This album is included in the following sets:
This set contains the following albums:
- Producer's Note
- Full Track Listing
- Cover Art
- Additional Notes
Two incredibly rare US 78rpm recordings featuring music by Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Milhaud, Piston and more
"More
unthinkably esoteric material from Pristine; this time from mid-1940s
USA - Pristine and their collaborators have delivered a virile and
vivacious result" - MusicWeb International
The two works presented here were both conceived and written at around the same time in the USA. Walter Piston's Second Symphony was written in 1943 and received its first performance on 5th March 1944. The present recording is the symphony's second performance, which took place about a month later and was preserved by the US Office of War Information for distribution to its Overseas Branch on vinyl 78rpm discs, which would have been broadcast to forces serving during World War II. Vinyl was still in its infancy, quality-wise, but was preferred for its lightness and unbreakability by comparison to shellac 78s. The discs themselves were "to be destroyed at the termination of the emergency", yet a rare set survives from which I have taken the present transcription. A great deal of work has been necessary to overcome surface noise and distortion, so although the tone is full and the performance enjoyable, the listener will have to allow at times for the shortcomings of the original media. That said, given the sound heard on the discs themselves during initial transfer, it is astonishing what modern restoration technology has permitted me to achieve.
The Genesis Suite was conceived in 1943 and written by its various composers between 1943 and 1945. It is known to have received two live performances, and the present recording was made shortly after the première. The project was overseen by its creator, composer Nathaniel Shilkret, who had planned to sell the completed recording to one of the major record companies. Unfortunately these companies failed to show interest in the project, and Shilkret went into partnership with some businessmen associates to create "Artist Records", who pressed and issued the recording.
Its success was limited, to say the least, and financial irregularities and a falling out caused Artist Records to be wound up, sales halted and remaining stock to be destroyed, leaving the very few existing sets of this release as among the rarest commercially issued 78rpm album sets in the USA. Thereafter the orchestral recording, which had been recorded separately from the narration, was issued with a new narrator on a Capitol LP, copies of which are also rare enough to fetch three-figure sums today. By all accounts the new narrator was no Edward Arnold! The Genesis Suite quickly fell into neglect.
A resurrection of the piece took place early in the 21st century with a recording issued by Naxos of a reconstructed version of the piece, following evidence that most of the parts had been destroyed by fire. It now appears that original copies do still exist in the Shilkret archive, as prepared by Shilkret, as is the original score as submitted by Castelnuevo-Tedesco in 1944. The work has also received a further live performance, which took place in 2008.
In its original form, the work opened with Schoenberg's "Prelude" movement, but fearing a hostile response to the music's perceived difficulty and modernity, Shilkret repositioned it on the final disc (alongside the other "difficult" composer, Stravinsky") and retitled it "Postlude" for the Artist Records release. He also apparently felt his own "Creation" movement, which now took first place, was far preferred by audiences (even though at this stage it had only had one performance!) - Shilkret's letters suggest he was not a man overcome by modesty. I have elected to retain the running order and titling as presented on the Artist Records 78s.
The discs themselves are not perhaps the finest pressings in the history of shellac. Many of the openings presented difficulties in replay which may still be heard, together with high initial surface noise, making side joins particularly tricky. Thereafter in general the sides were fine. The aural tone of Edward Arnold's narration changes significantly between works, and this has been retained.. XR remastering has helped to enhance and fill the orchestral tone, which retains a distinctly 1940s Hollywood flavour, especially in some of the more filmic movements.
Andrew Rose
Recorded 11 December 1945, narration recorded circa June 1946.
