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LOTTE LEHMANN 

BRUNO WALTER  

 

SCHUMANN  

Dichterliebe

Frauenliebe und -leben

 

Recorded Los Angeles, 1941 

 

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LATEST REVIEWS
Fanfare

Sept/Oct,
2011

WEINGARTNER'S BRAHMS SYMPHONIES   

By Jerry Dubins

  

"These performances will leave you limp and exhausted, they are so adrenalin-filled"

 
PASC281

I begin with the assumption that these are the same performances from 1939 and 1940 that were originally issued in the U.K. on Columbia 78s and that have been long available on CD in EMI's "References" series of recordings. Once again, Bob Rose [sic], Pristine's audio engineering maître, has gone back to the 78 matrices and restored them using his proprietary "XR" process in an effort to extract more signal and cleaner results. Whatever he has done, it's nothing short of miraculous. You would simply not know you were listening to recordings of this vintage taken from 78s. So, it's entirely unnecessary to issue any kind of a warning about the quality of the sound, as one often must for remastered historical recordings. If Weingartner (1863-1942) conducting Brahms interests you, there is no reason to hesitate.

And Weingartner conducting Brahms should interest you because he is a direct link to the composer and the performing traditions of the time. Early on, while Brahms was still alive, Weingartner became assistant conductor to von Bülow in Hamburg. It was not a comfortable relationship. Von Bülow was a great champion of Brahms, as well as of Wagner and Tchaikovsky, but his conducting style was not to everyone's taste, and his well-publicized tactless tongue got him into trouble more than once, as when he was fired from his position in Hanover for calling the tenor who was singing the Knight of the Swan in Lohengrin the Knight of the Swine.

From letters and anecdotal sources, it appears that Brahms more often than not preferred the stricter conducting manner of Hans Richter, who attended closely to the letter of the score, to that of von Bülow, who allowed himself a good deal of interpretive freedom. In these two 19th-century giants, one can see the antipodal antecedents that manifested themselves in the 20th-century rift between the Furtwängler (von Bülow) and Toscanini (Richter) schools, Richter being the one to declare that tempo fluctuations should be so discrete that only a metronome would detect them.

But all was not black and white. Brahms had his moods, one day calling Richter's performances of his works "dull, gray, uninspired, and misunderstood," while praising von Bülow's readings in one breath and criticizing them in the next as "calculated for effects." Significant in all of this, however, is that Brahms heard Richter's successor, Felix Weingartner, conduct his Second Symphony and praised the young man as a "healthy, fresh personality who gave a truly wonderful performance." And as far as I know, Weingartner is only one of two conductors who knew Brahms personally and recorded the composer's works, the other being Max Fiedler (1859-1939).

From the recording at hand, it's instantly clear that Weingartner rejected whatever he may have learned from his apprenticeship under von Bülow, choosing instead to follow in Richter's path. The Un poco sostenuto that opens the First Symphony is taken fast and in absolutely strict time. There are no rhetorical flourishes, no stretching of the beat for the oboe solo, and no hair-pinning of dynamics. Yet for all its seeming rigidity, it builds up an enormous sense of expectation for the ensuing Allegro. The transition is seamless, the Allegro proceeding at a bracing pace and again with little to no flexibility in the beat, but a precision of articulation that many latter-day conductors fail to achieve. Something emerges from this that seldom registers in readings that are rhythmically pulled about, and that is the tremendous drama of agogic and metric conflict inherent in the confrontation between feuding rhythmic forces that Brahms has written into the score. Listen to the slashing chords marked pesante beginning in measure 60. The ferociousness of it is fearsome for the simple reason that Weingartner does exactly what Brahms asks for. Heretofore, I've held up Bruno Walter's New York Philharmonic recording as an example of tempos yesterday versus today, citing his first-movement timing of 12:43 as faster than either Abaddo's 1990 Berlin account at 14:13 or Rattle's 2008 Berlin account at 13:59. Well, Walter, step aside; Weingartner is now the fastest gun in town at 11:46, and he will have you on the edge of your seat.

