symphony No.3 are a good deal stiffer
than many might appreciate – accurate it may be, but the
score never really seems to come to life. The recording is
again rather thin as one might expect, and there are one
or two artefacts of extreme age, such as the strangled opening
to the Menuetto which is probably due to tape damage.
Personally I would have gone for the ‘fake’ and pasted on
the opening of the repeat to cover for this, at which I hear
hissing from the purists, but as there seems to be hardly
any difference between any of the repeats or recapitulations
I’m sure few would have noticed. There do seem to be a few
edits which tune slightly differently as well. Aside from
these minor points and one or two wobbly horn moments, the
playing is reasonably good, but not much more than that.
Kleiber’s background as an opera conductor means that Mozart’s
sense of musical argument does come through as a thinly disguised
instrumental version of something from that genre – you could
imagine someone bursting into song at almost any point, but
with the orchestra sounding a little as if it is ‘in the
pit’ this might just be more of an acoustic artefact. If
I’m honest, this kind of relic has to be more of interest
to Kleiber historians than for genuine musical pleasure in
my humble opinion.
Kleiber recorded Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No.6 with
the Paris Conservatoire Orchestra for Decca eighteen months
before this recording, and clearly had the music well under
his skin. String ensemble is not always that great, but the
orchestral tuttis have a stormy quality, and Kleiber’s operatic
pedigree comes through in his freely expressive way with
the ‘big tunes’. We’ve become far less used to the kind of
tugging around with the tempo Kleiber asks for at these moments,
but the music gains a weird character of its own, and there
is a strange kind of symbiosis between the score and the
conductor which created its own worlds of passionate intensity
and bizarre beauty. Those expecting a performance of the
first movement which mirrors the Decca reading are likely
to be in for a surprise. The second movement is more con
grazia than Allegro, but you get a sense of Kleiber’s
ability to draw every last drop of detail from the score,
from the outspoken pizzicati from the strings, the circular
movement of the dynamics and the ongoing forward momentum
in both this and the Allegro molto vivace third movement.
Freedom in rubato returns in the final tragic movement, giving
the work more of a symmetrical feel than I think I can recall
having heard anywhere else. Does this performance come up
with the goods? If you can place yourself into another era,
with a conductor steeped in the traditions which gave us
the kind of romanticism embodied by the works of Mahler,
then yes. The blood is wrung from Tchaikovsky’s enigmatic
stone with every ounce of strength available to Kleiber,
and with something which could so easily be bordering on
over-sentimental farce the heart and sinews of the music
are laid bare, and one can only gasp at the results.
Mastering on these recordings has to be as good as it can
get. You cannot expect genuine HiFi from this era, and oboes
will almost always be gargling away in there somewhere. There
are one or two moments where some kind of strange phasing
seems to crop up, but this is very minor. Tape hiss has been
kept low but without apparent loss of treble detail, and
as historical fare goes the results of re-mastering give
as good an impression of the originals as one might expect.
What we have is a valuable document of a great conductor
giving us his last thoughts on a number of significant works.
The orchestra might not have been the greatest Kleiber ever
conducted, but in the Tchaikovsky at least one has the feeling
of the musicians consciously raising their game to meet the
demands of the old maestro.
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