| |
Reviews for
GHCD 2354 Fritz Busch (1890-1951)
Bonus
Track:
Fritz Busch’s apparently only Edinburgh Festival concert recording
Antonín Dvorák
(1841-1904)
Karneval
(Carnival)
Overture, Op.92 -
Edinburgh International Festival of Music & Drama concert at the
Usher Hall,
26
August 1950
-
Statsradiofonien Orchestra, Copenhagen
Johannes Brahms
(1833-1897)
Alto Rhapsody, Op. 53 (orchestra and choir) Marian
Anderson(1897-1993) contralto, Male Chorus of the Schola Cantorum (Hugh Ross)
Frédéric Chopin
(1810-1849) Concerto for piano and orchestra F
minor Op.21 – Claudio Arrau (1903-1991)
Ludwig van Beethoven
(1770-1827)
Symphony
No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67 –
Human Rights Day Concert at the Metropolitan Opera House, 10 December 1950 - New
York Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra
-78:20
MusicWeb International Friday January 22 2010
A well compiled programme
devoted to a conductor of high moral and musical qualities
Fritz Busch
Antonín DVOŘÁK (1841-1904)
Carnival Overture Op. 92 (1891) [9:20]
Johannes BRAHMS (1833-1897)
Alto Rhapsody Op 53 (1869) [12:38]
Fryderyk CHOPIN (1810-1849)
Piano Concerto No.2 in F minor, Op.21 (1830) [30:32]
Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
Symphony No.5 in C minor, Op.67 (1805) [25:23]
Marian
Anderson (contralto); Claudio Arrau (piano)
Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra/Fritz Busch (Dvořák)
New York Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra/Fritz Busch
rec. 26 August 1950, live, Usher Hall, Edinburgh International Festival (Dvořák);
10 December 1950, live, Metropolitan Opera House, Human Rights Day Concert
(remainder)
GUILD
GHCD 2354 [78:20] 
None of these performances is making a ‘first release’ appearance but all are
welcome nonetheless in Guild’s well upholstered transfers, and with typically
useful notes. There is one intact concert here – the Human Rights Day concert
given in November 1950 at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York. Then, from
slightly earlier in the year, there is the only surviving document of Busch’s
work at the Edinburgh International Festival, in the shape of Dvořák’s
Carnival Overture. This was something of a favourite of his, and he had in
fact recorded it much earlier in 1933. The performance has been reissued several
times by Danacord. The tempo is almost identical and whilst he was never quite
as fast as Reiner, say, in this spirited work, he always brought to it a fiery
intensity. The opening chords tend to splinter in the 1950 off-air recording.
But we can still admire the vigorous and rhythmically persuasive way Busch
drives through the music, vesting it with carnal life and lissom verdancy. It
makes one wonder, afresh, at Busch’s otherwise scanty interest in the composer’s
music. The Edinburgh performance once appeared on JS Editions 07159.
Talking of which, Marian Anderson’s performance of the Alto Rhapsody was
issued on JS Editions 07209, on Discocorp, the NYPS Society (on LP) in 1987, and
privately from Indiana University. There are several inscriptions of her noble
way with this work, and there is indeed Busch’s own with Ferrier and the Danish
Radio Orchestra from 1949 [DACOCD301]. Well recorded at the Met with Anderson’s
voice characterfully forward, this yields to none of these competing versions in
directness and gravity. Arrau’s Chopin Concerto has also done the rounds over
the years: the Indiana private release noted above, a Bruno Walter Society LP,
Urania 22.145 and it’s also to be found housed in an unwieldy 20 CD box from
Habana/JBM – as well as more congenially on a single CD on Music & Arts 1158.
It’s a strong, sinewy reading, with an unshrinking violet approach all round.
The slow movement doesn’t aim at delicate refinement and there’s some skittish,
and authoritative playing in the finale.