I note by the way that back in Fanfare 16:1, John Tuska submitted an earlier Brahms First by Weingartner to Fanfare's Hall of Fame. That performance from 1929 was with the Royal Philharmonic, and I think it's instructive to read what Tuska had to say, for it corroborates 100 percent what I've been saying: "Weingartner's [performance] has a classical reserve, a sense of inner balance, and, more, an almost aristocratic austerity that embodies an underlying rhythmic vigor that defines the line rather than sings it. Although they were stylistically dissimilar, these are qualities Weingartner did share with Toscanini prior to 1937. It is rare today to hear such rigorous articulation, so accustomed have we become to the darker shades of romanticism. Yet, I suspect that here we come closer to what the audience heard when Hans von Bülow declared this to be the 'Tenth Symphony' than what quite recently Roger Norrington provided in his presumably 'authentic' recreation."

If the above has led you to believe Weingartner is cold or soulless, you need only turn to the second movement, played exactly as Brahms wrote it and as lovingly as one can imagine it. When it comes time for the Adagio introduction to the last movement, there's no aimless slogging through a gaseous bog. It marches in indomitable lockstep through the long night, inexorably toward the glorious sunrise. And what a sunrise the London Symphony brass provides! The famous tune that then kicks off the main body of the movement, taken at a quicker step than is customary, has a real sense of triumph and joy to it, as Weingartner and the orchestra keep up the pace and press on to a blazing finale. This now replaces Walter's Brahms First as my reference source. Phenomenal!

The performance of Brahms's Second Symphony comes as somewhat of a corrective to the impression I may have conveyed that Weingartner is a speed demon. Tempo-wise, he's still a shade faster than most, but not that you'd really notice without checking timings-at least, that is, until the two sections marked Presto ma non assai in the third movement where he takes off like the cartoon roadrunner being chased by a coyote. These are the only points in the entire symphony, however, where Weingartner feels rushed to me, as if he simply chose to disregard the ma non assai caution sign.

In the first movement, he picks up no more than about a minute by not making a ritard, as so many conductors do, at the beginning of the second theme in the violas and cellos at measure 81 and its corresponding reappearance in the recapitulation. Again, he follows Brahms's instructions scrupulously, for here the score is marked sempre dolce and cantando, but nowhere is there a ritard or meno mosso in sight. One could argue that sempre dolce and cantando, in and of themselves, implicitly call for a slowing, but Weingartner, as always, is a stickler for what's in front of him on the page.

This, recall, is the symphony Brahms heard Weingartner conduct when he praised the young man as a "healthy, fresh personality who gave a truly wonderful performance." As noted by Peter Clive in Brahms and his World, that performance took place in Vienna on April 3, 1895, but with the Berlin Philharmonic, not the Vienna Philharmonic. Whatever the orchestra, one has to know that if Weingartner led that performance anything like the one on this CD, it had to have been with a well-established, highly professional ensemble; no provincial band could possibly have played this way.

These performances will leave you limp and exhausted, they are so adrenalin-filled. But in closing, I just want to reiterate that you need have no fear of the vintage of these recordings. Bob Rose [sic] has breathed new life into them so that they sound almost brand new. 

  

 

     

PASC 281 - Brahms   

 

   
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CONTENTS
Editorial         RCA's red vinyl - a technical assessment
Beethoven    Koussevitzky's 1947 Choral Symphony
Beethoven    Schnabel plays Piano Sonata's 14-16
PADA              Willem van Otterloo tackles Mozart - part 2

Editorial - Koussevitzky's Beethoven gets technical

RCA's red vinyl 78rpm discs and their pros and cons    


As I began writing this column last week I'd just started transferring the sixteen sides which make up Serge Koussevitzky's 1947 recording of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9. Recorded in Tanglewood in August of that year with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, four soloists and the Music Festival Chorus, the recording was one of a relative handful to be issued on the RCA Victor Red Seal De Luxe label.

It seems my mention of this label's clear red vinyl 78s brought back a lot of memories for readers of this column - and judging by what you wrote it sounds like they were something of a mixed blessing. Some people loved them, others were far less enthusiastic.

What I had, in this recording, was the rare opportunity to play sides which had never been played before. Even of those three or four sides which had, they had only received a single play using a modern, lightweight stylus, and would therefore have been just about as good as new.

The format was hailed by the RCA Victor marketing department in 1945 as the future of music reproduction and the biggest advance in 45 years in playback technology. It's an interesting claim, and one which I'd dispute: the almost overnight switch from acoustic to electric recording across the world in mid-1925 surely remains the biggest single leap forward in recording technology - everything else has (I would argue) been more about evolution than revolution.

