| Strictly
on the
Record |
| Igor
Kipnis |
| December
1999 |
Christmas
Suggestions
To
hear them talk
about it, the
record
companies are
having a hard
time. That
surprises a
lot of people,
mainly those
who are less
into today’s
record scene
or stores,
especially the
classical
part. They
might walk
into a Tower’s
or HMV or
Strawberries
and take note
of just how
many CDs there
are on
display, even
in - maybe
especially in
- classical
bins. But then
the question
arises: is
anything
selling? Lots
of product,
certainly. But
how many
buyers do you
see walking
around,
browsing,
picking out
the latest
releases, or
digging into
the older
ones? And
there’s the
rub: there is
a glut on the
market, too
much product,
with releases
pouring in
every month
from a host of
distributor
outlets,
mainly
foreign-made
discs and
often good
ones. Try,
however, to
count the
customers who
are picking
them up.
Perhaps that
explains the
3-5% of
classical that
accounts for
discs sold in
the past, as
opposed to all
the rest which
are different
categories,
rock, gospel,
country, you
name it.
Except that
the percentage
is reputed to
be even less
at the present
time.
So
the larger
companies in
particular are
retrenching.
Read
downsizing. If
you’ve been
looking at
release lists
over the last
couple of
years, as I
have, you
would have
noted that any
potential
esoterica that
might have
been offered
in the past
have given way
to safe items,
along with
safe, visibly
viable
performers.
There night be
a few
exceptions:
The Anonymous
Four, Yo-Yo Ma
playing
unaccompanied
cello works,
but mostly in
the direction
of crossover:
Argentinian
tangos, movie
scores (is
"Titanic"
really
classical?
Sony says it
is).
Not
least are
reissues,
which are
relatively
inexpensive to
package, the
initial costs
of recording
having already
been covered.
There are, of
course,
innumerable
recouplings
available:
Adagio music
to relax by,
noisy music
compilations
to excite your
audio system
(and your
neighbors),
greatest hits
of everything
from composers
to instruments
(and I shouldn’t
complain since
I am on one
such
harpsichord
CD, and it has
sold well),
music for gays
and nongays,
lovers, and
even Mozart
for babies
whose exposure
to that
composer is
presumed to
make their
brains grow.
But
on to the
Suggestions
For
both the bona
fide classical
buff, as well
as the audio
enthusiast,
though, this
lately has
become a
bonanza time.
By far the
most
interesting
releases - at
least to my
way of
thinking - are
the vast
number of
reissues which
you might put
under the
heading of
historical,
depending on
how far back
you want your
history to go
or how recent
is recent.
Here
are some of
the releases
that in
particular
have appealed
to me, some of
which will
make dandy
holiday
presents for a
lucky audio
enthusiast of
your
acquaintance
or just plain
music lover
(yourself?).
We know that
there are
hardly any US
orchestras
that presently
have record
contracts,
with the
result that
quite a number
of orchestras
have been
rolling their
own with
productions
that are both
mouth watering
and as well
benefit the
orchestra
coffers, which
so badly need
the support.
Mind you, not
all the
performances,
almost all
from
broadcasts,
are top audio
quality. Some
- the older
but highly
important ones
- derive from
acetates,
scratches and
swishes
largely
eradicated
through
considerate
EQing but
often
suffering from
passages of
constriction.
Other, more
recent 1970s
through 1990s
broadcasts
sound
remarkably
well, but the
most important
thing is that,
unlike what
one so often
hears today,
these
performances
are anything
but bland.
They radiate
personality
and
excitement.
The
Philadelphia
Orchestra
Can
you spare
$200? That’s
what the
Philadelphia
Orchestra’s
Centennial
Collection
will set you
back for
twelve CDs
(that’s not
quite $17 per
disc, pretty
close to what
some of the
imports are
asking). What
do you get for
that? There
are five CDs
devoted to the
orchestra’s
past music
directors (Stokowski,
Ormandy, Muti,
and Sawallisch),
three of guest
conductors
(for example,
Reiner’s
music from
Parsifal
recorded
experimentally
for Bell Labs
in 1931;
Tennstedt,
Scherchen‘s
hair-raising
Mahler 5th,
Munch’s
volatile
Ravel,
Kertész
completely at
home with
Bartók, and
Toscanini in
Berlioz, plus
such composers
as Kodaly,
Stravinsky,
Virgil
Thomson, and
Aaron Copland
conducting
their own
music -
hearing Marian
Anderson‘s
noble
narration of
the latter’s
Lincoln
Portrait is
almost worth
the price of
the whole
album). And
then there are
four CDs of
guest artists,
an astounding
array, running
from Joan
Sutherland
singing the
Lucia mad
Scene under
Stokowski,
Stokowski
conducting
Wagner’s
Immolation
Scene with
Birgit Nilsson
(incredible!),
Stokowski with
Heifetz in a
previously
unissued 1934
commercial
recording,
Kapell in a
super Brahms D
Minor Piano
Concerto,
Jacqueline du
Pré with
husband Daniel
Barenboim in
the Saint-Saëns
first Cello
Concerto, and
a sensational
1938 Beethoven
Fourth
Concerto with
Josef Hofmann.
