WALTER conducts Brahms (1941-54) - PABX005

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WALTER conducts Brahms (1941-54) - PABX005

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Overview

BRAHMS Symphony No. 1 - Symphony No. 2 - Double Concerto - Song of Destiny - Tragic Overture - Hungarian Dance No. 17 - Symphony No. 3 - Symphony No. 4 - Piano Concerto No. 2 - Violin Concerto - Piano Concerto No. 1 - Haydn Variations - Alto Rhapsody - Academic Festival Overture - Un Requiem Tedesco (A German Requiem, sung in Italian)


Recorded 1941-1954


Bruno Walter
, conductor
John Corigliano, violin
Leonard Rose,
cello
Erica Morini,
violin
Myra Hess,
piano
Clifford Curzon,
piano
Enid Szantho,
contralto
Rosanna Carteri,
soprano
Boris Christoff,
bass

Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York
Hugo Strelitzer Choir
Hollywood Bowl Symphony Orchestra
Rome Symphony Orchestra & Chorus of RAI

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This set contains the following albums:

Click below to expand note:
WALTER conducts Brahms, Volume 1 (1947-54) - PASC485

Bruno Walter's 1951 Brahms Cycle with the NY Philharmonic - and more!

"These concerts apparently find Mr. Walter at the very zenith of his powers, absorbed in a task which is especially dear to him" - NY Times


  • This series is based around what survives of Bruno Walter's fabulous 1951 series of Brahms concerts with the New York Philharmonic, together with other live performances which either fill gaps in the 1951 recordings or, in the case of the German Requiem (Vol. 3), add to the 1951 programme. A number of major recordings, including two of the symphonies, have never been issued before; in other cases we have gained access to sonically superior sources to those used in previous releases.

    There is some variation in sound quality across the recordings, some of which have required extensive repair and restoration. What shines throughout is the fabulous musicality of these truly historic concert accounts of Brahms' music, as given by Walter and the New York Philharmonic. 

    One of the highlights of this first of three 2-CD volumes is a previously-unissued recording of the First Symphony. This was original played alongside the Tragic Overture and the Violin Concerto, neither of which has apparently survived in usable recorded form (a correspondent reports "a horrible transfer to a defective private LP" of the Violin Concerto with Francescatti); here we've replaced the Overture with a later New York performance, a later disc will include a 1953 NY recording of the Violin Concerto. The Song of Destiny which completes the first disc was not performed at the New York concerts - the present recording is taken from a 1947 Hollywood Bowl concert, conducted in the open air by Walter to the (occasional) gentle accompaniment of crickets chirruping in the background.

    The second disc here offers the third concert programme in full. Of the recordings it is the Double Concerto which is perhaps of greatest interest to collectors - previous outings on various dubious Italian labels have offered badly muffled, congested and inferior sound. By comparison it is clean and clear here, as are the other two recordings. I had to deal with occasional peak distortion in the first movement of the Second Symphony where it was originally recorded at levels which overloaded during the loudest sections, something I've endeavoured to bring under control here.

    Volume Two in this series will complete the symphonies, accompanied by two concertos, whilst the final volume will include a previously unissued recording of the Piano Concerto No. 1 from the 1951 New York series, together with a later performance of A German Requiem and other works.

    Andrew Rose

  • WALTER conducts Brahms, Volume 2 (1951/53) - PASC489

    Bruno Walter's 1951 Brahms Cycle with the NY Philharmonic continues

    Rare and previously unissued live Brahms recordings from Carnegie Hall


    This series continues here with what survives of Bruno Walter's fabulous 1951 series of Brahms concerts with the New York Philharmonic, together with a later live performance of the Violin Concerto which fills the gap in the 1951 recordings left by the apparent loss of a performance with Zino Francescatti.

  • Preparing this release has required some major technical innovation, both in the Symphony No. 3, previously unissued, and the Violin Concerto. As outlined in the quoted review in our CD liner notes of a previous issue of the latter, things went wrong during the first movement, culminating in a momentary silence from the soloist - the result of a broken string. Morini quickly borrowed the violin offered by the orchestra's leader, John Corigliano and carried on playing while he replaced her broken string.That gap here is filled by the seamless mixing in of Morini's 1956 studio recording for Westminster at around 11 minutes to patch the gap whilst instruments were exchanged.