Thus the new plastic discs of 1945 also coincided with the commercial development of much greater frequency range recordings than had previously been offered, something Decca in the UK made a big deal about with their ffrr recordings. Others chose not to repeat the experience of 1925 and say anything to suggest their back catalogue had been rendered obsolete overnight. So the RCA red vinyl discs were also able to offer a  greater frequency range than earlier offerings - but they weren't telling anyone this, and to be clear, the same was also true of their shellac discs.

However, shellac's days were numbered. Wartime use of vinyl-like discs for radio transmissions had probably done much to point the way forward, with the LP and 45rpm microgroove discs of 1948 onwards being the logical conclusion.

In 1945 the technology wasn't quite there yet, and the Koussevitzky 78s tell us as much about what was right about the new plastic records as was still yet to be mastered. The first few turns of all of the sides displayed something which LPs never really fully conquered: a heavy low-frequency rumble which gradually diminished as the side went on. But on these discs it was far more pronounced than anything you'd hear on an LP - or on a regular shellac 78 - and got worse as I compensated for the poor bass response of the recording in question.

Not to worry - it's not too difficult to filter out. I'm guessing the greater energy of the disc rotating at 78rpm only emphasises a problem common to other vinyl discs. On a number of sides it was accompanied by a regular thump, indicating the disc wasn't as flat as one would like - to the extent that the final side jumped ever so slightly out of the groove on each turn, something easily edited out, but which would probably not have happened at the more sedate speed of an LP!

So that's the bottom end, what about the top? Well, at its best it was clear, crisp and clean. In theory a record turning at this kind of speed should be much better able to handle higher frequencies than one running at 33rpm, and I would expect a modern 78rpm pressing from a high resolution source to deliver good sound at the top end. But here we're dealing with a 1947 recording and technology optimised for shellac. We get end of side distortion, a really noticeable treble roll-off (common to most 78s), and a lot of swish.

Swish is created at the time of cutting grooves in a record, and in a direct-to-disc system such as was used prior to magnetic tape, there's no chance to re-cut the disc in order to fix it. I'll be clear and say right now that I don't know precisely what causes it, but it bedevils 78s and early LPs and is exaggerated by digital noise reduction which normally misidentifies it as content and leaves it alone, only putting into greater sonic relief.

So it's no great surprise to find it here on a number of sides, leaving the slow, tedious job of manually selecting each swish and trying to bring it under control or eliminate it. with 68 minutes of music and a swish potentially 78 times per minute - well you do the maths.

Finally we come to sides 4 and 13. I'll quote now from notes in a Koussevitzky Discography published in the Spring 1990 issue of the ARSC (Association for Recorded Sound Collections) Journal:

"Due mainly to the extremely noisy surfaces typical of so many late postwar Victor pressings, the shellac 78s (DM-1190) make for hard listening. However, the red vinyl 78s (V.DV-12) came out fairly well. Sides 4 and 13 have a particularly distorted sound on both shellac and vinyl editions similar to other sides that are known to have been recut. Victor was capable of making fairly decent sounding recuts. Some of the bad ones, including the two sides at hand, sound as though the disc being copied was played with a stylus fouled with dirt."

What this suggests is that these two side, for some reason, had to be dubbed - a "recut" - from another disc master (or copy) before pressing masters could be made, usually as a result of some kind of problem in the mastering or manufacturing process. Both sides 4 and 13 were especially noisy and had a fuzzy distortion to them, well described here.

I was able to cut through the worst of this with various restoration tools, and the difference in sound quality is far less glaring in the finished transfer than it had been to begin with. What is confusing to me is that this problem seemed to have been avoided in the later microgroove issues of this recording, which makes one wonder how they got through quality control for the 78s.

One final thing to report on these discs, and one which would have been equally the case on the shellac editions. The Boston Symphony Orchestra, at least when replayed at the correct speed, appears to have been tuned to A=450Hz rather than the more common A=440. Were the Victor disc cutters really rotating at 78rpm, as this would indicate a speed of 76.25rpm for cutting if the orchestra was playing at concert pitch. Or did the BSO play sharp?