Transfers from Artst Records set JS 10, 1101-1110
Narrator Edward Arnold
Chorus director Hugo Strelitzer
Janssen Symphony of Los Angeles Werner Janssen
1. Creation (Nathaniel Shilkret) (9:36)
2. Adam and Eve (Alexandre Tansman) (10:06)
3. Cain and Abel (Darius Milhaud) (5:10)
4. Noah's Ark (Mario Castenuovo-Tedesco) (9:42) [NB. See Below]
5. The Covenant (Ernst Toch) (5:12)
6. Babel (Igor Stravinsky) (5:23)
7. Postlude (Arnold Schoenberg) (5:44)
Recorded live, Symphony Hall Boston, 8 April 1944
Transfers from Office of War Information vinyl 78s "Contemporary American Series No. 34"
Disc numbers 1009-1 - 1009-4
Boston Symphony Orchestra
G. Wallace Woodworth conductor
XR remastering by Andrew Rose at Pristine Audio, September 2011
Front cover artwork detail from Artist Records 78rpm cover (uncredited)
Pristine Audio is grateful to Al Schlachtmeyer for the generous donation of these discs
Total duration: 75:32
Original Sleevenotes (Artist Records 78s)
The
massive concept of setting to music the first chapter of the Bible
occurred to Nathaniel Shilkret, Composer and Conductor, after a survey
of public opinion made while he was manager of the Victor Recording Co.
He decided that so tremendous a project should be shared by leading
contemporary creators and carefully selected and commissioned composers
he considered best fitted to expound the various subjects.
"My colleagues," Shilkret declared, "have approached their task in a spirit of the most profound reverence. Their devotion is apparent in the music they have created."
The separate movements have been composed in complete independence, the composers each proceeding with their individual portion without reference to or knowledge of each other's work. The sole connecting link is the narrator, Edward Arnold, who delivers the Biblical story.
A detailed analysis of the individual movements is impossible because of space restrictions, since elucidation of their intricacies would involve a wealth of detail. Each is partly descriptive, partly psychological, yet each illustrates its portion of the spoken narrative, and is therefore easy to follow.
1. Creation • Nathaniel Shilkret
(Born New York City, January 1, 1895)
This
episode is divided into two distinct parts, the first treating of the
initial aspects of the Bible story, the second beginning with the words,
"Let there be light."
2. Adam and Eve • Alexandre Tansman
(Born Lodz, Poland,June 12, 1897)
The
tale of the Garden of Eden is expounded. The approach of the composer
to the conception of this chapter of the Genesis is rather atmospheric
than descriptive. He tried to express the mood of each particular part
of the text through lyrical means of expression and by solely musical
work. The work could be formally considered as a Suite with a series of
fast and slow movements, framed by a slow Introduction and a robust
Coda.
3. Cain and Abel • Darius Milhaud
(Born Aix-en-Provence, France, September 4, 1892)
The story of discord andviolence is deftly underlined in music.
4. Noah's Ark • Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco
(Born Florence, Italy, April 3, 1895)
The
first of this episode's two portions illustrates events leading to the
Flood; the second portion tells of the Flood and its subsidence.
5. The Covanent • Ernst Toch
(Born Vienna, Austria, December 7, 1887)
The story of Noah's debarking, and of the covenant that no further flood should occur.
6. Babel • Igor Stravinsky
(Born Oranienbaum, Russia,June 5,1882)
The
concluding movement of the work tells of the confusion brought about by
various languages. The music is in cantata form, with a "Greek chorus"
supporting narrator and orchestra.
7. Postlude • Arnold Schoenberg
(Born Vienna, Austria, September 13, 1874)
This deals instrumentally with the opening words of the Bible, impressively establishing a devotional mood.
About My Babel Cantata
By Igor Stravinsky, Hollywood, California, November 5, 1945
"For
those who are not very familiar with my compositions, knowing my name
only by the reputation of my earlier works such as the Firebird,
Petrouchka or the Rite of Spring, my Babel-a Cantata for Chorus with
Orchestra and a Narrator—will present itself probably as a casual, an
isolated work which has little to do with my previous compositions, with
my actual features as a composer. This feature presents itself in an
entirely different aspect to those who know my musical mind and my
symphonic work, especially such as the Symphony of Psalms, the Melodrama
Persephone or the Opera-Oratorio Oedipus-Rex, to mention only these
capital compositions of my catalogue, compositions never played in Los
Angeles. Yet the acquaintance with but these compositions could easily
explain my bent toward musical forms cultivated by the best musical
brains of all times. Therefore the approaching performance of my Cantata
among other compositions of the Bible collected of Mr. Nathaniel
Shilkret by the brilliant company of Werner Janssen Symphony seems to me
most opportune and I welcome it."