Finally we have Beethoven’s Fifth; see also its appearance on the Indiana
release, a Discocorp LP, and Urania 22.159. This receives a fleet, rugged and
essentially Toscanini-like performance which reveals Busch’s hallmarks as a
Beethovenian of distinction – as the other few surviving examples of his work
amply demonstrate. One thing will perplex listeners however. There’s a swingeing
cut in the finale. It doesn’t sound like tape loss because the rest of the
concert is in decent sound and suffers no such problem. Might it have been for
broadcast reasons – to keep the programme within a certain allotted time span?
That seems more likely but I’m still somewhat surprised at Busch proving so
amenable.
In short then this is a well compiled programme devoted to a conductor of high
moral and musical qualities. Jonathan Woolf
Audiophile Audition
June
19, 2009
The “essential”
Fritz Busch emerges in Beethoven’s resounding Fifth Symphony, a colossus of a
rendition on a par with the best of Erich Kleiber.
Fritz
Busch Conducts = DVORAK: Carnival Overture, Op. 92; BRAHMS: Alto Rhapsody, Op.
53; CHOPIN: Piano Concerto No. 2 in F Minor, Op. 21; BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 5
in C Minor, Op. 67 - Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra (Dvorak)/Marian Anderson,
contralto/Claudio Arrau, piano/ New York Philharmonic Orchestra/Fritz Busch
Guild GHCD 2354, 78:20 [Distr. by Albany] ****:
For those devoted to the often superlative musicianship of Fritz Busch
(1890-1951), Guild restores the Metropolitan Opera House concert of 10 December
1950, given for Human Rights Day Declaration for the United Nations, which
featured speakers Charles Boyer and Judith Anderson. The two missing pieces by
Busch are David Diamond’s Centennial Fanfare for brass and percussion, and the
Benvenuto Cellini Overture of Berlioz. Sir Ernest Macmillan led five excerpts
from Messiah (with baritone John Brownlee), but they, too, seem not to have
survived the recording process.
The disc opens with the only surviving document from Fritz Busch’s appearance at
the Edinburgh Festival, the 26 August 1950 rendition of the
Carnival Overture
of Dvorak, a furious affair, fast, powerful, uncompromising. After a shattering
of the opening chords, the sound textures settle down enough so we can savor the
colors Dvorak presents in the second of his “Nature, Life, and Love” sequence of
symphonic poems.
Marian Anderson (1897-1993) is in virile--dare I say “masculine”--form for the
Alto Rhapsody
of Brahms, a brooding, haunted performance. The Male Chorus of the Scola
Cantorum appears via Hugh Ross. The pace is quick, in the Toscanini mode, but
Anderson’s diction and vocal projection equal or surpass her various, inscribed
performances with Monteux, Ormandy, and Reiner. Busch himself had performed the
piece with Kathleen Ferrier from Copenhagen in 1949, and that inscription may
still be the preferred version.
Enter Chilean great Claudio Arrau (1903-1991) for the Chopin concerto, a soloist
not always to Busch’s taste, as Arrau left Nazi Germany late in the regime,
1940, while Busch had left at its outset, in 1933. Despite the temperamental
vagaries of the collaboration, the performance bristles with muscular excitement
and purposeful direction, Arrau’s long lines, his clean balances of poetry and
power masterfully executed. The orchestral tuttis themselves become quite
explosive, demand for Polish liberation without a word of patriotic rhetoric.
After a thoroughly lyrico-dramatic
Larghetto,
a resolute
Allegro rondo
concludes, perhaps a bit too serious for some auditors. But none can deny the
digital, pearly proficiency at work at the keyboard, nor the firm conviction in
the orchestral tissue. The furious applause has opened well before the last
notes have decayed.
The “essential” Fritz Busch emerges in Beethoven’s resounding Fifth Symphony, a
colossus of a rendition on a par with the best of another demonic German, Erich
Kleiber. This survives as his only inscription of the work. Driven with an
ineluctable fury and girth--but no less sensitivity in the relatively quiet
passages--the performance will doubtless warrant comparison with Toscanini’s
various readings. But I would venture to look to the contemporary reading of
this vital symphony that the Philharmonic made with Vittorio de Sabata
(1892-1967) for anything like the kinetic will-power inherent in this crushing,
heroic interpretation.
Highly
recommended!
Gary Lemco

Page revised Thursday January 21 2010
|