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Pristine Classical Recorded Music
PASC104: Ein Heldenleben - R. Strauss German

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Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York
conducted by Willem Mengelberg

Recorded Carnegie Hall, New York, 11-13 December, 1928
Transfer and XR remastering by Andrew Rose, November 2007


Download ID: 372323/4/499972
(Duration 40'59")

 

PASC104

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"Mengelberg is represented in two recordings of a work dedicated to him, Richard Strauss's Ein Heldenleben, with the New York Philharmonic, from 1928 (PASC104) and with the Concertgebouw Orchestra, from 1941 (PASC103). Both are superb readings, but the earlier one is superior on two counts: it has slightly greater toughness and intensity, and a miraculous transfer that is, to put it simply, the finest of any 78-rpm material that I have ever encountered. Surface noise is virtually absent, dynamic range uncommonly wide for 78s, timbres are remarkably accurate, and throughout, presence astonishes. Side-joins are, of course, seamless."

Mortimer H. Frank, Classic Record Collector (Summer 2008)

 

The absolutely virtuoso quality of the performance is, doubtless, Mengelberg’s calling-card, the energized brass and string playing (given their capacity to produce heroic-scale slides) superbly and romantically over the top. But the woodwinds, too, with their sniping titters--characterizing the Hero’s adversaries, aka music critics)--carry an acerbic, biting tone rare in performances. Mengelberg, after the extended love-scene of section three, has been awaiting The Hero’s Battlefield, so he unleash the polyphonic beauties of the New York Philharmonic when an ersatz Napoleon leads it. The metrical perplexities of the battle--as opposed to the melos of the mistress’ devotions--only add combustible ecstasies to the heady mix and hurly-burly, as the Hero’s leitmotif wends its way under and over the brew as a kind of recapitulation for the tone-poem’s wiry version of sonata-form. The trumpet part pushes upward into a stratospheric yawp, and the whole edifice comes tumbling down in fragments of galloping Don Juan motifs and bits from the opera Guntram. The taut line never wavers; and for all of Toscanini’s musical and intellectual aversion to much of Mengelberg, something of that uncompromising vision must have made itself a dent in Toscanini’s own persona.

Mengelberg treats the entire last two sections--The Hero’s Works of Peace and The Hero’s Retreat from the World and Consummation--as a kind of epilogue from Hamlet, a series of reconciliations with direct quotes from the Strauss catalogue underpinned by Beethoven’s Eroica. The New York Philharmonic basses make their presence felt, along with some deep resonance from the low brass. Certainly, by the end of the sections, with horns, strings, and harp afloat, we wish we had a full realization of Mengelberg’s Tod und Verklaerung on record. Monster slides in the strings, caesuras, all sorts of nostalgic sentiment froths over the musical canvas like molasses; but the intense power and cumulative effect of the reading remains undeniable. Guidi makes one last appearance over a bass pedals; the drooping figures toll with tympanic and French horn accompaniment. Three chords from Zarathustra, and we bid our Sweet Prince goodnight. Heartily recommended.

Review by Gary Lemco- Audiophile Audition

An XR remastering also available in Ambient Stereo
This XR-remastered recording is available in mono and Ambient Stereo. For more information on Ambient Stereo click here.
Notes on the restoration: Mengelberg's first recording of Strauss's Ein Heldenleben, though not quite up to the recording quality of his 1941 Concertgebouw recording, is generally considered the finer performance of the two. Despite its vintage, it has proved remarkably receptive to the XR remastering technique and is now a pleasure to listen to. Both recordings are essential to any understanding of this piece.

 

 

Willem Mengelberg

notes from Wikipedia

 

Joseph Willem Mengelberg (28 March 1871 – 22 March 1951) was a Dutch conductor.

 

Biography

Mengelberg was born fourth of sixteen children to German born parents in Utrecht, Netherlands. He studied in the Cologne conservatory, including piano and composition. He was chosen as General Music Director of the city of Lucerne Switzerland at age 21, where was conductor of an orchestra and a choir, directed a music school, taught piano lessons and continued to compose.

