PASC303 - COATES conducts Russian and French music
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  Symphony Orchestra
Albert Coates, conductor
Acoustic HMV recordings 1921-24

Transfers by Ward Marston
Cover artwork based on a photograph of Albert Coates

Total duration: 70:19
©2011 Pristine Audio.

Download ID: 1488378-79

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PASC303

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Albert Coates conducts:
1. Bach & Beethoven
2. Russian Music
3. Mozart & Beethoven
4. Tchaikovsky & Glinka
5. French & Russian
6. Russian Electrics

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Albert Coates - C19 and C20 French & Russian classics

New acoustic transfers demonstrate the conductor's brilliant versatility


  • GLINKA Ruslan and Lyudmilla - Overture [notes / score]
    Recorded 5 May 1922; Matrix Cc1292-2; Issued on HMV D658.

  • RIMSKY-KORSAKOV Coq d'Or - suite [notes / score]
    Recorded 10 May and 14 July 1922.
    Issued on HMV D732-734.
    Side 1 recorded 14 July 1922; matrix Cc1307-4; HMV D732.
    Side 2 recorded 10 May 1922; matrix Cc1308-2; HMV D732.
    Side 3 recorded 10 May 1922; matrix Cc1309-2; HMV D733.
    Side 4 recorded 14 July 1922; matrix Cc1310-4; HMV D733.
    Side 5 recorded 14 July 1922; matrix Cc1659-1; HMV D734.
    Side 6 recorded 14 July 1922; matrix Cc1660-3; HMV D734.

  • RIMSKY-KORSAKOV The Snow Maiden - Dance of the Tumblers [notes / score]
    Recorded 14 July 1922; matrix Cc1661-1; HMV D658.

  • STRAVINSKY Firebird Suite (1911 version) [notes / score]
    Recorded 24 and 29 October 1924. Issued on HMV D958 and 959.
    Side 1: 1. Introduction – Kashchei's Enchanted Garden – Dance of the Firebird
    recorded 29 October 1924; matrix Cc5298-1; HMV 958
    Side 2: 2. Supplication Of The Firebird
    recorded 29 October 1924; matrix Cc5297-2; HMV D958.
    Side 3: 3. The Princesses' Game With The Golden Apples; 4. The Princesses’ Khorovod
    recorded 24 October 1924; matrix Cc5291-1; HMV D959.
    Side 4: 5. Infernal Dance Of All Kashchei's Subjects
    recorded 29 October 1924; matrix Cc5296-2; HMV D959.

  • LIADOV Kikimora [notes / score]
    Recorded 28 October 1921; matrix Cc608-2; HMV D620

  • DEBUSSY Golliwog's Cakewalk from Children's Corner Suite [notes / score]
    Recorded 25 April 1922; matrix Cc1243-2; HMV D620.

  • RAVEL Ma Mère l'Oye - Suite [notes / score]
    Recorded 25 November 1921, and 25 April 1922. Issued on HMV D708 and 709.
    Side 1, Pavane de la Belle au Bois Dormant; Petit Poucet.
    recorded 25 November 1921; matrix Cc709-2; HMV D708.
    Side 2, Laideronette, Impératrice des Pagodes.
    recorded 25 November 1921; matrix Cc710-3; HMV D708.
    Side 3, Les entretiens; De la Belle et de la Bête.
    recorded 25 April 1922; matrix Cc1241-3; HMV D709.
    Side 4, Le Jardin Férique.
    recorded 25 April 1922; matrix Cc1242-2; HMV D709.


    London Symphony Orchestra
    Albert Coates
    , conductor

    FLAC downloads include scores of all four works



    Review of this Firebird Suite recording, 1925:

    "I can imagine strife in many a peaceful home when Part 4 of this suite is reached.

    Father: "I call that a noise."

    Son or Daughter
    , with that desire to irritate so conspicuous in happy families : "Noise? A term used by the Elizabethans to denote a band or company of musicians."

    (Confused sounds from father.)

    Mother
    , reading newspaper, quite irrelevantly remarks "How terrible these Bolshevists are."

    Son, of course, misunderstands, and replies with withering scorn "Naturally you cannot understand that the juxtaposition of tonal masses, the empirical atonalities, etc., etc." (until the entire family is flattened out!)

    The Firebird music suffers more from being detached from its proper setting—the theatre—than did the later work Petrouchka. It will sound extraordinarily scrappy and disjointed to anyone who has not seen the ballet. Moreover, the titles affixed to the records do not correspond very satisfactorily with the plot given in the supplement. Further, Mr. Percy Scholes' excellent analytical notes, done for a B.B.C. concert at Covent Garden, from which I have culled some information, present the music in a different sequence to that given here. Perhaps, therefore, the following analysis, merely a personal interpretation fused with the main outlines of the story, will be helpful.

