This album is included in the following sets:
This set contains the following albums:
- Producer's Note
- Full Track Listing
- Cover Art
Lehmann & Walter: Astounding musicianship and sound quality
Celebrating Schumann's 200th birthday in style at Pristine!
This week (as I write it's 11th June, 2010) marks the 200th birthday
of Robert Schumann, and what better way to celebrate the music of this
great composer than with a recording of some of his finest work,
recorded 101 years after it was written by two of the finest musicians
of the twentieth century?
I was rather surprised to find the LP
which served as source material for this transfer tucked away in the
large collection we recently acquired. Housed in a paper envelope within
a protective plastic outer sleeve, it appears from the notes pencilled
onto the paper ("Historical value - not hi-fi[!] - heavy rumble[?!]" was
one comment [with my punctuation!], "Fully justifies issue" the other)
that this was the copy which did the rounds at Philips when they were
deciding whether or not to licence the recording for issue in Europe
from Columbia. The red tick in the top right hand corner is presumably
confirmation that a sufficient number of initials had been accumulated
on the sleeve to justify going ahead.
Although dating from the
summer of 1941, you'd be hard-pushed to guess the vintage when listening
to this remastering. The original, still available in a decent transfer
elsewhere, had relatively low background noise, but a musical tone
which was strident and rather thin, with a piano that was unrealistic
and a voice that was rather too obviously "microphonic" of its era, if
you know what I mean.
When I first heard it, this LP sounded an
ideal candidate for XR remastering. Carefully-tailored re-equalisation
brought from it a truly believable piano and a glorious rendition of
Lehmann's voice, the realism of the former being an excellent guide to
the accuracy of reproduction of the latter. Careful application of
frequency-targeted noise reduction produced an incredibly clean and
clear background which is, for the most part, just about inaudible.
It
wasn't all plain sailing – there was a tendency to peak distortion in
upper frequencies which has been largely tamed though is occasionally
still a little evident; there's some pre- and post-echo during sections
of the first few tracks still just about audible; I've done a lot of
work on areas of swish and the clicks which inevitably arise from any
archive disc-based recording, few though these were.
However, I
think the end results will surprise many people, just as they've
surprised me – once again, it's hard to equate the actual vintage of the
recording with the sound one hears when listening to it. A fitting
tribute, therefore, both to the composer, Schumann, and to the artists,
Lotte Lehmann and Bruno Walter.
Andrew Rose
-
SCHUMANN Dichterliebe, Op. 48
Recorded 13th August, 1941, Los Angeles -
SCHUMANN Frauenliebe und -leben, Op. 42
Recorded 24th June, 1941, Los Angeles
Transfer from Columbia Masterworks LP ML 4788 in the Pristine Audio collection
XR remastering by Andrew Rose at Pristine Audio, May-June 2010
Cover artwork based on a photograph of Lotte Lehmann
Total duration: 48:03
Lotte Lehmann, soprano
Bruno Walter, piano