Also, Ravel: Piano
Concerto in G. Nicole Henriot-Schweitzer,
piano; Charles Munch, Boston Symphony Orchestra. HDTT HDCD298.
It’s always a pleasure to listen to a disc remastered by
HDTT (High Definition Tape Transfers): You can depend upon a classic
performance not generally available on CD and a splendid remastering job. If
you recall, the folks at HDTT remaster older recordings from tapes and LPs in
the public domain, make them sound better than they’ve ever sounded before, and
offer them to the public burned to various formats (FLAC, DXD, DSD, HQCD, HDCD,
etc.). You can hardly ask for more.
In the present instance, HDTT have remastered an old favorite
of mine, The Symphony on a French
Mountain Air (Symphonie sur un chant
montagnard français), Op. 25, by Vincent d’Indy in an RCA recording by
pianist Nicole Henriot-Schweitzer, conductor Charles Munch, and the Boston
Symphony Orchestra. Munch’s performance is maybe the first time I ever heard
this music, and it’s still the performance I most cherish, so to say I welcome
this new edition is an understatement. Along with it, the same forces perform
Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G major.
Composers have long shown interest in mountains,
especially the Romantics with their obsessive regard for Nature and some
modernists with their concerns for the mystical. Thus, we’ve gotten Liszt’s Mountain Symphony, Grieg’s Hall of the Mountain King, Mussorgsky’s Night on the Bare Mountain, Strauss’s Alpine Symphony, Raff’s In the Alps, Hill’s The Sacred Mountain, Hovhaness’s Mysterious Mountain, and so on. French composer Vincent d’Indy
(1851-1931) wrote his Symphony on a
French Mountain Air in 1886, using a folk melody he heard in the Cévennes
mountains as a primary theme (thus, the work's alternative title, Symphonie cévenole). He initially
planned the work as a fantasia for piano and orchestra, although the piano part
never dominates, and some critics have even labeled it a sinfonia concertante, a mixture of symphony and concerto. Like most
concertos, it’s fairly brief at under half an hour and contains three
movements.
D’Indy didn’t write a lot of material that people listen
to anymore beyond the Symphonie cévenole,
and the fact is, with no disrespect, he may have lucked into the principal
tune. Be that as it may, the Boston players seem fully attune to all the
charmingly bucolic nuances of the Symphony,
and Ms. Henriot-Schweitzer contributes a most-sympathetic piano part. There is
a gentleness about the performance that is both poignant and striking, yet when
the score requires its few big, showy moments, as in the animated final
movement, Munch and his crew are well up to the task. With playing this sharp
and instrumentalists this much on their toes, it's no wonder the performance
continues to lead the field.
The disc’s companion piece is the jazz-inflected Piano Concerto in G major (1931) by
French composer Maurice Ravel (1875-1937). Here, the situation is a bit
different from the d’Indy; while there is little competition from rival d’Indy
recordings (Dutoit and Plasson aside), there is formidable competition in the
Ravel field. In particular, it’s hard to find anything that matches the
brilliant performance by Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli, Ettore Gracis, and the
Philharmonia Orchestra on EMI. Nevertheless, Ms. Henriot-Schweitzer's
performance of the Concerto is
energetically fluid while remaining free of any overtly idiosyncratic
mannerisms. She and Munch seem of a single mind and purpose in communicating
the work's bluesy-jazzy contrasts and its lyrical Adagio in an entirely unforced manner. The whole work comes across
in a more-unified style than one sometimes hears it. So, while it's perhaps not
as characterful or purely magical as Michelangeli's interpretation, it's quite
good, especially that dreamy slow movement.
RCA’s celebrated recording team of producer Richard Mohr
and engineer Lewis Layton recorded the music at Boston’s Symphony Hall in 1958,
and HDTT remastered it from an RCA LP (LSC 2271) in 2013. To say they did a
good job would be putting it mildly. With the judicious application of a little
noise reduction, these Fifties recordings sound almost dead quiet even in
softer passages. More important, the sonics are clear and clean, demonstrating
the kind of transparency that most of us admire in the old RCA "Living
Stereo" series. What's more, the clarity does not come with any undue
brightness, forwardness, or edginess. The sound is generally smooth and
natural, with fine stereo spread, separation, depth, and air. When the piano
enters, the miking places it in a well-integrated position just in front of the
orchestra but not way out in front or stretching from speaker to speaker. The
aural presentation sounds as well focused, dynamic, and realistic as one could
want.
For further information on the various formats,
configurations, blank HQCD discs, and prices of HDTT products, you can visit
their Web site at http://www.highdeftapetransfers.com/storefront.php.
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
JJP
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