If the latter is the case then I'll have to apologise to pitch purists - I've made the roughly 2% correction required to repitch the recording to A=440Hz.(Wikipedia tells me that these days the BSO tunes to A=442...)

At this stage I feel like I've successfully trashed the recording to the extent that nobody will be interested in hearing it, so let me now redress the balance. Despite all the faults outlined above - most of which are common to 78s and LPs to one degree or another - the red vinyl discs did indeed deliver probably the best available sound quality at the time. It was a technology still in its infancy, and one which would be improved upon in the years to come, but they were very much on the right track - and the sound quality I've been able to extract from the records is remarkably refined and clear. Just about all the shortcomings have been within the capacity of modern remastering software to remedy, and XR remastering has dug deep into the recorded sound to bring out the previously recessed bass and make the whole sound more direct and immediate.

The ARSC notes comment: "Victor obviously had a great deal of trouble recording anything sonically acceptable in the Music Shed. The sound has a distant quality, but it is possibly the result of putting the mikes back aways from the orchestra to capture ambience, of which a reasonable amount exists on this recording. A & R man R. Gilbert, would have probably achieved better results by putting his mikes closer to the orchestra, and forgetting about trying to make this recording sound as though it had been made in a fine concert hall."

I would suggest that the XR rebalancing of the tonal response of the recording actually achieves what the sound recording engineers were attempting to achieve - but have a listen to the first movement and judge for yourself. It doesn't sound "distant" to me - in fact I like it a lot!

I always like to find something special to mark numerical milestones in our catalogue if I can - and this record more than fits the bill for our 300th orchestral release. It's provided me with a fascinating technological diversion and with a rather nice recording to boot. Once again, a big thanks to Al Schlachtmeyer for the discs - another major contingent of which arrived here a couple of days ago and await careful unpacking over next few days. In the meantime I hope you'll enjoy the first fruit of this remarkable collection!

 

Andrew Rose, July 29, 2011  

 

 

Koussevitzky's only commercial recording of the 9th

  

Incredible sound quality extracted from previously unplayed vinyl 78rpm pressings!

 

 

PASC300 KOUSSEVITZKY 

Beethoven 9        

 

Recorded 1947          

 

Producer and Audio Restoration Engineer:  Andrew Rose  

  

BEETHOVEN  Symphony No. 9 "Choral" in D minor, Op. 125  

  

Frances Yeend soprano

Eunice Alberts contralto

David Lloyd tenor

James Pease bass

Berkshire Music Festival Chorus dir. Robert Shaw

  

Boston Symphony Orchestra

Serge Koussevitzky conductor

 

 

Web page: PASC 300

 

 

 

Short Notes  

It is very rare in the 21st century to unpack a set of unplayed 78s for transfer - even rarer to find they're pressed not on noisy shellac but on relatively clean, quiet vinyl.

 

That's what we have here for this, the only studio recording by Serge Koussevitzky of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9, made with the Boston Symphony Orchestra at Tanglewood in August 1947.

 

A combination of these astonishing discs and Pristine's 32-bit XR remastering have brought out qualities in the recording never heard before, revealing a far more vital performance than was evident from previous transfers of this recording.

 

Something very special for our 300th orchestral release!

  

 

Notes on the transfers 

 

This transfer is unusual in that it came from a largely unplayed set of clear red vinyl-like 78s issued by RCA Victor under the "Red Seal De Luxe" label in the second half of the 1940s. Although pressed from the same masters as their shellac equivalents, they cost twice as much and were advertised as much for their unbreakability as their much quieter and cleaner surfaces. It was a format which was soon superseded by microgroove LPs and 45s, pressed onto very similar plastic.

 

In transfer the discs suffered similar shortcomings to both early LPs and many 78s. There was a noticeable treble drop-off towards the end of each side, and many sides suffered from the swish which plagued many discs at all speeds until well into the 1950s. They also presented a considerably raised degree of rumble over other formats. That said, overall (two sides excepted - see editorial) the fidelity and clarity of these discs was indeed excellent for their day, and for the overall impression is excellent. It has been suggested to me that these discs could produce the finest transfers possible of this recording - to the extent that a reassessment of Koussevitzky's performance here might be long overdue. I certainly believe this XR remastering has addressed many of the technical criticisms previously levelled against it, and thus allows the recording to be heard in a completely new light.

