At a Promenade Concert 
                on Monday, August 19th 1991 
                we heard Leonard Slatkin's brilliant 
                first compilation from nine different 
                orchestrations of Mussorgsky's Pictures 
                at an Exhibition, a remarkably successful 
                initiative, reminding us, as it did, 
                of how many arrangements there have 
                been of this evocative score. Then he 
                went for extracts from Lawrence Leonard’s 
                version for piano and orchestra, from 
                Ashkenazy, Lucien Cailliet, Sergey Gorchakov, 
                Leonidas Leonardi, Sir Henry Wood, Mikhail 
                Tushmalov, Stokowski and Ravel. 
              
 
              
It was the indefatigable 
                Edward Johnson, champion of Leopold 
                Stokowski, we had to thank for getting 
                Slatkin interested and finding some 
                of the scores. Now Slatkin has done 
                it again with a new – in many ways more 
                way-out – compilation including versions 
                by Ellison, Gorchakov, Walter Goehr, 
                Naoumoff, Geert van Keulen, Ashkenazy, 
                Simpson, Cailliet, Wood, Lawrence Leonard, 
                Leo Funtek, Boyd, Ravel and the Australian 
                composer/arranger Douglas Gamley. 
              
 
              
Slatkin’s first compilation, 
                although he played it round the world, 
                has never been commercially released, 
                which makes it all the more pleasing 
                to welcome his second version on this 
                CD from the 2004 Proms at the Royal 
                Albert Hall. 
              
 
              
Now there are two possible 
                attitudes to orchestrations of Pictures. 
                There is the po-faced "I cannot 
                be having with anything except Ravel" 
                view, or on the other hand, that this 
                colourful score has endless possibilities 
                and most orchestrations give one a new 
                angle on it. If you incline to the first, 
                stop reading now, but if like me you 
                want a sonic adventure, join Leonard 
                Slatkin in this fascinating exploration, 
                starting and ending with absolutely 
                way-out versions, one of which works 
                and one of which doesn’t. 
              
 
              
The pictures that inspired 
                Mussorgsky were, of course, by his friend 
                Victor Hartmann (1834-1873), architect, 
                designer and water-colourist, one of 
                that group of artists and musicians 
                who looked to Russia, its folk-song, 
                folk-tales and peasant handicraft as 
                a source of national art in the 1860s. 
                The critic Stassov tells how Hartmann, 
                then in his late twenties, caused a 
                furore when he attended a carnival ball 
                dressed as the witch Baba Yaga. Yet 
                Hartmann was achieving recognition, 
                and in that same year designed the Russian 
                Millenary Monument at Novgorod for which 
                Balakirev's tone-poem Russia was 
                commissioned. 
              
 
              
Mussorgsky was stunned 
                by the death of his fertile and brilliant 
                friend at the age of 39, and when a 
                memorial exhibition of Hartmann's work 
                took place in St Petersburg, he quickly 
                responded with four of these familiar 
                piano pieces, soon expanded to ten and 
                linked by interludes (the promenades 
                in which Mussorgsky said that he, himself, 
                could be seen) to become the piano work 
                we know today, first published in 1886. 
              
 
              
It was Rimsky-Korsakov 
                who prepared the original Pictures 
                for publication, and indeed it has 
                been reported that the beginning of 
                a sketch of a possible Rimsky-Korsakov 
                orchestration survives, abandoned when 
                his pupil Mikhail Tushmalov took it 
                up. Rimsky certainly conducted Tushmalov's 
                first performance in St Petersburg, 
                on November 30th, 1891, and the only 
                recording ascribes it to "Tushmalov-Rimsky", 
                though on what grounds is not said. 
                Tushmalov must have acquired the printed 
                piano score from his teacher soon after 
                publication and been struck by the opportunities 
                it gave for orchestral colour, though 
                he only chose the opening promenade 
                and seven of the pictures, omitting 
                "Gnomus", "Tuileries" 
                and "Bydlo" (Stokowski, too, 
                later omitted "Tuileries", 
                as well as "Limoges"). Tushmalov 
                was for a time on LP (Acanta DC22128) 
                in a business-like Munich Philharmonic 
                performance conducted by Marc Andreae 
                from 1980 which I cannot trace having 
                been transferred to CD, though Slatkin 
                quarried "Limoges" from it 
                in 1991. 
              
