Showing posts with label dukas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dukas. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

HiFi Feast for Orchestra with Argeo Quadri conducting


Today, a really neat orchestral compilation conducted by Italian maestro Argeo Quadri. With the Philharmonic Symphony of London (I believe it is the LPO in disguise though it could be the RPO too), Quadri leads bouyant performances of  Dukas' The Sorcerer's Apprentice, Saint-Saens' Danse Macabre and Bacchanale from Samson and Delilah, Chabrier's Marche Joyeuse and  Espana, Mossolov's The Iron Foundry, and Revueltas' Sensemaya and Cuauhnahuac. This is mid 50's Westminster monaural sound with an impressive dynamic range.

 Argeo Quadri was primarily a conductor of opera and he spent many years as a resident in Vienna. Westminster, obviously playing into the Toscanini craze and legend of the 50's, signed Quadri as their resident Italian, probably in the hopes that another Italian, known for firm technical control and a fidelity to the score, would increase their sales exponentially. Quadri made a number of records, a very fine Sheherazade, a strong Respighi issue (posted here on this blog) and surprisingly, an excellent set of Corelli's Op 6 Concerti Grossi. Unfortunately for Westminster, Quadri did not develop into a seller like Scherchen, Rodzinski, or Boult. Probably a lot of that had to do with the fact that Quadri did not have much of a physical presence on this side of the Atlantic nor was he a larger than life figure as was Westminster stallwart Scherchen. Quadri also was not a martinet or an excessively ruthless person. All speculation, of course.

Argeo Quadri
The surprise of this program has to be the inclusion of the two pieces by Revueltas. I suppose that these were new to the London players and I find it fascinating that this Italian opera conductor would program these little known works when no one else did, maybe with the exception of Stokowski. The results are positively splendid, with the orchestra playing in a "by the seat of the pants" fashion. Juxtaposed with warhorses Espana and The Sorcerer's Apprentice, Quadri manages to craft a varied and interesting program. I think you will like this alot. Oh....and if Iron Foundry doesn't get your attention!?

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Sunday, August 7, 2011

Hans Swarowsky leads excerpts from Berlioz's "Romeo and Juliet"

Excerpts from Berlioz's dramatic symphony "Romeo and Juliet" and Dukas' "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" led by Hans Swarowsky on a Musical Masterpieces (Treasures) of the World issue. Probably recorded in the mid to late 50's, this monaural lp features the "Musical Masterpieces Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra" better know as the Vienna State Opera Orchestra though not, of course, the orchestra that comprises the famed Vienna Philharmonic. Whew!

Much has been written about Swarowsky and his actual, and non actual, recordings. Considered by many the greatest conducting professor of the twentieth century Swarowsky, himself, cut many recordings from Vienna during the 1950's and 60's, often for budget labels that worked on shoestring budgets and within tight time constraints. I'd suspect that Swarowsky's pay as a professor was not all that terrific and churning out records was a great way to supplement his, and his musical students', income. Since Swarowsky probably knew intimately many of his orchestral colleagues, the results he got were most often faithful and fully representative of the score and composer, though admittedly not the last word in technical perfection.

All that said, the performance here of the Berlioz is quite good indeed. Overall, I find Romeo and Juliet to be a bit wayward, not as cohesive as Symphony Fantastique, and in the wrong hands it can become a colossal bore. Happily, Swarowsky has the right hands, a strong sense of line, and an intuitive sense of drama. The listener's attention is held firm and one can only wish that Swarowsky had taken on the complete score. Dukas' perennial favorite too is afforded a splendid reading and the story is brilliantly etched from the musical score.

A rather nice remembrance of an influential man whose legacy has often been tarnished by careless marketing and the natural pitfalls of the bargain basement recording business.

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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

More from Lenore Engdahl


A follower of my blog, Dan from California, was most kind to send more from music from the ten gifted fingers of Lenore Engdahl. I am pleased to offer Ms Engdahl in Franck's Prelude, Chorale and Fugue and Dukas' rarely heard Variations on a Theme of Rameau. Both these works were from a stereo LP of which I have no additional information.

Dan wrote me that Ms Engdahl lives in a retirement community outside of Boston and is a remarkable 93 years of age. She had settled in greatly Boston many years ago after becoming a professor at Boston University.  Dan did mention that though a great and respected artist, Ms Engdahl consciously placed her family and students ahead of  personal ambitions and a concert career. On evidence of what I have heard, she would have been a highly successful concert hall artist, especially as a recitalist.

The two works offered here are brilliantly played. Ms Engdahl combines insight and intelligence with superlative technique and scrupulous musicianship. The Franck, a massive work, is played stately and with nobility and the Dukas captures the charm and wit of the theatrical Rameau. I'd love to hear Ms Engdahl in an all baroque program - it would probably be a smashing recital!

On a personal note, one of the great thrills of collecting is discovering an artist previously unknown to me. Especially important, is when that artist reminds me of how little I know!

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Thursday, May 6, 2010

Hugo Rignold conducts Dukas, Ravel and Dvorak


A while back, David Gideon at reDiscovery posted a paperback issue featuring the English conductor Hugo Rignold in Rimsky-Korsakov's Suite from The Golden Cockeral and Mussorgsky's Night on a Bald Mountain in the R-K orchestration. Both performances struck me as quite good and rather idiomatic. So with those fresh in mind, I set out to locate a few more examples of Hugo Rignold's art.

Here we have a Somerset recording of Dukas' Sorcerer's Apprentice and Ravel's Bolero and, an Alshire LP with Dvorak's New World Symphony. All performances feature the London Philharmonic and they date from around 1960.

Of the three compositions, Sorcerer's is the strongest performance with exemplary playing and an insightful interpretation that really goes all out to tell the story in music. Bolero is good, though others have done a far stronger job of building the tension through dynamics and phrasing. This piece REALLY needs significant rehearsal in order to maximize its effect. The New World Symphony practically plays itself although Rignold exhibits a strong sensibility for Dvorak's musical language by stressing the "folk" elements of the score. This recording does possess the tell tale signs of a "rush job," most notably in some intonation problems with the horns. That aside, there is an excitement level present and an overall firm grasp of the symphony is readily apparent.

It would appear that Rignold had a brief recording career, for whatever reason I don't know. From the evidence of these recordings, and those available through reDiscovery, it seems a bit of a pity that Hugo Rignold is all but forgotten today.

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Friday, November 27, 2009

Mitropoulos + Minneapolis = FUN!




Here's a fun one...from Harmony HL 7129, the great Dimitri Mitropoulos conducting his Minneapolis Symphony in The Sorcerer's Apprentice, a couple Slavonic Dances by Dvorak, the coronation march from Meyerbeer's 'The Prophet," Lalo's overture to Le roi d'Ys, and Gliere's Russian Sailors Dance.

I love the work of Mitropoulos. Everything he put his hand to created a kind of electricity and nervous energy. These "lollipops" as Beecham would say, positively sparkle under Mitropoulos. The orchestra is with him every step of the way and these pieces come off sounding more important then they really are.

Enjoy!

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