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Pristine Classical Recorded Music
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London Philharmonic Orchestra
Conductor: Sir Adrian Boult

Recorded 1949
Issued as 6 HMV 78s, D.B.21024 - D.B.21029
Duration 48'01"


Download ID: 94259, 416184

 

PASC003

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A Pristine Audio Natural Sound restorationWhen a conductor of Boult's standing and abilities has something to say to the world, and he is given Elgar's First Symphony and the London Philharmonic to do it with, you know something amazing is going to come out of it. In his first recording after leaving the BBC, Boult brings his huge authority to bear in a performance which set the standard for many years before superior recording technology left this masterpiece behind. Hear it again in superb sound in another brand new Pristine Audio restoration.

 

 

 

Elgar - Symphony No. 1

 

Sir Edward Elgar's Symphony No. 1 in A flat major, Op. 55 was written in 1907–1908, and dedicated to "Hans Richter, Mus. Doc., true artist and true friend." It was premiered on 3 December 1908 in Free Trade Hall in Manchester, England, with Hans Richter conducting the Hallé Orchestra. It is the only frequently-performed symphony whose main key is A flat major.

The symphony is scored for three flutes (one doubling piccolo), two oboes and English horn, two clarinets and bass clarinet, two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion (including snare drum, bass drum and cymbals), 2 harps, and strings.

It is in four movements:

I. Andante. Nobilmente e semplice
II. Allegro molto
III. Adagio
IV. Lento — Allegro

While Elgar never explicitly stated a programme for the symphony, it has been suggested that the work was inspired by the death of General Charles George Gordon: its "Eroica" character parallels the similar Beethoven symphony which was, according to the story, originally dedicated to Napoleon. In 1899 Elgar wrote to his friend A. J. Jaeger (the "Nimrod" of the Enigma Variations) that he intended someday to write a work dedicated to the military hero: "the thing possesses me, but I cannot write it down yet."

The symphony is in a cyclic form: the incomplete "nobilmente" theme from the first movement returns in the finale for a complete grandioso statement after various transformations throughout the work. Unlike thematic transformations in the work of other composers who used cyclic form, such as Mahler and Liszt, Elgar does not use the theme so much as a source of motivic material for the rest of the work, but as a mood; it transforms whatever it touches, and returns triumphantly at the close. The first movement contrasts the "nobilmente" theme in A-flat with anxious "Allegro" music in D minor.

A close look at the score will reveal what is not obvious to the ear: that the melodic line of the first eight-bar semiquaver (8th note) passage of the first violin part in the second movement is the same as the melodic line of the first thirteen bars of the third movement (excepting bar 7 of the third movement where the top A is omitted and the shape is very slightly modified), despite their contrasting tempi and different keys.

Critical reaction to the symphony at first was mixed. Hans Richter, the symphony's dedicatee, extravagantly praised it at a rehearsal in 1908: "[it is] the greatest symphony of modern times, written by the greatest modern composer — and not only in this country." On the other hand, some reviewers criticized it for slack structure and an overabundance of themes. In spite of this, it caused a sensation at its first performance and received more than one hundred repeat performances during its first year, and has maintained a place in the standard orchestral repertory ever since.

Notes from Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphony_No._1_(Elgar)

 

 

REVIEW OF ELGAR: Symphony #1
(London Philharmonic, Boult) (1949)

In a letter shortly after the completion of the 1st Symphony, Elgar wrote that the symphony had no programme beyond "a wide experience of human life with a great charity (love) and a 'massive' hope in the future". A 'massive' hope in the future? This six years before the greatest disaster in the history of Western Civilization was about to strike? The First World War in 1914 began the long decline of Western Civilization which continues accelerating to this day. The symphony itself gives the lie to Elgar's words.

The motto theme with which the symphony begins is not confident or heroic, but is the pathetic twin of "The Land of Hope and Glory". Even when fleshed out in full orchestra and forte, it is more dogged than triumphant. The allegro theme of the first movement is not joyous (like that of its 2nd Symphony counterpart or of King Hal's theme in Falstaff), but rather a "keep on trucking" kind of a theme. The scherzo is spiky rather than joyous; the slow movement limps beautifully looking for something, but does not always find it. Even the motto theme at the end, though very noble, has to have a lot of wind (both literally and figuratively) blown into its sails. Don't mistake me; this is a great and very beautiful work, but it is a darker work than most conductors realize and Elgar stuffs it with no end of little themes and delicious orchestration to keep it afloat and cheerful. Therein lies the trap for most conductors-too much beauty and lingering over details can sink the work.

Sir Adrian Boult understands Elgar as no other conductor (except the composer himself). He knows (as Elgar did in his recordings) that there is so much detail in the music that the conductor must emphasise the line and keep moving forward-always forward. I found this recording absolutely true, always cogent. Each note is pregnant with the next-the score has never seemed so tight to me. There was no lingering over details, no getting hijacked by a violin or harp melody, but oh so much beauty. The end nobilmente was very fortissimo and very triumphant. I compared this 1949 recording with the 1976 EMI and found the latter, sad to say, rather dull by comparison. I snuck a listen to the Elgar 1930 and found that very good interpretively, but the EMI sound could not begin to compare with the reprocessed sound on this recording.

Perhaps I will not be believed, but the sound of this Pristine Audio Direct reprocessing is so thrilling that I prefer it to most of my stereo recordings of the Elgar 1st Symphony. The blazing fortissmos without harshness, the sweetness of the solo instruments and the overall clarity have given me real joy. This is the one I'll return to.

Reviewer: Bill Rosen

 

Find out more:

 
2nd Movement: Allegro
About Elgar:

BBC Artist Profile
The Elgar Society
Elgar Birthplace Museum

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