    Part 1.—An enchanted garden with something sinister and evil lurking in the background. A scene bathed in half-light. After many obscure mutterings the air suddenly grows tremulous with sound, a rich glow dispels the shadows. The wonderful exotic fire bird flutters into the garden.

    Part 2.
    —She dances round a silver tree loaded with golden fruit, seeming to the young Prince Ivan (hidden in the bushes) the loveliest thing he has ever seen. Greatly daring he captures her, but she begs to be released, offering him a gift of one of her feathers.

    Part 3.
    —She departs. The garden is now filled with a band of maidens headed by a Princess. They too dance with charming vivacity and have a game with the golden apples. At dawn they disappear.

    Part 4.
    —The Prince is seeking them when suddenly there appears the monstrous retinue of the evil spirit of the place, the demon king Kastchei The magic feather preserves Ivan's life, but the Firebird also comes to his rescue. She makes the bevy of wild Indians, warrior Turks, Chinamen, Clowns, Imps, Hobgoblins, Ogres, and Apes burst into a frenzied dance. While they are thus engaged she directs Ivan to smash a huge egg in a casket in which is hidden the demon's life. This done the monster dies and the loathsome creatures vanish. Ivan marries the princess.

    The highly coloured orchestration rather blinds one to the lack of any real "meat" in the music. It is a positive relief on reaching Part 3 to encounter a genuine tune, one which seems better than it actually is by reason of what has gone before. Rhythmically the music is feverishly alive; melodically it has to rely on actual or spurious folk tunes for sustenance. These sound very like concessions. The final section with its blocks of harmonies pushed this way and that makes a terrific din that fits the stage picture, but is meaningless without. As a study for Petrouchka the music has a definite interest and as all of us like a bit of "twopence coloured" at times, these records will find a place in our cabinets.

    Whatever criticisms one may make of this Debussy–Scriabin–Stravinsky confection, there are none to be made about the recording. Real oboe tone, that floating incisive quality, is heard at last; the string background, the occasional solo violin relief, the writhings and posturings of the wind and brass are excellently reproduced. Everyone, at least, will be able to take genuine pleasure in the Dance of the Princesses (Part 3)."


    N.P. The Gramophone, April 1925, review of the Albert Coates recording of Stravinsky's The Firebird


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Albert Coates

Biographical notes from Wikipedia

 

Albert Coates (23 April 1882 –11 December 1953) was an English conductor and composer. Born in Saint Petersburg where his English father was a successful businessman, he studied in Russia, England and Germany, before beginning his career as a conductor in a series of German opera houses. He was a success in England at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, and in 1919 was appointed chief conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra.

His strengths as a conductor lay in opera and the Russian repertoire, and he was not thought as impressive in the core Austro-German symphonic repertoire. After 1923 he failed to secure a permanent conductorship in the UK, and for much of the rest of his life he guest conducted in continental Europe and the U.S. In his last years he took orchestral appointments in South Africa, where he died at 71.

As a composer, Coates is little remembered, but he composed seven operas, one of which was performed at Covent Garden. He also wrote some concert works for orchestral forces.

 

Early years

Coates was born in Saint Petersburg, the youngest of seven sons of a Yorkshire father, Charles Thomas Coates, who managed the Russian branch of an English company, and Mary Ann Gibson, who was born and raised in Russia to British parents. He learned the violin, cello and piano as a child in Russia. From 12, he was raised in England. After attending the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth, he studied science at Liverpool University.

Coates returned to Russia to join his father's company, but he also studied composition with Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. In 1902, he entered the Leipzig Conservatory, to study the cello with Julius Klengel and the piano with Robert Teichmüller, but he was drawn to conducting by Arthur Nikisch's conducting classes.

Nikisch appointed Coates répétiteur at the Leipzig opera, and he made his debut as a conductor in 1904 with Offenbach's The Tales of Hoffmann. He was engaged as the conductor of the opera house at Elberfeld in 1906, in succession to Fritz Cassirer. From there he progressed to the post of assistant conductor at the Semperoper, Dresden (1907–8), under Ernst von Schuch and Mannheim in 1909 under Artur Bodanzky. He made his London début in May 1910, conducting the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) in a programme consisting of a symphony by Maximilian Steinberg, Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto and Beethoven's Seventh Symphony. The Times judged him "sound and artistic", though "not particularly inspiring to watch." In the same year he was invited by Eduard Nápravník to conduct at Saint Petersburg's Mariinsky Theatre.

Coates's conducting of Siegfried at the Mariinsky led to his appointment as principal conductor of the Russian Imperial Opera, a post he held for five years, during which he became associated with leading Russian musicians, including Alexander Scriabin, for whose music he became a strong advocate. In July 1910, he married Ella Lizzie Holland.

International career

Coates first appeared at Covent Garden in 1914 in a Wagner season. He won critical praise for his performance of Tristan und Isolde and particularly for his conducting of Die Meistersinger. His conducting of Puccini's Manon Lescaut later in the same season was also well-received, his Parsifal less so.