    More challenging was the Symphony No. 3, where two source recordings were used for several sections of the recording. One was damaged in upper frequencies, the other in the lower frequencies. Following digital pitch and tempo stabilisation and synchronisation I was able to digitally copy and paste good upper frequencies over good lower frequencies to produce a perfectly matched and utterly convincing new whole, a technique I believe may never have been successfully attempted before, and which restores what would otherwise have been unusable sources to their full glory.

  • Andrew Rose

  • WALTER conducts Brahms, Volume 3 (1941-52) - PASC494

    This final entry in the Walter conducts Brahms series features only one recording from the 1951 series around which it has been constructed, the previously unissued and stunning performance with Clifford Curzon of the Piano Concerto No. 1. The surviving source for this recording has suffered some mild deterioration over the last 66 years that can at times be heard, but never to the extent that it distracts from the performance - in this we have I hope largely achieved the wish of the New York Times correspondent who wished it "might have been transfixed and preserved immaculate for the generations" - if not quite immaculate, then pretty close to it. It's certainly a major addition to the Walter discography.


    For the rest of this release I've had to sift through the archives - not all of Walter's 1951 performances survive, and there we no performances of either the German Requiem or the Alto Rhapsody in the series. The latter, from a 1941 Carnegie Hall performance appears here for the first time, whilst I decided on the Italian performance of the German Requiem  for both better sound quality and an unusually slower tempo from Walter than the other performances captured at this time. In both cases I've done what I can with the archive material available to me - the age of the Alto Rhapsody is reflected in a limited frequency range, whilst there is some top end hash heard during some of the louder passages of the Requiem.


    The other two recordings here come from the same Hollywood Bowl performance that appears on Volume 1 of this series, and yes, once again the crickets make an appearance towards the end of the Haydn Variations!


    Andrew Rose

    Click below to expand track listing:
    WALTER conducts Brahms, Volume 1 (1947-54) - PASC485


    • BRAHMS Schicksalslied (Song of Destiny), Op. 54
      Hugo Strelitzer Choir, Hollywood Bowl Orchestra

    • BRAHMS Tragic Overture, Op. 81
       
    • BRAHMS Symphony No. 1 in C minor, Op. 68
       
    • BRAHMS Hungarian Dance No. 17 in F-sharp minor
       
    • BRAHMS  Double Concerto for violin and cello in A minor, Op. 102
      John Corigliano,
      violin
      Leonard Rose,
      cello

       
    • BRAHMS  Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op. 73



    Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York

    Bruno Walter
    , conductor 


    PERFORMANCE DATES
    *Schicksalslied: 7 October 1947
    Tragic Overture: 19 December 1954
    Symphony No. 1: 21 January 1951
    Hungarian Dance: 4 February 1951
    Double Concerto: 4 February 1951
    Symphony No. 2: 28 January 1951


    All performed at Carnegie Hall, New York
    except *Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles


    WALTER conducts Brahms, Volume 2 (1951/53) - PASC489


    • BRAHMS Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat major, Op. 83

    • BRAHMS Symphony No. 3 in F major, Op. 90
       
    • BRAHMS Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 77
       
    • BRAHMS Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98



    Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York

    Erica Morini, violin
    Myra Hess, piano

    Bruno Walter, conductor 

    PERFORMANCE DATES
    Piano Concerto No. 2: 28 January 1951
    Symphony No. 3: 28 January 1951
    Violin Concerto: 20 December 1953
    Symphony No. 4: 11 February 1951

    All performed at Carnegie Hall, New York

    WALTER conducts Brahms, Volume 3 (1941-52) - PASC494

    DISC ONE


    BRAHMS  Variations on a Theme by Haydn, Op. 56a*
    1 Theme. Chorale St. Antoni  (1:53)
    2 I. Poco più animato  (1:17)
    3 II. Più vivace  (1:02)
    4 III. Con moto  (1:52)
    5 IV. Andante con moto  (1:50)
    6 V. Vivace  (0:58)
    7 VI. - Vivace  (1:11)
    8 VII. Grazioso  (2:07)
    9 VIII. Presto non troppo  (0:59)
    10 Finale. Andante  (4:14)