And there is
so much more.
I would
suggest
accessing
www.philorch.org
for all the
information
details about
this mostly
mono package
or call
215-893-1900.
I wouldn’t
miss it.
The
New York
Philharmonic
A
similar album
has been
issued by the
New York
Philharmonic,
the third in
that
organization’s
series of
beautifully
produced
historical
compilations
(the earlier
ones were the
ten-CD
Historic
Broadcasts
1923 to 1987,
going back to
the time of
such greats as
Toscanini,
Mengelberg,
and the early
Klemperer,
plus The
Mahler
Broadcasts
1948-1982,
with
Barbirolli,
Stokowski,
Tennstedt,
Mehta, and
Boulez, mong
others). The
new one, ten
CDs for $185
(call
212-875-5000
or access
www.newyorkphilharmonic.org),
is a
two-volume
American
Celebration,
with another
grand series
of performance
going back to
1936 and
Loeffler’s
Memories of My
Childhood
conducted by
Barbirolli and
leading up to
a 1999
Ellington-derived,
Wynton
Marsalis
executed
Harlem. Almost
all the major
American
composers are
here: much
Copland
(including
another
Lincoln
Portrait, this
time just as
magnificently
read by
William
Warfield with
Bernstein
conducting in
1976),
Gershwin,
Barber,
Hanson, Virgil
Thomson,
Harris,
Bernard
Herrmann,
Foss, Carter,
Tower, Reich,
Glass, Adams,
Bolcom,
Zwilich, and
many others.
Conductors
include major
names:
Bernstein,
Monteux,
Boulez, Masur,
Rodzinski,
Cantelli,
Stokowski,
Slatkin, and,
at the very
end, an
extraordinary
1944 Madison
Square Garden
War Bonds
concert finish
with the Stars
and Stripes
Forever played
by both the
New York
Philharmonic
and the NBC
Symphony
conducted at
fever pitch by
no less than
Toscanini.
Yes, the
latter encore,
by modern
standards and
not really
typical of the
mostly mono
set, has
execrable
sound, but
with this kind
of rouser, one
can forgo a
bit of
criticism.
Audio
Reissues
Collectors
of RCA Victor
stereo LPs of
the past few
decades know
that those
grooves at
times held
astonishing
sound, such as
the old 1950s
to early ‘60s
"Living
Stereo"
series. In
recent years,
those
long-deleted
original discs
could even
demand
amazingly high
prices. Now,
to all our
good fortunes,
BMG has been
reissuing
l960s and
later material
as CD
compilations
with
refurbishing
that sound
even better
than the
initial
pressings. The
sampling rate
is announced
as 96
kilohertz with
24-bit
resolution,
though, until
DVD-audio
becomes the
standard
format, the
present discs
are actually a
conversion to
the standard
44.1
kilohertz, 16
bits that are
the feature of
normal compact
discs. Yet, in
my
recommendations
below, they
sound
remarkably
good. LPs of
course could
only contain
so much bass
and were apt
to emerge thin
on the bottom
if there was
an excess of
music on a
side. All that
has been
rectified in
this
"High
Performance,"
$12 per disc,
series,
through a
hefty but not
unreasonable
bass boost,
EQing having
judiciously
been added.
Overall, the
sound stages
have opened up
far more
realistically.
Orchestras,
of course,
make the most
spectacular
noises,
nowhere better
illustrated
than in Rodion
Shchedrin’s
percussion-heavy
orchestration
of Bizet as
the Carmen
Ballet under
Arthur Fiedler
and the Boston
Pops, plus
music by
Shostakovich
and Glazunov
(BMG
09026-63308-2).
If that late
60s
spectacular
has speaker
rattling
potential, so
do the Boston
Symphony’s
1962 Bartók
Concerto for
Orchestra and
1964 Kodály
Peacock
Variations
brilliantly
conducted by
Erich
Leinsdorf (BMG
09026-63309-2),
a young Seiji
Ozawa
directing the
BSO in 1968/69
in Stravinsky’s
Petrouchka and
Chicago
Symphony in
The Rite of
Spring (BMG
09026-63311-2),
and Jean
Martinon and
the Chicago
Symphony
Orchestra
performing
Bartóks
violent
Miraculous
Mandarin, plus
Hindemith and
Varèse’s
colorful
Arcana in
1966/67 (BMG
09026-63315-2).
All are
guaranteed
lease
breakers. Add
two piano
discs for
further
examples of
the fine work
MBG has done:
Horowitz
playing
Scarlatti,
Chopin, Liszt,
and
Rachmaninov
live on
November 1,
1981, at
Carnegie Hall,
sounding much
richer and
fuller than on
the original
LPs (BMG
09026-63314-2)
and a recital
by the
flamboyant
Raymond
Lewenthal of
Liszt and the
bizarre Chopin
contemporary,
Charles-Valentin
Alkan (BMG
09026-63310-2).