Mengelberg is highly renowned for his work as the principal conductor of the Concertgebouw Orchestra from 1895 to 1945. In addition, Mengelberg founded the long-standing Mahler tradition of Concertgebouw. In 1902 he met Gustav Mahler and became friends with him. Mengelberg was instrumental in introducing most of Mahler's work to The Netherlands, and Mahler regularly visited The Netherlands to introduce his work to Dutch audiences. In fact, he edited some of his symphonies while in the Netherlands, making them sound better for the acoustics of Concertgebouw. This is perhaps one reason that this concert hall and its orchestra is renowned for its Mahler tradition.

Nevertheless, Mengelberg's importance as a conductor was not only due to his Mahler interpretations. He was also, for example, an exceptionally gifted performer of Richard Strauss; and even today his recordings of Strauss's tone poem Ein Heldenleben which has been dedicated to him and the Concertgebouw Orchestra are widely regarded by critics as among the best — if not the very best — of this piece ever made.

One criticism of Mengelberg's influence over Dutch musical life, most clearly articulated by the composer Willem Pijper, was that Mengelberg did not particularly champion Dutch composers during his Concertgebouw tenure, especially after 1920.

Mengelberg with The New York Times
Mengelberg with The New York Times

Mengelberg was music director of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra from 1922 to 1928. Beginning in January 1926, he shared the podium with Arturo Toscanini; Toscanini biographer Harvey Sachs has documented that Mengelberg and Toscanini clashed over interpretations of music and even rehearsal techniques, creating division among the musicians that eventually resulted in Mengelberg leaving the orchestra. However, the maestro did make a series of recordings with the Philharmonic for the Victor Talking Machine Company, including a 1928 electrical recording of Ein Heldenleben [the present recording] that was later reissued on LP and CD.

The most controversial aspect of Mengelberg's biography centers around his actions and behavior during the years of the Nazi occupation of Holland between 1940 and 1945. Some newspaper articles of the time gave the appearance that he acquiesced to the presence of the Nazi's ideological restrictions on particular composers. Explanations have ranged from political naiveté in general, to a general "blind spot" of criticism of anything German, given his own ancestry. Because of Mengelberg's co-operation with the occupying regime in The Netherlands during World War II, he was banned from conducting in the country by the Dutch government after the war in 1945. He was stripped of his honours and his passport. The original judgment was that Mengelberg would be banned from conducting in the Netherlands for the remainder of his life. Appeals by his attorneys led to a reduction in the sentence to a banning of six years from conducting, retroactively applied to start from 1945. This notwithstanding, he continued to draw a pension from the orchestra until 1949 when cut off by the city council of Amsterdam. Mengelberg retreated in exile to Zuort, Sent, Switzerland, where he remained until his death in 1951, just two months before the expiration of his exile order.

Willem Mengelberg was the uncle of the musicologist and composer Rudolf Mengelberg and of the conductor, composer and critic Karel Mengelberg, who was himself the father of the prominent improvising pianist and composer Misha Mengelberg.

 

Recorded Legacy

In addition to his acclaimed recordings of Richard Strauss' Ein Heldenleben, Mengelberg left valuable discs of symphonies by Beethoven and Brahms, not to mention a wildly controversial but gripping reading of Bach's St. Matthew Passion.

His most characteristic performances are marked by a tremendous expressiveness and freedom of tempo, perhaps most remarkable in his recording of Mahler's fourth Symphony but certainly present in the aforementioned St Matthew Passion and other performances as well. These qualities, shared (perhaps to a lesser extent) by only a handful of other conductors of the era of sound recording, such as Wilhelm Furtwängler and Leonard Bernstein, make much of his work unusually controversial among classical music listeners; recordings that more mainstream listeners consider unlistenable will be hailed by others as among the greatest recordings ever made.

Many of his recorded performances, including some live concerts in Amsterdam during World War II, have been reissued on LP and CD. While he was known for his recordings of the German repertoire, Capitol Records issued a powerful, nearly high fidelity recording of Cesar Franck's Symphony in D minor, recorded in the 1940s with the Concertgebouw Orchestra.

Due to the Dutch government's six-year ban on Mengelberg's conducting activities, he made no more recordings after 1945. Some of his performances in Amsterdam were recorded on the innovative German tape recorder, the Magnetophon, resulting in unusually high fidelity for the time.

 

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