ARTURO TOSCANINI
The complete concert and an extensive rehearsal of La Mer - All Debussy
Carnegie Hall - 14 February 1953
NBC Symphony Orchestra
Ibéeria, Prélude àl'après-midi d'une faune, La mer
CD1 |
1 |
Broadcast commentary |
1:43 |
CLAUDE DEBUSSY (1862-1918) |
Ibéria |
2 |
Par les rues et par les chemins |
6:52 |
3 |
Les parfums de la nuit |
6:19 |
4 |
Le matin d'un jour de fête |
4:21 |
5 |
Broadcast commentary |
0:25 |
6 |
Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune |
8:39 |
7 |
Broadcast commentary |
0:23 |
La mer |
8 |
De l’aube à midi |
8:20 |
9 |
Jeux de vagues |
6:31 |
10 |
Dialogue du vent |
7:46 |
11 |
Broadcast commentary |
0:41 |
|
TOSCANINI IN REHEARSAL |
|
12 |
La mer – De l’aube à midi |
23:57 |
CD2 |
1 |
– De l’aube à midi (continued) |
14:54 |
2 |
– Jeux de vagues |
34:20 |
3 |
– Dialogue du vent |
17:59 |
Reviews for CD 2271-72 Toscanini All-Debussy
BBC Music Magazine August 2004
Debussy
Ibéria; Prélude à l’après-midi d’un
faune; La mer; plus rehearsal
NBC SO/Arturo Toscanini
Guild GHCD 2271-72 AAD mono (1953) – 145:27 mins (2 discs) £
Toscanini’s 1953 Debussy concert comes from Carnegie Hall rather than the boxy
Studio 8H where most of his recordings were made, so you can hear the orchestral
sound blooming in a real acoustic, and enjoy the sensuous quality of the sound
in the middle movement of Ibéria, as well as the detail and tight
rhythmic control in the outer movements. In L’après-midi, I wish that
Toscanini would let go a bit more: the opening flute solo is confined by the
bar-lines, and the rhapsodic nature of the music doesn’t quite flower under such
strict control. The more symphonic structure of La mer suits him better,
and his care for balance and sonority makes for a tight performance. You can
hear how he does it in the extensive rehearsal sequences which take up over 90
minutes of the set, though the sound isn’t as good as in the concert itself, and
it’s quite a strain on the ears – a transcript of his words would have been
useful. There’s the usual amount of shouting and execrable singing, but no
temper tantrums, and his alertness to every line of the score is exemplary – and
he rehearsed from memory.
Martin Cotton
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