Somm has been highly 
                active in reviving out-of-the-way Beecham 
                material. Here they have had access 
                to a concert given by the newly-formed 
                RPO and present the bulk of it; there 
                wasn’t room for the other item on the 
                programme which was Berners’s The 
                Triumphs of Neptune. Beecham aficionados 
                will know he left behind two commercial 
                recordings of this. 
              
 
              
It was the fifteenth 
                concert given by the orchestra, though 
                despite the hectic pre-Christmas round 
                of concert giving and recording sessions 
                it was very much a still-provisional 
                band. The leader was ex-London String 
                Quartet first violin John Pennington 
                though he was soon to cede to Oscar 
                Lampe and return to the newly reconstituted 
                LSQ in America. The viola section was 
                led by Leonard Rubens and the excellent 
                Raymond Clarke led the cellos. The wind 
                section was on its way to establishing 
                itself as a sovereign body; Gerald Jackson, 
                Leonard Brain, Archie Camden and Reginald 
                Kell. Dennis Brain led the horns. Within 
                a year Kell had gone to America to be 
                replaced by Brymer. Gwydion Brooke replaced 
                Camden. 
              
 
              
The programme here 
                was, with the exception of the Schumann, 
                standard Beecham fare. The Mozart G 
                minor can be contrasted with the pre-War 
                LPO 1937 performance and indeed the 
                post-War recording Beecham made with 
                the later RPO incarnation [Sony SMK89809]. 
                Beecham’s view of the later Mozart symphonies 
                generally grew more mannered as he aged. 
                The earliest performance is the most 
                recommendable; portamenti are more pervasive 
                but more affectionate, the string playing 
                is more incisive and the inner part 
                writing more athletically brought out. 
                The fortes in this live performance 
                are rather trenchant and accents are 
                sometimes rather brusque. The slow movement 
                sounds rather more exaggerated as well, 
                both in terms of phrasing and weight. 
              
 
              
The concerto featured 
                Moura Lympany who rather nervously announced 
                to Beecham that her conception of the 
                work probably differed from the norm. 
                Her first movement is certainly quite 
                fast though the contours of her performance 
                put me in mind, at least temporarily, 
                of Yves Nat’s 1933 traversal. It’s certainly 
                not at all the kind of performance that 
                Myra Hess was giving at the time, nor 
                indeed, somewhat later, Géza 
                Anda, to take two other rather disparate 
                examples of stylish Schumann players. 
                There are sufficient problems with the 
                recording to damp total contentment. 
                Tuttis don’t really register and the 
                piano tone is rather cloudy. The orchestra 
                is inclined to be drowned behind Lympany 
                – especially when she journeys to the 
                bass. Lissom and affectionate in conception 
                just enough survives to show her elegance 
                and control. 
              
 
              
The Mendelssohn has 
                all Beecham’s buoyancy though here not 
                always refinement; the Wagner makes 
                a fine addition and is highly expressive 
                if not quite in the Knappertsbusch class. 
              
 
              
Despite the problems 
                with the recording and the occasionally 
                rather sub-standard orchestral playing 
                this is an intriguing, and rare, look 
                at the RPO in its early performances. 
                Graham Melville-Mason’s note give one 
                all that one requires by way of identification 
                and detail. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf