ELGAR, KOUSSEVITZKY, STOKOWSKI Accidental Stereo Recordings (1929-33) - PASC422

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ELGAR, KOUSSEVITZKY, STOKOWSKI Accidental Stereo Recordings (1929-33) - PASC422

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Overview

TCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op.74 (Pathétique)
RAVEL
Boléro
SAINT-SAËNS Carnival of the Animals
STRAVINSKY
The Rite of Spring
ELGAR Cockaigne Overture

    Studio recordings · 1929-1933
    Total duration: 74:03

    Sir Edward Elgar - BBC Symphony Orchestra
    Serge Koussevitzky - Boston Symphony Orchestra

    Leopold Stokowski - The Philadelphia Orchestra

    This set contains the following albums:

    Amazing "accidental" stereo 78rpm recordings made by Elgar, Koussevitzky and Stokowski

    New technologies and techniques produce astonishing stereo results from these unexpected early electric recordings


    Shortly after the introduction of electrical recording, it became standard practice to make backups for wax matrices by simultaneously recording on a second cutting table, with the takes from the first being numbered 1, 2, etc. and the ones from the second 1A, 2A, etc. In the vast majority of cases, the two cutters were fed from the same microphone. Occasionally, however, each was run from its own microphone; and where those matching takes survive and have been released, it is possible to combine them to produce what has come to be called “accidental stereo”.

    Since this phenomenon was first brought to light some thirty years ago, a number of matching “plain” and “A” takes have been proposed as possible stereo pairs; but until recently, the technology did not exist to prove whether they were or not. The problem lay in perfectly synchronizing the two sides: there could be differences in speed between the original cutting turntables, within each recorded side, or in the playback turntables. There was also the problem of “wow” caused by warping of the original discs or imperfect centering on the turntable. Any one of these factors could lead to a false positive – identifying two recordings made from the same setup as stereo based on subtle variations which caused them to be out of sync with each other.

    The recent development of Celemony’s Capstan pitch-stabilizing program, used in conjunction with phase alignment software, finally enables these problems to be solved with a degree of accuracy hitherto unattainable. In successfully synchronizing some proposed stereo sides, others have proven to be only in mono. For example, Side 4 of Koussevitzky’s 1930 Tchaikovsky Pathétique came out in takes labeled 1 and 1A; however, analysis has proven that at least one of them was mislabeled, and that they are in fact identical. Similarly, two 1941 Stokowski recordings previously released in what was believed to be accidental stereo were shown to be no more than slightly out-of-sync mono.

    The present release brings together nearly all the sides that have been identified publicly so far as Classical accidental stereo recordings. As the name implies, accidental stereo was never intended to be heard in synchronized form, and was not miked the way a stereo recording would have been. Most likely, one microphone was centered on the orchestra, while the other was pointed slightly off to one side. However, the joined-up results do suggest some directionality that accords with what is known of the orchestras’ seating patterns under these conductors. For example, a 1947 picture of Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony on stage at Symphony Hall displays the basses lined up to the left and back with the timpani stationed on the right – exactly as we hear them in the Tchaikovsky.

    One can best appreciate the added dimension accidental stereo brings at those points where the music blossoms from mono into stereo. Suddenly, what has been the auditioning of a historical artifact takes on a presence and a reality that puts us in the concert hall 85 years ago – a time machine like no other.

    Mark Obert-Thorn



    • SAINT-SAËNS  Carnival of the Animals
      Aquarium – Personages with Long Ears – The Cuckoo in the Heart of the Woods [stereo]
      Olga Barabini and Mary Binney Montgomery(pianos)

      Recorded 27 September 1929 in the Academy of Music, Philadelphia
      Matrix nos.: CVE-51883-2/2A
      First issued on Victor 7201 in album M-71

    • STRAVINSKY  The Rite of Spring
      Part 1: The Adoration of the Earth
      Introduction [stereo]
      Games of the Rival Tribes – Procession of the Wise Elder – Adoration of the Earth – Dance of the Earth [stereo]

      Recorded 24 September 1929 in the Academy of Music, Philadelphia
      Matrix nos.: CVE-37471-4/4A and 47975-1/1A
      First issued as Victor 7227 and 7228 in album M-74



    The Philadelphia Orchestra ∙ Leopold Stokowski


    • TCHAIKOVSKY  Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74 (Pathétique)
      1st Mvt.: Adagio – Allegro non troppo [mono/stereo]
      2nd Mvt.: Allegro con grazia [stereo]
      3rd Mvt.: Allegro molto vivace [stereo/mono]
      4th Mvt.: Adagio lamentoso – Andante [mono]

      Recorded 14 - 16 April 1930 in Symphony Hall, Boston
      Matrix nos.: CVE-56824-2, 56825-2, 56832-2/2A, 56833-1A, 56826-2/2A, 56827-2/2A, 56828-1/1A, 56829-2, 56830-2A and 56831-2
      First issued as Victor 7294 through 7298 in album M-85

    • RAVEL  Boléro [mono/stereo] 
      Recorded 14 April 1930 in Symphony Hall, Boston
      Matrix nos.: CVE-56820-1A, 56821-2/2A and 56822-2/2A
      First issued on Victor 7251/2 [later in album M-352]

    Boston Symphony Orchestra ∙ Serge Koussevitzky


     

    • ELGAR  Cockaigne Overture (In London Town), Op. 40 – conclusion [stereo]

      Recorded 11 April 1933 in Abbey Road Studio No. 1, London
      Matrix nos.: 2B 4176-1/1A
      First issued on HMV DB 1936

    BBC Symphony Orchestra ∙ Sir Edward Elgar


    When Mark Obert-Thorn first suggested a collaboration on this project a few months ago, neither of us really knew what to expect. Mark's theory that Capstan might prove helpful in synchronising these independently-cut recordings was just that, a theory. I was less sure that Capstan would be as consistant as would be required, particularly