    11 BRAHMS Alto Rhapsody, Op. 53  (11:02)
    Enid Szantho, contralto

    BRAHMS  Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor, Op. 15
    12 1st mvt. - Maestoso  (20:49)
    13 2nd mvt. - Adagio  (13:36)
    14 3rd mvt. - Rondo. Allegro non troppo  (10:49)
    Clifford Curzon, piano




    DISC TWO


    1 BRAHMS Academic Festival Overture, Op. 80*  (9:27)


    BRAHMS  Ein Deutsches Requiem, Op. 45** (Sung in Italian)
    2 I. Selig sind, die da Leid tragen (Ben è vero che gli affliti son beati)  (10:03)
    3 II. Denn alles Fleisch (Dell'erba al par la carne è vile)  (14:00)
    4 III. Herr, lehre doch mich (Dio, svelami tu)  (10:01)
    5 IV. Wie lieblich sind deine Wohnungen (Le tue dimore sono dolci invero)  (5:01)
    6 V. Ihr habt nun Traurigkeit (Voi avete qui dolor)  (7:16)
    7 VI. Denn wir haben hie (Stabil secle in terra noi non abbiamo)  (10:40)
    8 VII. Selig sind die Toten (Oh, beati i morti che muoiono nel Signore)  (11:27)
    Rosanna Carteri, soprano
    Boris Christoff,
    bass

    Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York
    *Hollywood Bowl Orchestra
    **Rome Symphony Orchestra & Chorus of RAI
    Bruno Walter
    , conductor



    XR remastering by Andrew Rose

    Cover artwork based on  photographs of Walter & Brahms

    *Haydn Variations: 10 July 1947
    Alto Rhapsody: 9 November 1941
    Piano Concerto No. 1: 28 January 1951
    *Academic Festival Ov.: 10 July 1947
    **German Requiem: 16 April, 1952

    All performed at Carnegie Hall, New York
    except *Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles, **Auditorium Rai di Torino

    Total duration:  2hr 31:33 

    Fanfare Review

    “Highest possible recommendation” is simply not good enough here; this is beyond all praise

    Although Bruno Walter is perhaps most immediately identified with Mahler and Mozart, Brahms was extremely dear to him, and in fact is the composer whose orchestral repertoire he most frequently recorded, proportionately speaking. With Columbia, he twice set down the four symphonies, the two overtures, the Haydn Variations, and the Double Concerto, originally in mono with the New York Philharmonic in 1951–54 and then a remake in stereo in 1959–60 with the West Coast incarnation of the Columbia Symphony Orchestra; the mono cycle also included four of the Hungarian Dances (Nos. 1, 3, 10, and 17). He also made pre-war 78-rpm recordings of the Academic Festival Overture and Symphonies Nos. 1 and 3 with the Vienna Philharmonic, and of No. 4 with the BBC Symphony. In addition, there are a 1954 mono recording of the German Requiem and a 1941 mono recording of the Schicksalslied (sung in English as the Song of Destiny) with the NYP, and 1961 stereo recordings of the Alto Rhapsody and Schicksalslied with the CSO. By way of comparison, the only works of Beethoven he recorded three times were the Violin Concerto, the Leonore Overture No. 3, the Symphony No. 6, and the finale of the Symphony No. 9; of Mozart, the Symphonies Nos. 38–41, the Eine kleine Nachtmusik, and the overtures to Così fan tutte, Le nozze di Figaro, and Die Zauberflöte. (The Symphony No. 41, Eine kleine Nachtmusik, and overtures to Così fan tutte and Le nozze di Figaro were waxed by Walter four times.) The only other works he recorded thrice or more in the studio were Schubert’s Symphonies Nos. 8 and 9; Johann Strauss, Jr.’s Die Fledermaus and Der Zigeunerbaron overtures and Kaiserwaltz; and Wagner’s Siegfried Idyll (six times!), Siegfried’s Rhine Journey from Götterdämmerung, and the act I Prelude to Parsifal.


    All of Walter’s Brahms recordings have appeared on CD, and are rightly regarded as classics; indeed, in the estimation of some collectors (myself included), Walter remains the nonpareil interpreter of Brahms, a composer with whose music he seemed to have a positively preternatural identification. His performances invariably achieve an ideal balance of drama and lyricism, penetrating to the heart of Brahms’s stoic but melancholic reserve. Unfortunately, although the Violin Concerto and the two piano concertos also were core items in Walter’s repertoire, Columbia turned to other conductors (most often Eugene Ormandy) for its recordings of those three works. In scattershot fashion, live performances previously have surfaced of Walter in all four symphonies, all four concertos, and the aforementioned overtures and choral works, but tracking those down and acquiring them is an onerous and formidable task.


