Keilberth 
                  may have had an advantage over many of his German contemporaries 
                  when it came to Czech music. Between 1940 and 1945 he was the 
                  resident conductor of the German Philharmonic Orchestra in occupied 
                  Prague in which capacity he made some recordings for Telefunken. This was 
                  not a position to endear him to Czech patriots, doubtless, but 
                  his later, small discography did include Rusalka (for 
                  Urania), and the New World Symphony with the Bamberg Orchestra. 
                  In Hamburg he 
                  set down Dvořák’s Cello Concerto with Ludwig Hoelscher 
                  and there was also a Carnaval Overture and some Slavonic 
                  Dances again with the Bamberg. 
                What 
                  we have here is a 1952 concert performance of the New 
                  World Symphony with the Orchestra stabile dell’Accademia di Santa Cecilia 
                  and given in Rome. 
                  Keilberth was an active guest conductor after the War and the 
                  symphony would have been a good compromise on both sides. The 
                  audience is not too restive though there are a few coughs but 
                  the sound is rather unsubtle and raw. There are some orchestral 
                  imprecisions (chording in the winds) but the performance, while 
                  in no way remarkable, does have a vigorous boldness to it. The 
                  relatively slow tempo for the slow movement accords with that 
                  taken by Talich and by Kubelík and it’s actually not so far 
                  off Reiner’s tempo in Chicago. A feature of interest is the expressive quality of the front desk 
                  string players at the close of the movement. I’m not sure about 
                  the very short gap between this and the scherzo - it surely 
                  didn’t reflect the concert performance – but the finale is neatly 
                  shaped, pretty fast but not breathlessly phrased and with a 
                  good sense of plasticity. 
                Coupled 
                  with it is the Sibelius Concerto with Danilo Belardinelli. I 
                  don’t know of him as a violinist but assume that this is the 
                  same man who is better known now as a conductor. Once more the 
                  recording is raw and up front but this time we have the added 
                  burden that the soloist is very much primus inter pares and 
                  it does make for tiring listening, especially when counter-themes 
                  are submerged and the orchestral contribution tends to be tentative 
                  and opaque.  Belardinelli and Keilberth take a relatively measured 
                  view – it’s more Ignatius and Haendel than Heifetz, Oistrakh 
                  or Stern in that respect – but it’s certainly a plausible one, 
                  though I happen to prefer a quicker tempo. His vibrato is inclined 
                  to be one-dimensional and tense and though there are some fluffs 
                  and missed notes Belardinelli seems sympathetic to the work. 
                  What is less in evidence is a structural tightness; things do 
                  sag metrically and passagework can sound dogged and a bit forced. 
                  I quite like the rather feminine cast of the slow movement though 
                  it’s not at all dramatic but the finale is prosaic and the orchestral 
                  playing is very literal minded. 
                As 
                  usual with this label there are no notes. It’s apparently previously 
                  unissued and Hi End Restoration has been employed - whatever 
                  that means (I have no idea – treble boosting?). I can’t see 
                  this as an especially enticing prospect, though it’s cheap and 
                  there may be a market of some sort for Belardinelli’s Sibelius 
                  or Keilberth in general.
                Jonathan 
                  Woolf