 
              
It seems probable that 
                the long familiar version by Ravel and 
                that by the Finnish conductor Leo Funtek 
                were written almost simultaneously and 
                in ignorance of each other, during 1922. 
                The conductor Serge Koussevitzky had 
                introduced Ravel to Mussorgsky's piano 
                original and he had responded by transcribing 
                "The Great Gate of Kiev" during 
                May 1922, finishing the complete transcription 
                shortly before Koussevitsky gave the 
                first performance in Paris on October 
                19th that year. Meantime, Funtek had 
                been working on his far more sombre 
                version of which he gave the first performance 
                in Helsinki on December 14th, 1922. 
                Interest in Pictures must have 
                been "in the air" because 
                that same year there was also published, 
                in Berlin, a version for salon orchestra 
                (including harmonium and percussion) 
                by Giuseppe Becce. He was an Italian 
                composer of songs, and a pioneer of 
                film music in the silent era, and his 
                version of Pictures, much abridged 
                and never recorded, started with "The 
                Old Castle" and omitted all the 
                promenades! 
              
 
              
Once the published 
                score of the Ravel version had become 
                widely disseminated (and the performing 
                materials easily available) Pictures 
                became really popular and the Ravel 
                version was established as the pre-eminent 
                one. It was recorded by Koussevitzky 
                on October 28th, 1930 (DB 1890/3, reissued 
                on Pearl GEMMCD 9020) and certainly 
                in the mid-1930s Pictures was 
                frequently given; for example, at Carnegie 
                Hall it was conducted by Koussevitzky, 
                Stokowski and Toscanini. Despite his 
                "literalist" reputation, when 
                Toscanini recorded it he could not resist 
                making his own revisions to Ravel’s 
                orchestration. 
              
 
              
Perhaps the most obscure 
                version, not so far recorded, is that 
                by Leonidas Leonardi, a Russian-born 
                American who studied in France (and 
                indeed, included Ravel among his teachers) 
                and died in 1967. In his early twenties 
                he prepared a rival version to Ravel’s 
                at the request of Mussorgsky’s own publishers, 
                who were taken aback by the success 
                of Koussevitzky’s commission. From this 
                score, Slatkin included the "Tuileries" 
                movement in his first compilation. He 
                remarked at the time that the orchestration 
                "seemed like a rushed job" 
                and it is notable he has not returned 
                to it. 
              
 
              
In the 1930s there 
                followed orchestrations by the French-born 
                American Lucien Cailliet - for nearly 
                20 years the bass clarinettist in the 
                Philadelphia Orchestra (VICI4851/4 now 
                on Biddulph WHL 046) and by Leopold 
                Stokowski, both really only known to 
                record collectors. Cailliet’s version 
                was commissioned by Eugene Ormandy to 
                show off the Philadelphia Orchestra 
                that he had just taken over. It also 
                provided a rival version to the Ravel 
                transcription being performed in Boston 
                by Koussevitzky, then still very much 
                his own property, but it is a rousing 
                view, if more rough-hewn than Ravel’s. 
              
 
              
The Stokowski orchestration 
                is particularly arresting, the arranger 
                making the point that he was deliberately 
                being more Slavic than Ravel. Stokowski 
                omitted two of the pictures – "Limoges" 
                and "Tuileries" – which he 
                felt not to be authentic. 
              
 
              
Stokowski announces 
                his intention to depart from the sophisticated 
                world of Ravel at the outset by presenting 
                the opening promenade on strings, phrased 
                haltingly to depict Mussorgsky's tour 
                of the exhibition. Nevertheless, Cailliet's 
                opening Promenade on woodwind is perhaps 
                the most authentic in this respect. 
                I prefer both to the one recorded here. 
                Stokowski’s was first recorded with 
                the Philadelphia Orchestra on November 
                27th, 1939 (DB5827/30, CD reissue on 
                Dutton CDAX 8009) thus creating on pre-war 
                78s a fairly sharp competition between 
                three brilliant and strongly characterized 
                versions. All this must have contributed 
                significantly to the growth in public 
                interest in Mussorgsky's music, albeit 
                interrupted by the war. Stokowski recorded 
                the work three times and his Decca ‘Phase 
                4’ version of 1966 is on London 443 
                898-2. Music and Arts CD-765 has Stokowski’s 
                memorable 1963 Promenade Concert performance 
                in stunning true stereo, once on King 
                Records in Japan. The Stokey orchestration 
                seems to be the one most widely taken 
                up by other conductors, with versions 
                by the BBC Philharmonic and Matthias 
                Bamert on Chandos (CHAN 9445), the New 
                Zealand Symphony and James Sedares on 
                Koch (37344-2), a live Rozhdestvensky 
                performance on Russian Revelation RV 
                10073, and most recently by Oliver Knussen 
                with the Cleveland Orchestra on DG (457 
                646-2). A forthcoming version with the 
                Bournemouth Symphony conducted by Jose 
                Serebrier, variously reported as in 
                great sound, is due out from Naxos in 
                September (8.557645). 
              