    With these three two-CD sets, Andrew Rose has performed the signal service of issuing a Bruno Walter live Brahms edition that brings together all the symphonies, concertos, and overtures, along with the three major choral works, including some items appearing for the very first time. The basis for Rose’s series is the series of four consecutive broadcast concerts with the New York Philharmonic that Walter devoted to Brahms early in 1951. The programs were as follows:


    1/21/1951 – Tragic Overture, Violin Concerto [Zino Francescatti], Symphony No. 1

    1/28/1951 – Haydn Variations, Symphony No. 3, Piano Concerto No. 1 [Clifford Curzon]

    2/4/1951 – Hungarian Dance No. 17, Double Concerto [John Corigliano, Sr. and Leonard Rose], Symphony No. 2

    2/11/1951 – Academic Festival Overture, Piano Concerto No. 2 [Myra Hess], Symphony No. 4


    Portions of these programs have circulated underground among collectors of historic recordings such as myself, and a few items have appeared on CD. The Symphony No. 2 was issued in excellent sound by the now lamentably defunct Tahra label. The Piano Concerto No. 2 has also enjoyed fine releases on several labels, most notably Tahra and Music and Arts (the latter also was once briefly licensed by Pristine). The Symphony No. 4 and Double Concerto have surfaced in murky sound primarily on old pirate Italian labels (e.g., Nuova Era), though the former also appeared on a somewhat muffled Music and Arts issue. The Hungarian Dance No. 17 appeared only on an ultra-scarce Wing CD in Japan. The Symphonies Nos. 1 and 3 and the Piano Concerto No. 1 have been preserved only in private hands, the concerto in seriously defective versions afflicted with terrible radio hum and/or manifold drop-outs. The two overtures, the Haydn Variations, and the Violin Concerto from that cycle have not surfaced. (I once was given a privately made amateur LP pressing of the Violin Concerto; the quality of both the vinyl and the sound was sub-acoustic era level, and a section of one side was so badly scratched that it would not play through; but through it all one could hear a performance for the ages, very similar to the stellar live 1958 Francescatti/Mitropoulos/Vienna Philharmonic performance issued by Orfeo.)


    For the missing items from this 1951 New York cycle, Rose has substituted the following performances: the Academic Festival Overture and Haydn Variations with the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra (10/7/1947); the Tragic Overture with the NYP (12/19/1954); and the Violin Concerto with Erica Morini and the NYP (12/20/1953). Except for the Tragic Overture, for which three other live performances survive (Philadelphia Orchestra, 12/2/1944; Vienna Philharmonic in Edinburgh, 9/8/1953; NYP, 3/16/1952, unpublished), these are the only surviving live accounts of these works under Walter’s baton. To these Rose has added what are likewise the only preserved live renditions by Walter of the Schicksalslied (Hollywood Bowl, 10/7/1947) and the Alto Rhapsody (Enid Szantho and the NYP, 11/9/1941). Finally (more on which below) there is Ein deutsches Requiem from a broadcast in Rome, sung in Italian (Rosanna Carteri, Boris Christoff, and the RAI Rome Chorus and Symphony Orchestra, 4/16/1952).


    How do these live performances compare with Walter’s commercial releases? One of the conductor’s signal traits was his ability to bring his concerts into the recording studio, as it were. He did not freeze up or turn stiff or overly self-conscious, and there is generally a very high degree of both consistency and inspiration between a given studio recording and a live performance by him of reasonably near vintage. Likewise, until his late, post-heart attack studio recordings from 1958 to 1961, there is remarkable similarity and continuity in Walter’s interpretations of a given work over time. In that sense, live performances do not add as much to our knowledge of Walter’s art as do, say, those of Wilhelm Furtwängler, whose individual performances could vary radically in character (and sometimes in quality as well). That is not to say that, however, Walter’s live accounts of works he set down in the studio are of comparatively little value. As always, there is often that subtle trade-off between the greater technical perfection of a studio recording and the intangible electricity and tension of a live performance, and that is the situation here. While I could live (and die) happily with either of Walter’s two studio cycles, I have a decided preference for the monaural versions of Symphonies Nos. 1, 3, and 4, esteeming all the other performances in both sets as being equally meritorious.


