Notes and Editorial Reviews
Live historic recordings brimming with ardent power and fantasy.
This collection of radio transcriptions is for Stokowskians or fans of the music of these composers. The mono sound is very respectable, clean and by no means primitive but it cannot hope to match modern commercial recordings and there is some distortion at times.
The pulsating acidic
Stravinsky symphony suffers some roughness but is in miraculous sound for 1943. The grunt at the start of the
Allegretto is startlingly strong and secure. The
Hanson dates from 1944 and has the slow-swelling stubborn romanticism typical of this fine composer. That said it is without the overwhelmingly fresh invention of the first
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two symphonies and the Sixth. This is however a most atmospheric interpretation and although again suffering some sound fragility is very impressive. Stokowski's
Dies Irae is driven on with a flaming sjambok - picking up on the Stravinskian echoes. The
Harris Seventh Symphony is well worth your attention and study time. Stokowski paces it with slow blooming evolution. This is a splendid performance and can be placed alongside the CBS mono of Ormandy conducting the Philadelphia (now on Albany). For me this symphony, heard in its single movement first version, stands above even the Sibelian First (1933) and the ubiquitous Third. Glorious! The second disc launches with
Hindemith's Symphony in E flat written while he was a refugee from Nazi Germany in 1939. He had been a professor at Yale for two years at the time he wrote this and had wholeheartedly adopted his new homeland. This NBC recording is from 1943. The recording is in very good stead indeed whether in exhausting rhetoric or in rolling grand tragedy.
The
Hartmann
Adagio Symphony (No. 2) is in a single impressive and anxiety-disseminating arch of 20 minutes. Here is one of Henze's exemplars. This is an avant-garde work yet one concerned with the long line rather than a dazzle of mosaic shards and incidents.
Stokowski championed
Hovhaness's music for much of his active concert life. Although it was Reiner and the Chicagoans who made the premiere recording of Symphony No. 2
Mysterious Mountain it was Stokowski and the Houston Orchestra who commissioned and premiered it in 1955. Previously he had premiered Hovhaness's First Symphony
The Exile with the NBC SO in 1942 - to be heard on GHCD2347 with firsts by Serebrier and Milhaud. There is a more modern recording of the Third Symphony. It is on Soundset: see review and there the symphony presents a more stately and less fervent face. Its style, across three movements and almost 26 minutes, is here rhythmically incisive, Armenian national, groaningly majestic and mysterious. Sample this work in the
Andante. It then flares with muscularity in the
Allegro Molto finale. Flames and seismic impacts alternate with delicate dances and finely limned unison writing for the violin benches. To think that even now we lack recordings of many of his sixty-seven symphonies! This is very attractive music.
Some of these performances are preceded by radio announcements and followed by applause from studio or hall audiences and radio commentator 'tailing'.
Each of these live historic recordings brims with ardent power and fantasy.
-- Rob Barnett, MusicWeb International
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Works on This Recording
1.
Symphony in C by Igor Stravinsky
Conductor:
Leopold Stokowski
Orchestra/Ensemble:
NBC Symphony Orchestra
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1939-1940; USA
2.
Symphony no 4, Op. 34 "Requiem" by Howard Hanson
Conductor:
Leopold Stokowski
Orchestra/Ensemble:
NBC Symphony Orchestra
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1943; USA
3.
Symphony no 7 by Roy Harris
Conductor:
Leopold Stokowski
Orchestra/Ensemble:
St. Louis Symphony Orchestra
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1952/1955; USA
Notes: First version.
4.
Symphony in E flat major by Paul Hindemith
Conductor:
Leopold Stokowski
Orchestra/Ensemble:
NBC Symphony Orchestra
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1940; USA
5.
Symphony no 2 "Adagio" by Karl Amadeus Hartmann
Conductor:
Leopold Stokowski
Orchestra/Ensemble:
West German Radio Symphony Orchestra
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1946; Germany
6.
Symphony no 3, Op. 148 by Alan Hovhaness
Conductor:
Leopold Stokowski
Orchestra/Ensemble:
Symphony of the Air
Period: 20th Century
Written: 1956; USA
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