Toscanini
BMG
had also done
some
astonishing
refurbishing
on somewhat
older
material, the
past Toscanini/NBC
Symphony
performances,
which are vast
improvements
over what the
company has
offered in the
past. I would
say that,
based on what
I have heard
so far, they
definitely
supersede the
anthology of
Toscanini’s
complete
commercial
recordings
issued in
1990. If a
sometimes-blaring
brass top
remains,
distortion is
largely
minimized and
a bass boost
has greatly
warmed up the
overall sonic
picture. These
classic mono
performances
are being
issued as
two-CD package
and offered as
two for one
and include
all the
Beethoven
Symphonies in
three volumes
(BMG 74321
55835/6/7-2),
the four
Brahms
Symphonies
(74321
44838-2),
selected
symphonies by
Schubert,
Mendelssohn,
Mozart, Haydn,
Cherubini,
Schumann, and
Dvorák in two
volumes (74321
59480/1-2), a
marvelously
vivid Wagner
collection
(74321
59482-2),
French
orchestral
music (74321
66924-2), and
orchestral
showpieces by
Mussorgsky-Ravel
(a still
wonderful
Pictures at an
Exhibition),
Richard
Strauss,
Brahms,
Tchaikovsky,
Sibelius, and
Smetana (74321
59484-2). New
recordings by
contemporary
conductors of
all these
works
naturally are
far more
state-of-the-art
satisfying,
but if you
want to know
what Toscanini
was all about,
do investigate
these
remarkable
recordings.
Sony
Heritage
The
Sony Heritage
series has
also done some
very
painstakingly
prepared
processing of
its Columbia
back catalog,
sometimes in
selections
going even
back to
earlier this
century. There
are great gems
to be found in
this series,
but not all,
as you would
expect, up to
state-of-the-art
sonics. But
scratches,
swishes, and
distortion are
greatly
minimized
without
overkilling
ambiance, an
irritating
past problem
on the part of
many reissue
producers.
Important
singers from
the past (the
1903 Grand
Opera Series,
or, if I may
put a plug in
for my father,
the bass
Aleander
Kipnis, his
late 20s-early
30s Columbia
discs) or the
violin
recordings of
Eugène Ysaye
(1858-1931)
are among the
earlier
recorded
examples. One
such
refurbishing
that,
considering
its more
recent
recording
dates,
sonically
sounds
especially
impressive, is
a George Szell-Cleveland
Orchestra
re-release of
the Prokofiev
Fifth Symphony
(1959)
together with
the Bartók
Concerto for
Orchestra
(1965), the
latter with a
few Szell cuts
in the score.
Both are
exceptional
performances,
full of drive,
clarity, and,
even in a few
Bartók spots,
humor (Sony
MHK 63124).
Hopefully
this splendid
Sony series
will continue,
rumors having
been rife that
new issues had
been placed on
hold (although
a reprise
seems just to
have been put
into effect,
at least for a
little while).
Knowing the
vagaries of
the present
classical
record
business, that
should not
surprise one.
But that’s
where we came
in, isn’t
it?
Internationally
known as a
performer on
the
harpsichord,
clavichord,
fortepiano,
and as a
member of
the
Kipnis-Kushner
Duo (one
piano, four
hands), on
the modern
piano, IGOR
KIPNIS has
recorded
over 80
albums, 56
of them
solo, as
well as
having
received
numerous
honors,
including 6
Grammy
nominations,
a Deutsche
Schallplatten
prize, and
an honorary
doctorate
from
Illinois
Wesleyan
University.
Keyboard
magazine in
its readers’
polls three
times named
him
"Best
Harpsichordist"
and twice
"Best
Classical
Keyboardist."
A
frequent
guest on
both
television
and radio
(he has had
his own
program on
New York’s
WQXR),
Kipnis has
also edited
music
anthologies
for Oxford
University
Press, and
at present,
among
several book
projects, he
is working
on a
biography of
his singer
father, the
bass
Alexander
Kipnis, to
be published
by Amadeus
Press. As a
performer,
he often
gives
masterclasses
devoted to
keyboard
instruments.
He is a
faculty
member of
the Mannes
College of
Music, where
he lectures
on
historical
piano
recordings.
He
has long
been an avid
record
collector,
specializing
in piano and
historical
performances,
and his
reviews and
articles,
many of
which deal
with the
piano, have
appeared in
a great many
publications,
including
The
International
Piano
Quarterly,
The
International
Classical
Record
Collector,
Gramophone
Early Music,
Goldberg,
Early Music
America,
Audio,
Schwann/Opus,
FI,
Stereophile,
Musical
America,
Opus, Stereo
Review, The
American
Record
Guide,
Classical,
Chamber
Music
Magazine,
Listen,
Clavier, The
Yale Review,
and the
internet
magazines,
Music &
Vision and
Stereo
Times.
His
most recent
recording is
a reissue,
just
released, of
his first
solo album,
originally
made for
Golden Crest
and now
available
for the
first time
on CD by VAI
(VAIA 1185).
Included are
works by
Bach, Handel,
Soler, and
Dussek.
His
web site is
on:
http://people.mags.net/kipnis

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