    To my great surprise and pleasure, this 1947 Hollywood Bowl performance of The Song of Destiny is a worthy rival for its 1941 studio counterpart. (In addition to the 1961 stereo version in German, there is a live 1952 performance from Rome, sung in Italian, from the same concert as the Requiem in this series.) Hugo Strelitzer (1896–1981) was originally an opera coach and assistant conductor for various opera houses in Germany, who taught in the Berlin Conservatory from 1926 to 1933. After being arrested and held for six weeks in the notoriously brutal “Columbia House” SS prison (he escaped death there due to the intervention of Furtwängler), he fled Nazi Germany for the USA in 1936, where he joined the faculty of Los Angeles City College, founded his choir that sang for Walter in this performance, and established a very successful new career in opera that lasted 25 years. The caliber of his choir’s singing is very close to that of the Westminster Choir in the studio version from 1941 (both groups have very good diction); likewise, in this particular work the playing of the Hollywood Bowl Symphony does not compare badly with the New York Philharmonic. Andrew Rose has managed to elevate the sound quality to being at least on a par with the studio version. The pacing in 1947 is actually more comparable to the 1961 studio account, being broader in the outer sections. A feature I find charming is the audible chirping of crickets in the background in time to the music in some of its quieter sections (e.g., shortly before the five-minute mark).


    In all the other performances in this first set, the sonic trade-off is between the very clear but slightly dry sound of Columbia’s 30th Street studio in New York for Walter’s contemporaneous monaural recordings, and the less clear but more resonant acoustic of live concerts in Carnegie Hall. Individual listeners will have their preferences between hearing greater instrumental detail or sacrificing a degree of that for greater sonic warmth. The sound quality of the January 21 concert for the Symphony No. 1 is particularly fine, being almost of studio quality; that of the complete February 4 concert (the Hungarian Dance No. 17, Double Concerto, and Symphony No. 2) presented on CD 2 of this set is also quite good for its era, but has significantly more tape hiss in the high frequencies.


    The two versions of the Hungarian Dance No. 17 and the Tragic Overture are virtually identical, though the live version of the former seems to me to have greater ripeness. (Somewhat oddly, the concert originally advertised that three Hungarian Dances, Nos. 1, 2, and 17, would be performed, but only one was actually played. On the unedited copy of the complete concert broadcast in my possession, one hears a prolonged awkward pause while the audience waits for the next dance to be played, and then belated applause in response to some signal from the stage. My suspicion is that the other two dances were dropped to create time for a fund-raising plea for the orchestra by Clare Boothe Luce as the intermission feature.) Likewise the two versions of the Symphony No. 2 are very close in character, though the live performance seems to me to have a bit more plasticity and to be slightly more relaxed in the finale (where it runs 20 seconds longer). Both accounts are splendid, and I could live happily with either one or the 1960 stereo version. (The other live performances that have surfaced on CD—the NBC Symphony in 1940, the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1944, the Berlin Philharmonic in 1950, and the Orchestre National de l’ORTF in 1955—are all sonically and interpretively inferior to these three.)


    The greatest differences occur in the Symphony No. 1 and Double Concerto. The finale of the symphony is a full minute longer in the live performance (15 vs. 16 minutes), and I find the extra breadth beneficial; in the live performance, the famous horn call really is a ray of sunshine suddenly breaking through the clouds. More unexpectedly, concertmaster John Corigliano, Sr. is far more prominently miked in the live performance than in the later studio account, though not in an unduly unbalanced way, and thus shines to an extra degree in the second movement. Again, these two performances and the 1959 stereo version are all highly preferable to Walter’s other recordings (a 1937 studio recording on 78-rpm discs with the Vienna Philharmonic and a 1939 NBC Symphony broadcast). But, pressed to make a single choice, I might well elect this newly issued live rendition.