 

 

Andrew Rose 

   

 

  

MP3 Sample  First Movement           

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The legendary Schnabel Beethoven series continues

  

Three superb performances in fabulous sound quality - a "Moonlight" to die for...

  

SCHNABELPAKM041

Beethoven Sonatas             

Recorded 1933/35

 

Producer and Audio Restoration Engineer:  Andrew Rose       

   

 

Sonata No. 14 in C sharp minor, Op. 27 No. 2 "Moonlight"

Sonata No. 15 in D major, Op. 28 "Pastorale" 

Sonata No. 16 in G major, Op. 31 No. 1  

 

Artur Schnabel piano

 

 

Web page: PAKM 041

 

 

 

Short Notes  

This week we reach the numerical halfway stage in Artur Schnabel's groundbreaking 1930s recording of the Beethoven Piano Sonatas, and bring you what, for this listener, has been without doubt one of the true highlights of them all so far.

 

It's difficult to pass through life without hearing the opening movement of the "Moonlight" sonata so many times that it begins to seem almost a musical cliché, something so familiar that you cease to listen to it.

 

Schnabel's performance here forces you to think again, and crucially to listen again - with the hairs standing up on the back of your neck. In a fraction under five minutes you know why his Beethoven is revered above almost all others. And with this new 32-bit XR remastering, it's surely never sounded this good.




Recording Notes

This set of sonatas has presented one of the greater challenges in the series so far, with the difficulty of reconciling the sensitivity and gentleness Schnabel brings to one of the most famous sonata movements in the classical repertoire - the first movement of No. 14 which inspired the "Moonlight" epithet in 1932 from the music critic Ludwig Rellstab, who compared it to real moonlight shining upon Lake Lucerne - with the recording of it.

 

The problem here was of excessive surface noise. Recorded the day before the second and third movements, it seems years apart from them in technical terms, and took up much of the overall remastering time in my efforts to reduce background noise as much as possible without harming the music, such that it could be finally brought into the foreground and heard properly and clearly, something only now possible to this degree with new restoration tools unavailable to my predecessors, thanks to the onward march of digital remastering technology.

 

Thereafter the restoration of each movement went ahead reasonably smoothly. Except for some exceptionally quiet, single note passages, the pitch stability achieved using Capstan software on Schnabel's Bechstein is astounding, and only occasionally does a slight surface noise "fuzz" remind the listener of the vintage of these exceptional recordings. 

  

Andrew Rose    

 

 

 

Review of 1994 reissue   

 

"How characteristic is that gruff but musicianly refusal in Op. 27 No. 2 of all undue solemnity, all notion of romantic, moonlit effusion. Such robust eloquence will hardly appeal to those who long for a prolonged gaze into the infinite (the first movement is over almost before you realize it), but the balance of sense and sensibility provides a superbly authoritative alternative. Of course, there are moments when Schnabel's impetuosity, his embattled rather than fluent resolution of purely pianistic problems, can cause momentary confusion. As the opening Allegro of the Pastoral Sonata approaches its climax he loses his grip on the lefthand quavers, and in the whirling finale of Op. 31 No. 3 altogether too many corners are taken on two wheels. Yet the odd snatched phrase or telescoped rhythm pales into oblivion when you consider Schnabel's overall achievement, his salty brio and the profound eloquence of his slow movements...

His technique, while undeniably erratic, was, in the words of his distinguished student, Claude Frank, "so brilliant"; and every page pulses with a vividness and rough-hewn vitality that are somehow pure Schnabel, pure Beethoven... Time and again he wears his immense learning lightly and in, say, the dazzling wit and repartee of Op. 31 No. 1 the dust of ages seems to fall away before one's very eyes and ears."

 

From Gramophone, November 1994 (read full article here)

 

 

 

MP3 Sample  "Moonlight" Sonata, mvts. 1 & 2           

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Willem van Otterloo
Willem van Otterloo
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Mozart      

Symphony No. 34 in C, K.338                 

 


Hague Philharmonic Orchestra

Willem van Otterloo
conductor



Recorded April 25, 1955
Issued as Philips LP A 00286 L

  

 

This transfer is presented with Ambient Stereo remastering by Dr. John Duffy 

 

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