Recording of the Month

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Recording of December 1984: Beethoven: Symphony 9

1284rotm.promo.jpgBeethoven: Symphony 9 in d, Op.125 ("Choral")

Berlin Staatskapelle and Rundfunkchor, Otmar Suitner, cond.; Dietrich Knothe, chorus master; Magdaléna Hajóssyová, soprano; Uta Priew, contralto; Eberhard Büchner, tenor; Manfred Schenk, bass.

Denon CD383C7-7021 (CD).


This is a positively stunning performance, abetted by one of the best-sounding orchestral recordings on CD to date.


I have long felt that the best reading of Beethoven's Ninth ever committed to records was an antique Columbia 78 set with the Vienna Philharmonic and Felix Weingartner (later released on an abominable-sounding LP: SL-165). I almost hate to day it, because the oldest idols die the hardest, but Suitner's is better! This is a monumental, consummately joyous Ninth that leaves the listener with a wonderful feeling of elation. If the orchestral playing is at times a little less than world-class and a couple of the soloists not quite up to star level, so what? This may well be the definitive Ninth on CD, both interpretively and sonically.

Recording of October 1984: Saint-Saëns & Rachmaninoff Piano Works

1084rotmjgh.jpgSaint-Saëns: Piano Concerto No.2

Rachmaninoff: Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini


Bella Davidovich (pno), Concertgebouw Orchestra, Neeme Jarvi, cond.

Philips CD 410-052 2 (CD), 6514-164 (LP).


At last we're starting to realize some of the promise of CD from a major record company. This is the best CD recording I've heard yet from Philips. Both of these are virtuoso romantic works requiring a big piano sound and the stamina to produce it for 6–10 minutes at a stretch, which is probably why few lady pianists will tackle them. Bella Davidovich pulls these off with great aplomb.


To me, the Saint-Saëns is the better of the two, and is one of the truly great performances of this work. I grudgingly rate it as equal to my long-time favorite, the Rubinstein/Reiner performance on a 1958 RCA LP (LSC-2234), although I would have liked a little more TLC from Ms. Davidovich in the first movement. She seems a little rushed where an occasional lingering caress is indicated, but that is quibbling with what is a really rousing performance.

Recording of August 1984: Saint-Saëns & Ravel Orchestral Works

884rotm.ssph.jpgSaint-Saëns: Carnival of the Animals

Ravel: Mother Goose Suite


Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, André Previn, cond.

Philips CD 400-016 2 (CD).


The whimsical Carnival, with its nose-thumbing at Saint-Saëns' contemporaries (eg a lugubrious "Can-Can" and a stately cello rendition of Berlioz's Dance of the Sylphs, from The Damnation of Faust), is given a delightful treatment here, and put on one of the best-sounding CDs I've heard to date from a major record company.


Philips has been less up-front about the roots of its CDs than most other record manufacturers, If fact, they have been downright sneaky about it. This release—billed prominently on the CD jacket as a "Digital Recording"—sounds very much as if it was analog-mastered. The is certainly nothing Philips should ashamed of, because this is a better-sounding recording than most digitally mastered ones.

Recordings of June 1984: Two Great Telarc CDs

684rotm.250.jpgBeethoven: Piano Concerto No.5 "The Emperor"

Rudolph Serkin, piano; Boston Symphony Orchestra, Seiji Ozawa, cond.

Telarc CD-80065 (CD). Robert Woods, prod., Jack Renner, eng.


Vivaldi: "The Four Seasons"

Joseph Silverstein, violin; Boston Symphony Orchestra, Seiji Ozawa, cond.

Telarc CD-80070 (CD). Robert Woods, prod., Jack Renner, eng.


I have never been a fan of Seiji Ozawa, feeling that his interpretive approach is too often cold and attached. That's not true of this performance of the "Emperor" Concerto. In fact, my only criticism is that the performance seems at time a little too broadly Romantic, where somewhat tighter phrasing would have been in order. Ozawa and Serkin have turned in one of the most satisfying performances in Telarc's catalog, which contains a remarkable number of lackluster performances.