    While Walter’s two studio recordings of the Double Concerto—with Isaac Stern, Leonard Rose, and the New York Philharmonic in 1954, and with Zino Francescatti, Pierre Fournier, and the Columbia Symphony in 1959—both rightly hold long revered places in the catalog as reference standard versions, I would now prefer this truly glorious live performance to either of those. Here the differences with the 1954 studio account are the most telling. The first movement is taken a hair faster, but it has a palpably greater degree of impetus and dramatic tension to it. The slow movement is considerably more expansive—8:27 compared to 7:17—which is entirely to its benefit in imparting more lyricism and repose after the febrile drama of the opening Allegro. The two finales are virtually identical interpretively. The other significant difference is in the violinists—Corigliano live vs. Isaac Stern in the studio. Both of them excel; but to my ears, perhaps because they worked together week in and week out, Corigliano and Rose blend together and are simpatico to an extra degree. (I also wonder if Stern simply was not entirely happy working with Walter. This was the only recording they made together, and from Stern’s pointed remarks elsewhere about Walter having an iron fist in a velvet glove, one infers that perhaps the conductor in his courtly manner insisted that the violinist yield to him on disputed points of interpretation, whereas Ormandy was far more willing to accommodate his soloists.) Andrew Rose’s remastering is a massive improvement over the previous Italian issues, revealing glories I had only dimly imagined before.


    The second two-CD set brings a world premiere release of the Symphony No. 3—and what a glorious performance it is! The sound quality is exceptionally fine here, and Walter’s tautly dramatic but impetuous account, of Toscaninian fieriness while leavened as always with idyllic lyricism, supersedes even his 1953 New York studio recording that has previously been my benchmark. To my mind, the single most difficult part of the symphony to bring off is the hushed coda to the finale that follows all the fireworks; heretofore to my ear neither Walter nor any other conductor had made a fully satisfactory rendition of this epilog, but here it is molded to exquisite perfection. The Symphony No. 4, in sound much richer and less congested than on its Music and Arts predecessor (there are also previous, privately circulated, NYP performances in poorer sound from 1942 and 1945), likewise now assumes a premiere place for that work in Walter’s discography. My one prior point of dissatisfaction with Walter’s interpretations of Brahms has been in the finale to this work, where I have always found his pacing too slow in the final variations and failing to generate the sense of implacable doom conveyed so well by Furtwängler. Here, if still not quite plumbing the depths of tragedy reached by his rival (the two had a rather uneasy relationship), Walter here maintains much greater momentum in those closing pages and makes a complete success of them in his own right, and of course is masterly at every other point.


    As previously mentioned, the two concertos featured here have both been favored with excellent releases in the past; but Rose has managed to improve on those palpably, with the Piano Concerto No. 2 in particular now having significantly greater clarity in its often dense instrumental lines, plus more weight in the bass register. And what a blessing to have preserved for us an account of this concerto with the leonine Myra Hess at the keyboard! Make no mistake; despite a very few smudges, this is a magisterial rendition that, if recorded in modern digital sonics, could arguably be ranked as the reference version. I’ve owned it for 30 years now, and have yet to hear its interpretive equal. Hess and Walter worked especially well together, having well-mated interpretive profiles for what might be termed weighty lyricism; their live performances from New York of Mozart’s Concertos Nos. 14 and 20 from Music and Arts are simply to die for, and here too they are utterly alive to one another, with a gorgeous cello solo from Leonard Rose in the third movement adding yet more icing to the interpretive cake. As for the Violin Concerto, while as stated above I would kill for the Francescatti/Walter performance from 1951, this is a marvelous account in its own right. Morini is here freer and more passionate than in her formidable but decidedly studio-bound account with Artur Rodziński (who provides significantly less varied and imaginative support for her from the podium than Walter as well). Those who own a previous issue of this performance will notice one difference. At exactly 11:00 in the first movement, Morini originally did not play a three-note phrase over an orchestral accompaniment. In an announcement between the first and second movements from the original broadcast (omitted here), commentator Jim Fassett explained that a string broke on Morini’s violin; she quickly swapped her instrument for that of concertmaster John Corigliano, Sr., who replaced the string and then traded instruments with her again just before the cadenza. By the magic of modern editing technology, Rose has seamlessly dropped in the missing phrase from Morini’s studio recording at this point.


