Toscanini is not immediately 
                associated with the performance of large-scale 
                choral music, except perhaps for Verdi’s 
                Requiem. So it can come as something 
                of a surprise that he conducted the 
                first Italian performance of Verdi’s 
                ‘Te Deum’, the longest and most successful 
                of the four late sacred pieces. This 
                disc is the record of a concert that 
                Toscanini gave with the NBC Symphony 
                Orchestra in 1945. All three works involve 
                a substantial choral part, though of 
                course the Bellini and Boito items are 
                operatic in origin. 
              
 
              
In his excellent accompanying 
                essay William Youngren refers to Toscanini’s 
                Bellini performance in the following 
                terms: ‘excitingly different from 
                others is his complete avoidance of 
                the "delicate" and lyrical 
                style most conductors routinely apply 
                to Bellini’ 
              
 
              
Whilst this is true, 
                as far as it goes, I found the resulting 
                performance had a welcome muscularity 
                during the instrumental introduction, 
                but that the vocal/choral passages had 
                an emphasis of articulation and lack 
                of singing line which was reminiscent 
                of performances of early Verdi rather 
                than Bellini. It does not help that 
                the bass soloist, Nicola Moscona, uses 
                his impressive voice in a rather emphatic 
                manner lacking in a feeling for lyrical 
                line. 
              
 
              
Moving on to the Verdi, 
                the issue of the qualities of performance 
                by the chorus comes more into play. 
                What constitutes the ideal choral performance 
                style is something that changes over 
                time. This is emphasised by listening 
                to the amazing vowel sounds from the 
                pre-war BBC choirs or the startling 
                sound quality of the French choir who 
                gave the premiere of Poulenc’s Mass 
                and received numerous plaudits from 
                him. So my comments on the unnamed chorus 
                might be thought of as a little unfair. 
                But I did find that their vocal qualities 
                detracted from the performance; there 
                was too much vibrato and far too little 
                sense of line. The chorus are impressive 
                and thrilling in the louder, more emphatic 
                passages, but in the quieter sections 
                the sense of line and intensity is lost, 
                thus compromising the music. This is 
                a shame as Toscanini conducts a performance 
                which is in many ways admirably subtle 
                and not a little restrained, despite 
                the inevitable bellicose moments. 
              
 
              
The final item on the 
                CD, the prologue from Boito’s ‘Mefistofele’ 
                receives a vigorous performance. Curiously, 
                though a weaker work, it seems to receive 
                a rather stronger, more vital performance, 
                particularly where the chorus is concerned. 
                Moscona is an excellent soloist in this 
                work, more suited to his role than in 
                the Bellini. Though, in many ways, it 
                is an unsatisfactory opera ‘Mefistofele’ 
                does have some remarkable imaginative 
                touches. The prologue is a tremendous 
                work and here Toscanini coordinates 
                its many disparate elements into a powerful 
                whole. 
              
 
              
This disc is an important 
                historical document and though not of 
                impeccable quality (the disc is a conflation 
                of three different sources), the engineer 
                Richard Caniell’s work has ensured that 
                the resulting disc is perfectly acceptable. 
                One curiosity, which emphasises the 
                disc’s historical status, is the preservation 
                of the broadcast commentary, a delightful 
                period detail. As a historical document 
                of one of the 20th century’s 
                greatest conductors we should accept 
                these performances gratefully and not 
                worry too much about how they compare 
                to our ideal. 
              
 
              
Robert Hugill 
                
              
see also 
                review by Robert Farr