The Russian Revolution in 1917 did not at first adversely affect Coates. The Soviet government appointed him "President of all Opera Houses in Soviet Russia", based in Moscow. By 1919, however, living conditions in Russia had become desperate. Coates became seriously ill, and with considerable difficulty left Russia with his family by way of Finland in April 1919. After his arrival in England, Coates was appointed chief conductor of the LSO. Reviewing his first performance in the post, The Times praised him warmly, along with the younger Adrian Boult and Geoffrey Toye, in an article on "The Conductor's Art". In September 1919, Coates was appointed to teach a new class for operatic training at the Royal College of Music. Reporting the appointment, The Times wrote, "There can scarcely be a musician in this country with so wide and cosmopolitan an experience of operatic performance."

The following month, there occurred an incident for which Coates's name is remembered in many books and articles. The LSO gave the world premiere of Elgar's Cello Concerto under the baton of the composer, but Coates, who was conducting the rest of the programme, appropriated most of Elgar's allotted rehearsal time. As a result, the orchestra gave a notoriously inadequate performance. Elgar did not complain publicly, but the musical world knew privately of Coates's behaviour. With this exception, Coates served English composers well in the post-war years, giving the first performances of large-scale works including Vaughan Williams's revised A London Symphony (1920), Delius's Requiem (1922), Bax's First Symphony (1922), and Holst's Choral Symphony (1925). He conducted many other early performances of music by contemporary English composers, including the second complete performance of Holst's The Planets in 1920, two years after its premiere. Among works from continental Europe introduced to England by Coates were Prokofiev's Third Piano Concerto and Rachmaninoff's Fourth Piano Concerto, each with its composer as soloist. In 1925 he gave the first stage performance outside Russia of Rimsky-Korsakov's opera The Invisible City of Kitezh.

After his contract with the LSO expired in 1922, Coates held no more permanent conductorships in the UK, although he directed the Leeds music festivals of 1922 and 1925. In 1923 he was appointed joint principal conductor with Eugene Goossens of the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra in the U.S. He was among the co-founders of Vladimir Rosing's pioneering American Opera Company. Coates left Rochester in 1925 as a result of a disagreement with the orchestra's sponsor, George Eastman over artistic policy. The reason for Coates's failure to secure a permanent position in the UK was, according to one commentator, that although he was a fine conductor of opera and of Russian concert music, "his interpretations of the Viennese classics were less acceptable" and as the latter were more important in British musical life, "Coates failed to win for himself the highest reputation among his own countrymen."

 

Later years

In 1925, Coates was invited to Paris to conduct at the Opéra. He continued to make regular guest appearances in many of the world's artistic centres until 1939. He conducted opera in Italy (1927 to 1929), and Germany (Berlin State Opera, 1931), and concerts with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra (1935) and in the Netherlands, Sweden and the USSR, which he visited three times.

On 13 November 1936 the BBC broadcast the world's first televised opera: scenes from Coates's Pickwick, directed by Rosing, were shown in advance of the work's premiere. Coates and Rosing launched a season of the British Music Drama Opera Company at Covent Garden the following week.

When World War II broke out, Coates moved to the US. There, together with Rosing, he founded the Southern California Opera Association. Productions included Coates's opera Gainsborough's Duchess. He guest conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra and worked briefly in Hollywood, making cameo appearances in two MGM films.

In 1946 Coates moved to South Africa. He accepted the conductorships of the Johannesburg Symphony Orchestra and, later, the Cape Town Municipal Orchestra. He settled in Milnerton, Cape Town, with his second wife Vera Joanna Nettlefold (a soprano professionally known as Vera de Villiers). He died there in 1953. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography says of him "Although he was important to the fortunes of the London Symphony Orchestra immediately after the First World War, his contribution to British musical life was ephemeral. As a composer he has lost his place in the repertory, and as an executant he is remembered generally by collectors with an interest in historic recordings."

 

Compositions

In its obituary of Coates, The Times wrote that his compositions "fell between the two stools of national character and international sympathy, with a resulting ambiguity of achievement." The Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians describes them as "technically proficient rather than imaginative". His works include the operas Samuel Pepys and Pickwick; the former was given in German in Munich in 1929, and latter in English at Covent Garden in 1936. His five other operas included "The Myth Beautiful" (1920). His concert works included a piano concerto and a symphonic poem The Eagle, dedicated to the memory of his former teacher Nikisch, which was performed in Leeds in 1925.

Recordings

Coates made important early contributions to the representation of orchestral music on record, beginning in 1920 with Scriabin's The Poem of Ecstasy and afterwards conducting many excerpts from Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen and (in 1923 and 1926) two complete recordings of Symphony No. 9 of Beethoven. He was the conductor for the 1930 premiere recording of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, with Vladimir Horowitz as soloist.

 

 

From Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Coates_(musician)

 

 

 

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