 
              
Later came other versions, 
                several of which are on CD. Perhaps 
                the most high profile was Vladimir Ashkenazy, 
                the subject of a Promenade Concert in 
                1989 and coming after he had used the 
                Funtek version in a celebrated TV film 
                still available on video (Teldec 9031-70774-3). 
                The other truly Russian version was 
                that by Gorchakov (recorded by Kurt 
                Masur, who first took it up with the 
                RPO at the Royal Festival Hall in 1983 
                and recorded it on Teldec 4509-97440-2); 
                Jukka-Pekka Saraste did a composite 
                version of the Gorchakov and Funtek 
                arrangements with the Toronto Symphony 
                on Finlandia 0630-4911-2. Others include 
                the Elgar Howarth brass version (on 
                Doyen CD 011), and the piano-and-orchestra 
                version by Lawrence Leonard, first issued 
                in 1992 with Tamás Ungár 
                the solo pianist and Geoffrey Simon 
                conducting, and currently available 
                on Cala CACD 1030. The story goes on 
                with more familiar versions which include 
                Tomita’s synthesiser version and Emerson, 
                Lake and Palmer’s pop one, as well as 
                those for organ and guitar. 
              
 
              
I was on the arena 
                promenade for this 2004 Prom concert 
                and confess that I was completely thrown 
                by the unfamiliar opening Promenade, 
                in the orchestration by the American 
                Byrwec Ellison. Ellison is a structural 
                engineer and self-taught arranger who 
                has produced a version of Pictures 
                in which each movement is in the style 
                of a different major composer. The opening 
                is intended to be in the style of Britten, 
                the model chosen being the percussion 
                movement of Britten’s Young Person’s 
                Guide. Having the bells give out 
                the theme at the outset, followed by 
                the percussion, while certainly arresting, 
                struck me as a mistake at the beginning, 
                though the treatment would have probably 
                worked for one of the later promenades. 
                It works better on CD, particularly 
                once one knows what is coming, but it 
                is my only reservation on a brilliant 
                compilation. 
              
 
              
For "Gnomus", 
                Slatkin turns to Gorchakov for a darkly-Russian 
                sound-world, all threatening low brass; 
                this is a malevolent gnome, beautifully 
                played by the BBC Symphony Orchestra. 
              
 
              
It was a good idea 
                to follow with Walter Goehr’s muted, 
                introspective second Promenade, with 
                its opening solo viola and delicate 
                textures. During the war, the need for 
                a small orchestra version must have 
                prompted Boosey & Hawkes to commission 
                the conductor/arranger Goehr, father 
                of Alexander, to produce a version for 
                a smaller orchestra than the Ravel, 
                and it is clear from this Promenade 
                that this was no hack arranging job 
                – it is beautifully imagined. 
              
 
              
Goehr’s Promenade nicely 
                sets up the shadowed colours of Emile 
                Naoumoff’s "Il Vecchio Castello" 
                with its prominent solo piano part. 
                We are so accustomed to Ravel’s alto 
                saxophone here, yet it works (if with 
                different effect) with a variety of 
                solo instruments, here at first for 
                alto flute but with the solo piano much 
                in evidence adding a canonic imitation 
                of the tune. David Nice, in his excellent 
                booklet notes reminds us that Bulgarian 
                Emile Naoumoff (b. 1962) studied composition 
                under Nadia Boulanger and swept to fame 
                with a virtuoso performance of Tchaikovsky’s 
                First Piano Concerto in 1984. 
              
