Cheap Stokowski Conducts Music of the 20th Century (Music) (Samuel Barber, Benjamin Britten, Charles Ives, Olivier Messiaen, Leopold Stokowski, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Japan Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra) Price
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| ARTIST: | Samuel Barber, Benjamin Britten, Charles Ives, Olivier Messiaen, Leopold Stokowski, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Japan Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | Music & Arts Program |
| TYPE: | 20th/21st Century Orchestral Music, 20th/21st Century Orchestral Work with Descriptive Title, 20th/21st Century Variations, Classical, Classical Artists, Orchestral, Orchestral & Symphonic, Symphonic, Transcription for Orchestra |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| TRACKS: | L' Ascension: Quatre Meditations Symphoniques: I. Tres Lent Et Majesteux, L' Ascension: Quatre Meditations Symphoniques: II. Pas Trop Modere Et Clair, L' Ascension: Quatre Meditations Symphoniques: III. Vif Et Joyeux, L' Ascension: Quatre Meditations Symphoniques: IV. Extrement Lent, Emu Et Solennet, Second Orchestral Suite: I. An Elegy To Our Forefathers, Second Orchestral Suite: II. The Rockstrewn Hill Joins In The People's Outdoor Meeting, Second Orchestral Suite: III. From Hanover Square North, At The End Of A Tragic Day, The Voice Of The People Again Arose, The Unanswered Question: IV. The Unanswered Question, The Young Person's Guide To The Orchestra, Op. 34: Variations And Fugue On A Theme By Purcell, Adagio For Strings |
| UPC: | 017685478727 |
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Customer Reviews of Stokowski Conducts Music of the 20th Century
Unvaluable musical files ! This work always had in Stokowski one of his most fervent and vigorous defenders. Written in 1933 , reflects Messiaen's Catholic mysticisms and takes in text from Catholic liturgy and Scripture . Charles Munch conducted the premiere in 1935 with the Paris Conservatory Orchestra . <
>The charismatic presence and the distinguished authority in front the orchestra made of Leopold Stokowski an epitome of the conduction. Even if you do not agree in some of his performances , he had a certain affinity for certain and determined works like this one . He was a unexhausted defender of Charles Ives music . <
>Precision and passion , fierce and intellect, this colorist director made an important contribution and elevated the rank of the Philadelphia Orchestra and the American Symphony among others . <
>His special preferences for the British composers Vaughan Williams sixth symphony and Elgar and the impressionist French Debussy and Ravel allowed him to move from every corner in Europe . <
>And please do not forget the unsuspected contribution with the Czech Philharmonic in the early sixties , the Houston Symphony (Shostakovich 11 th ) and the London Symphony in the middle sixties with an extraordinary Mahler second . <
>Finally his unforgettable transcriptions of Bach music and a curious rearrangement of the Pictures at Exhibition and his memorable contribution with Disney widely criticized in the world in the film fantasy of the forties . <
>Listening his Messiaen you are convinced once more the enormous mesmerizing power of him to get involve the audience . <
>In the case of the piece Question without answer there is just one unbeatable recording: Bernstein and New York Philharmonic of the middle sixties .
Somebody's gotta break the bad news...
about this absolutely horrible release, and it may as well be I. So I'll suck it up and explain.
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> Toward the end of what can only be described as one of the most remarkable conducting careers in the history of music, Leopold Stokowski was back in the recording studios, busier than ever, making some astounding LPs that were released on the London (Decca) Phase 4 label, virtually all of them true audiophile delights.
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>Among those Phase 4 LP releases was one containing the two major works on this CD: Olivier Messiaen's "L'Ascension" and Charles Ives's "Second Orchestral Set." It is an LP that has been in my collection for more than thirty years, made from 1970 recording sessions when Stokie led the London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus. For its time, it was both a sonic blockbuster and an authoritative take on two works (and composers) with whom Stokie was long associated.
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>Based on this recollection, I snapped up this CD under review, thinking that the Music & Arts label had obtained a license from Decca to reissue these two works, combining them with other "late Stokie" efforts with which I was not familiar.
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>I knew pretty early on, in listening to the CD, that all was not right: audience noises, sloppy playing, numerous clams from the brass section, poor acoustical balance and other assorted problems told me that this was not the "real deal." The recording date (18 June, 1970) seemed about right, but everything else was way out of kilter. So I dragged out my Phase 4 LP and did some comparison reading between the two, for performance venues and track timings.
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>The track timings on the CD differ wildly from those for the LP, although the interpretations, to the best of my memory, are not all that different. (The quality of the performances is an entirely different matter.) And the recording venues are different, with the Phase 4 LP venue being Kingsway Hall and the Music & Arts CD venue being Royal Festival Hall. What this M&A release represents, then, is a quite different provenance: a live broadcast of a concert performed in conjunction with the Phase 4 studio recording sessions.
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>And, based on what I hear, barely a warm-up exercise for the studio work that lay ahead of Stokie in putting together the Phase 4 recording. It is a testimony to his still-vigorous energy that he clearly worked hard in the studio, as the Phase 4 recording has it all together. And it is a saddening measure of the man, at age 90 or thereabouts, that he wasn't able to do as well in the concert hall.
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>Of the fillers making up this CD, only the Britten "Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra" can be considered passable. In particular, the live concert performance of Ives's famous "The Unanswered Question" is so poor that Stokie must be turning over in his grave now.
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>This latter is worth two comments from me. First, on the matter of the Ives, Bernard Herrmann (in an interview saved for posterity in Vivian Perlis's remarkable "Charles Ives Remembered: An Oral History") was on record as stating that it was easier to obtain "proper" performances of his music with British, rather than American, orchestras because the Brits heard Ives's compositions as "just music," whereas the Americans would always relate to the "borrowed" ideas in the music, and all too often play "against Ives's wishes" out of sheer habit and familiarity with the subsumed "borrowed" themes. After all my years of being an Ivesian, I still have trouble with Herrmann's argument. Perhaps it was true at the time he made the statement; perhaps not. In any event, "The Unanswered Question" here is about as unidiomatic as they get. Sadly.
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>Second, Music & Arts has nothing more than a commercial interest in these Stokie performances; certainly not an interest in preserving his proper legacy. I suggest, for those interested in this legacy matter, that they pursue the Cala Records catalog. The Stokie performances in this catalog have the imprimatur of the Leopold Stokowski Society, clearly a group engaged in preserving a proper legacy.
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>The booklet notes, such as they are, are little more than Stokie hagiography, and hardly worth the cost of the CD. What a Stokie fan needs to know about his musical career can be summarized in a sentence or two: Stokowski was the only conductor to have lived and performed so long as to cover virtually the full history of sound recordings, from the original Edison cylinder through early electrical recordings, 78's, LP's, and right up to the dawning of the early digital era in the late 1970's. He conducted virtually up to the end of his life, at age 95, with an active recording schedule that was regrettably cut short by his premature death.
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>This Music & Arts release does a severe disservice to the memory of a great man. Better that one remembers him for what he was at this stage of his life, by tracking down the Messiaen work on a Cala CD and/or the Ives work on a Decca CD, both properly remastered and having different couplings. (The Ives work on the Decca CD is coupled with Bernard Herrmann's equally authoritative recording of the Ives 2nd Symphony.) Or do what I plan to do: Burn the Phase 4 LP onto CD.
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>A measly extra star for the Britten work, passably performed for a wildly enthusiastic audience.
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>Bob Zeidler