    The third volume returns to the Hollywood Bowl again for the performances of the Academic Festival Overture and the Haydn Variations. The former is given a somewhat frenetic reading, and the ensemble gets shaky at one point, with upbeats and downbeats between different sections of the orchestra not properly in sync for a few measures; the latter work goes considerably better, and both receive spirited readings. While neither one can compete, sonically or interpretively, with either Walter’s monaural or stereo studio accounts, they are at present the only live performances we have of him in this repertoire, and are to be welcomed for the additional insights they provide into his artistry. The same is even more true of the Alto Rhapsody presented here; dating back to 1941, it features a mediocre soloist in Enid Szantho and poor recorded sound (though Rose has greatly improved upon the original source material, as I can attest from my private collection), but is of interest for filling out a live Walter discography.


    By contrast, the Piano Concerto No. 1 with Clifford Curzon, given its world premiere release here, is a find of the first magnitude. Curzon’s 1962 studio recording of the work with George Szell and the London Symphony has long been the benchmark version for many a collector; his 1953 monaural account with Eduard van Beinum and the Concertgebouw is also highly regarded. For his part, Walter has one other surviving live performance of this work, with Vladimir Horowitz and the Concertgebouw Orchestra dating from 1936. It’s an absolutely stupendous rendition of jaw-dropping virtuosity, heart-breakingly marred by the lack of one 78-rpm side in the middle of the first movement (which Music and Arts has valiantly filled in with the corresponding portion—in extremely poor sound, alas—of the 1935 Horowitz/Toscanini/NYP performance). Here, in an especially happy marriage of talents, Walter draws out of Curzon a matching degree of lyricism not found in those two studio accounts, without any lessening of tensile strength. Granitic drama is still present in abundance, but in many orchestral passages Walter opens the score to contrasting passages of yearning tenderness; one can positively see green-forested Rhineland valleys bathed in early morning sunlight. And, what Rose has managed to do in restoring this performance from his grotesquely flawed original sources must be accounted one of the great miracles of sound restoration technology. (For one brief passage in the second movement that simply could not be salvaged, Rose has undetectably substituted in the Horowitz/Walter performance.) This newly restored account now ranks with the titans—Curzon/Szell from the studio, and the live performances with Horowitz/Walter, Kapell/Mitropoulos, Firkusny/Cantelli, and Arrau/Kubelík spring immediately to mind.


    Finally, the series closes with something of an oddity—a 1952 performance of Ein deutsches Requiem sung in Italian. While the 1954 concert broadcast apparently survives, it has never surfaced and I’ve never heard it (the purported Archipel release is actually the contemporaneous studio recording with applause tacked on the end). That left Rose with a choice between the aforementioned studio account, a 1952 NYP broadcast in English, this Italian version, the 1950 Stockholm Philharmonic performance, and the 1953 performance of the Vienna Philharmonic in Edinburgh (the latter two in German), all previously released on other labels, for reissue to round out his series. I confess that I was very surprised by Rose’s choice here—offhand, I would have thought it a less promising alternative than New York 1952 or Edinburgh 1953—and contacted Rose for an explanation. Several factors went into his decision—e.g., the rarity of the performance and the unique presence of Boris Christoff—but the two decisive ones were that the interpretation differs noticeably from Walter’s other surviving versions, and that Rose was able to make a comparatively much greater improvement in the recorded sound over previous releases (in this case, by Fonit/Cetra and Datum). Once I listened to Rose’s version, his choice fully justified itself. Compared to its predecessors, it is literally as if a suffocating wet blanket has been lifted off the sonic profile; distant murk has now been transformed into tolerably decent 1950s monaural broadcast sound. Interpretively, the performance is an intriguing intersection of cross-currents; Walter’s tempos are much broader than usual (the overall time is about 68 minutes, compared to his typically very brisk 62), and yet there is an Italianate passion in the vocal delivery worthy of a Verdi opera that leads one to disregard the “wrong language” issue and revel in the intensity of interpretive commitment. Both vocal soloists are excellent, with Christoff being his instantly recognizable, idiosyncratic self.


    It is seldom that a historic release series as a whole merits the landmark status of this one, both for the featured artist and the composer. All three volumes are indispensible additions to the collections of any and everyone who either collects historic recordings or loves Brahms. All three volumes will jointly constitute the initial entry on my 2017 Want List. “Highest possible recommendation” is simply not good enough here; this is beyond all praise.


    James A. Altena


    This article originally appeared in Issue 40:6 (July/Aug 2017) of Fanfare Magazine.