 
              
The third Promenade 
                and "Tuileries", the evocation 
                of children and governesses in the Tuileries 
                Gardens, is by another name unknown 
                to most of us. Geert van Keulen (1992), 
                contrasting a brooding Russian Promenade, 
                all brass and winds, suddenly brought 
                up short by the charming picture of 
                Paris in the sun, the woodwind all Gallic 
                elegance and delicate textures. 
              
 
              
In "Bydlo" 
                the portrait of a lumbering Polish ox 
                cart, we have Ashkenazy’s in-your-face 
                version, four horns in unison loud from 
                the outset. Here we are used to Ravel’s 
                vision of a distant cart getting nearer 
                (and louder), passing and receding – 
                possibly the model for Elgar’s "The 
                Wagon Passes" in his Nursery 
                Suite. Orchestrators seem to have 
                taken this idea from an error in the 
                first edition of the piano work, which 
                is corrected to start fortissimo from 
                the outset in the 1931 edition. Well, 
                having heard it done both ways I must 
                say I find I prefer Ravel’s portrayal 
                of a wagon coming and receding – though 
                Ashkenazy’s pounding setting certainly 
                grips, and the BBC horns and brass give 
                it their best. 
              
 
              
For the fourth promenade 
                Slatkin again surprises us with a recent 
                version by a little-known arranger, 
                this time the musicologist and composer 
                Carl Simpson, now the strings very much 
                in evidence. It leads to the "Ballet 
                of the Unhatched Chicks" where 
                Slatkin has chosen the exuberant orchestration 
                by Lucien Cailliet, the only version 
                from the 1991 compilation to have survived 
                into this new one. Cailliet’s virtuosic 
                woodwind writing crowned by rattle and 
                trumpet flutter-tonguing is immediately 
                arresting. 
              
 
              
"Two Polish Jews 
                – Goldenberg and Schmuyle" brings 
                us to Sir Henry Wood’s version. The 
                Tushmalov version had only recently 
                been performed in London’s Queen’s Hall 
                by Sir Henry Wood, when, in 1915, at 
                Rosa Newmarch’s suggestion, Wood prepared 
                his own orchestration, now using all 
                the movements but like his predecessor 
                omitting the later promenades. Wood 
                brought his experience of the then new 
                British orchestral music to bear on 
                his task, using a romantic palette and 
                taking the idiosyncratic sound of camel 
                bells from Bantock’s Omar Khayyam 
                to colour "Bydlo," and 
                harps threaded with paper from Bax's 
                Spring Fire to punctuate "Goldenberg 
                and Schmuyle". Wood’s "Bydlo" 
                was in Slatkin’s first compilation, 
                now his "Two Polish Jews" 
                is in this second version. I was interested 
                to see how the harpists would do their 
                paper trick, for we wrestled with it 
                with the harpists when the complete 
                Wood version was recorded for Lyrita 
                at Watford in 1991, a recording in the 
                event never issued. Here in the Albert 
                Hall the glissandos were a stunning 
                success and vividly caught by the recording 
                (track 13, 1’ 42"). 
              
 
              
Pictures works 
                remarkably well as a piano concerto. 
                For the fifth Promenade, the only number 
                Ravel omitted, Slatkin turns to Lawrence 
                Leonard’s piano concerto orchestration 
                (he used Leonard’s opening Promenade 
                in 1991). Incidentally the booklet gives 
                Leonard’s dates as 1926-1991 but in 
                fact he was around long after that and 
                died in 2001. For the noise and bustle 
                of the market at Limoges, we have one 
                of the more brilliant passages in the 
                version by the Slovenian-born conductor 
                Leo Funtek, he and the BBC Symphony 
                Orchestra brilliantly catching the market 
                women’s arguments in the headlong chattering 
                wind and percussion colouration. 
              
 
              
For the linked pictures 
                "Catacombae" – "Cum Mortis 
                in lingua mortua" Slatkin first 
                looks to another little known recent 
                version that by the American John Boyd 
                (1986) running into Ravel’s spooky vision 
                of Mussorgsky’s fantasy dialogue with 
                the dead. The low winds are remarkably 
                well-caught throughout but especially 
                here. For perhaps in the only place 
                was I aware of the unwanted contribution 
                of a lone sufferer from a summer head-cold. 
              