Artist Records
MusicWeb International Review
Pristine and their collaborators have delivered a virile and vivacious result
More unthinkably esoteric material from Pristine; this time from mid-1940s USA.
The highly-coloured Genesis Suite
was the product of music entrepreneur and composer-conductor Nathaniel
Shilkret. It’s a luxury composite - a series of choral and orchestral
musical panels. The Hollywood golden age East Coast complacent narration
weaves in and out of the music. This high-flown Heston-style staginess
works well and it’s very agreeable. You need to leave your cynicism at
the hat-check.
The movements and their composers are:-
1. Creation (Nathaniel Shilkret) [9:36]
2. Adam and Eve (Alexandre Tansman) [10:06]
3. Cain and Abel (Darius Milhaud) [5:10]
4. Noah's Ark (Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco) [10:20]
5. The Covenant (Ernst Toch) [5:12]
6. Babel (Igor Stravinsky) [5:23]
7. Postlude (Arnold Schoenberg) [5:44]
The Shilkret Creation is glowingly and glaringly scored in the film industry’s most extravagant style. Tansman - entrusted with the story of Adam and Eve - is largely in the same region with writing that touches on Ravel at his most Daphne verdant. Cain and Abel is a shorter movement from Milhaud - silver screen dusted but rustically reminiscent of his orchestral suites. Noah's Ark is the work of Castelnuovo-Tedesco
whose concert idiom was a mete choice for this suite - he suited
Shilkret’s project like a gold lamé glove. His Violin Concerto No. 2
recorded by Heifetz and Perlman is entitled The Prophets. The contented Covenant panel is by Toch
and is as short a movement as that by Milhaud. In this land there are
as yet none of the troublous thoughts encountered by Job. It ends in a
magnificence of fanfares. Babel is by Stravinsky. Not only can you hear the whole suite on the Naxos/Gerard Schwarz reconstruction of the Genesis Suite. It is also included in the major box of Sony’s complete works
with the narrator there being John Colicos. Unsurprisingly there is
more tension, punchiness and angularity in this writing. There’s more of
that to come in Schoenberg’s concluding Postlude. Shilkret clearly knew no fear when choosing such uncompromising figures for the commission.
The original discs are in a distressed state but Pristine and their
collaborators have delivered a virile and vivacious result though not
without fragility and some spalling still in evidence. The scoring is
cinematically opulent but can be heard in modern sound on a Naxos Milken Archive disc.
Walter Piston's Second Symphony
was written in 1943 and was premiered on 5 March 1944 by the National
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Hans Kindler. The reading presented here
for the first time on CD is its second performance recorded under the
auspices of the US Office of War Information. The Piston Second is one
of his most endearing and moving works. The style is temperate and full
of the noble life of the great outdoors. Its euphoric confidence I link
with that also found in another American Second Symphony - the one by
Randall Thompson (Sony - Bernstein; Koch - Schenck). The dynamic winged flight of Tippett’s Concerto for Double String Orchestra sometimes also comes to mind. In the big soulful second movement we might also think of Barber’s Adagio.
The finale is explosive, adrenaline-fuelled and foot-tappingly kinetic.
I have loved this work since hearing the version - again played by the
Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1970 - conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas
(DG: LP 2530 103; CD: 429 860-2). I am not sure that MTT has been topped
not even by Gerard Schwarz (Delos DE3074 and then Naxos).
The sound, rescued from a battered set of vinyl 78s, is a bit crumbly
but enthusiasts will want to hear this rare and rewarding item.
Rob Barnett