Recording of February 1984: Beethoven/Enescu Violin Sonatas

BEETHOVEN: Violin Sonata in G, Op.96

ENESCU: Violin Sonata No.3, Op.25 (In Rumanian Style)


David Abel, violin, Julie Steinberg, piano

Wilson Audio W-8315 (LP). David Wilson, prod., eng. AAA.


Oh, what a breath of fresh air this is! An audiophile recording of real music that isn't bombastic, overblown, or high-powered.


Imagine, if you can, a private recital in your own home by two consummate artists who play these works for their own delight as much as for yours. Imagine sound so completely and disarmingly natural that after 30 seconds you're unaware it's reproduced. That's what this record is all about.


I could rhapsodize endlessly about this record, but I won't. Suffice it to say that if you think there's even a remote chance you'll like this music, you will be positively mesmerized by this recording of it . . .

Recording of January 1984: Debussy: Three Nocturnes; Jeux

rotm184.pjil.jpgDebussy: Three Nocturnes; Jeux

Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam, Bernard Haitink conducting.

Philips ACD 400-023-2 (CD).


This is the first classical CD I have heard that was originally mastered on analog tape, and the sound is quite different from what I'm accustomed to hearing from the silver discs.


I had read so many critics' complaints about excessive background (tape) hiss from analog-mastered CDs that I was fully prepared to be appalled. I wasn't. Perhaps my speakers (Watkins WE-1s as of now) are smoother than what some other critics listen to, perhaps I prefer a more subdued high end than some, but I did not find hiss to be a problem with this Philips disc. Yes, it is audible at high listening levels, but it is not a ssss, it is a hhhh, like the sound of a very gentle rain far off in the background. I have heard worse hiss from microphone preamps.

Recording of November 1983: Rimsky-Korsakov: Scheherazade

1183rotm.250.jpgRimsky-Korsakov: Scheherazade

Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Fritz Reiner conducting.

RCA ".5 Series" ARP1-W27 (LP).




In case you didn't already know, ".5" is RCA's name for their half-speed-–mastered line of audiophile LPs, whose releases to date have included many recordings, as well as some real gems, from their archive of older stereo recordings.


Their choice of old recordings is interesting to say the least, as it shows a side of RCA's classical division that we thought had atrophied and blown away many years ago: musical judgment. Instead of going for their most sonically spectacular tapes from yesteryear, the choices here were clearly made on the basis of musical performance first, with sound as a secondary consideration.

Recording of October 1983: The Stranger

Billy Joel: The Stranger

CBS CD 35DP2 (CD) and JC34987 (digitally mastered, CX-encoded LP).


This is one of four recordings we now have on hand in both the CD and digital-mastered LP formats, and all reviews of these will be parallel reviews. In the case of the CBS discs, there is no "conventional" version, as all of their recent LP releases are CX-encoded. Thus, I will be comparing decoded CXed CBS LPs (footnote 1) with their CD equivalents.

Recording of September 1983: Rickie Lee Jones

Rickie Lee Jones: Rickie Lee Jones

Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs MFSL 1-089 (LP) (originally on Warner Bros. LP, 1979). Nick DeCaro, Johnny Mandel, orchestral arrangements; Lenny Waronker, Russ Titelman, prods.


This is actually a nice record. I was somewhat surprised to find myself really enjoying it. All the songs were written by Miss Jones, who does share the credit with Alfred Johnson for two: "Weasel And The White Boys Cool" and "Company." Her lyrics are fresh and entertaining, and her music quite good. The only jarring note to me was her inept-sounding efforts to assume the lowah-class South'n accent that is apparently considered essential for success in popsingin'. It only muddles her diction and makes the lyrics even more difficult to understand.

Recording of August 1983: West Side Story

883rotmwest.250.jpgAndre Previn and His Pals: West Side Story

Andre Previn, piano; Shelly Manne, drums; Red Mitchell, double bass.

Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab MFSL 1-095 (LP). Lester Koenig, prod. TT: 38:16


Aaron Copland has called jazz "contemporary chamber music," and this is certainly true of these improvisations by Previn and his friends. I consider this chamber jazz at its best, varying in mood and tempo but never losing interest. The program consists of eight variations on themes from Bernstein's well-known musical, and includes "Maria," "Jet Song," "I Feel Pretty," and "Something's Coming."

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