 
              
Slatkin has saved Stokowski’s 
                version for the depiction of the terrifying 
                ride of the Russian witch Baba-Yaga. 
                Eight horns and a notable lack of orchestral 
                padding contribute to the impact of 
                this brilliantly imagined orchestration. 
                Many of Stokowski’s arrangements may 
                have had their origins in his musical 
                apprenticeship in the organ loft, but 
                not here – it is uniquely conceived 
                in terms of the orchestra, and informed 
                by the technique of the early twentieth 
                century orchestral masterpieces of which 
                Stokey was the pioneering champion in 
                the concert hall. Thrilling in the hall, 
                it is remarkably well captured on this 
                CD. 
              
 
              
Years ago in an LP 
                series replete with solecisms as well 
                as unexpected delights called "Music 
                for You" the Reader’s Digest issued 
                the bizarre arrangement of "The 
                Great Gate of Kiev," with male 
                voice chorus, by the Australian Douglas 
                Gamley. I found this in a cut-out bin 
                somewhere (RDS 6325) perhaps 25 years 
                ago and have delighted in playing it 
                to visitors to test their reaction. 
                One such was Edward Johnson, who many 
                years later played it to Leonard Slatkin. 
                He was determined to put it in his new 
                Pictures compendium, so 
                the score and parts were tracked down 
                in Australia, and here we are. It is 
                only the BBC who could keep a male voice 
                chorus (I seem to remember 42 strong) 
                sitting on the platform the whole evening 
                to sing less than three or four minutes. 
                The introduction with its bells make 
                one wonder if we have strayed into the 
                Coronation Scene of Boris, and 
                the Albert Hall organ makes a tremendous 
                contribution, particularly at the end. 
                But was it worth it: over the top? Of 
                course, but they do it wonderfully well. 
                So, not a version for every day, but 
                a vivid memento of a great evening, 
                and I predict once you have it, the 
                space allotted to Pictures on 
                your shelves will begin to grow. 
              
 
              
The coupling is Respighi’s 
                Pines of Rome, lustily played 
                by the BBC National Orchestra of Wales 
                conducted by Tadaaki Otaka on 6 August 
                2004. I remember being present years 
                ago when a former BBC Director of Music, 
                Robert Ponsonby, was asked whether Respighi’s 
                Feste Romane could be played 
                at the Proms: "We don’t play that 
                sort of thing at the Proms" he 
                replied loftily. Well, thank goodness 
                they do now, for this is a finely played 
                performance with an uproarious crescendo 
                for the final march up the Appian Way. 
                This must have lifted the roof in the 
                Royal Albert Hall and was received with 
                a characteristic ovation. 
              
 
              
This recording is notable 
                for its presence – a real performance 
                perfectly caught in a big space. Remembering 
                this is a live reading before a very 
                large crowd it is remarkable for the 
                quietness of the audience on a very 
                warm night, and there is some lovely 
                playing from all departments. The perspective 
                of the hall is realistically caught 
                with the distant quiet wind and brass 
                in "Pines near a Catacomb" 
                really sounding far off, while the murmuring 
                low strings are wonderfully atmospheric. 
                "The Pines of the Janiculum" 
                is beautifully caught, with a delightfully 
                atmospheric solo clarinet. The recording 
                of a nightingale at the end, so often 
                awkwardly balanced, is tremendous, singing 
                naturally in the distances of the Albert 
                Hall. 
              
 
              
Tadaaki Otaka builds 
                thrilling climaxes, and he lets rip 
                in "The Pines of the Appian Way" 
                made all the more exciting by being 
                underpinned by the newly refurbished 
                Albert Hall organ. This is certainly 
                a document of Proms performances at 
                their best. However, there is an electronic 
                click in Pines (track 4, 3’54") 
                not on the original broadcast, and as 
                there is a similar – and a much more 
                defacing – blemish on Warner’s companion 
                "Last Night of the Proms" 
                set (cd 1 track 5, 00’ 10"). One 
                wonders whether anyone actually listened 
                to the masters before sending them to 
                production and it seems to be on other 
                copies as well. It probably will not 
                bother you too much here, but in a quiet 
                part of Vaughan Williams Five Mystical 
                Songs on the Last Night disc it 
                is ruinous. Otherwise this is strongly 
                recommended. 
              
Lewis Foreman