I 
                  have always had fond memories of the name of Carl Schuricht 
                  as the conductor from whom I learnt “Fingal’s Cave” – on an 
                  EP in the school music room. Later he became the conductor of 
                  what remains a favourite record of mine – his Bruckner 9, which 
                  I had on a Classics for Pleasure LP. More recently interest 
                  in his art has increased. I found plenty to enjoy in a coupling 
                  of Brahms 2 and Strauss’s “Domestic Symphony” which I reviewed 
                  a few years ago. I say all this because my reactions here are 
                  fairly negative and I wish to show that I came to the disc, 
                  if anything, prejudiced in his favour.
                In 
                  1964 Schuricht came to London for a performance of Beethoven’s 
                  9th Symphony with the LSO. At the same time the BBC 
                  booked him and the orchestra to record – without an audience 
                  – the two works we have here. The recording is good enough for 
                  the date.
                At 
                  14:15 Schuricht’s “Tragic Overture” is not only a long way from 
                  the urgency of Klemperer (12:58) but even exceeds the breadth 
                  of Ančerl (13:42) who gives the most powerfully concentrated 
                  performance known to me. But with these conductors, and other 
                  traversals such as Boult or Kempe, it is possible to speak of 
                  “their” tempi. Schuricht, really, just doesn’t have one. After 
                  an energetic, if beefy, opening, the tempo simply drops and 
                  drops. Here and there it picks up but all too often it gets 
                  merely becalmed. With Furtwängler the approach might have worked, 
                  maybe with Schuricht too a few years earlier. He was then 84 
                  and conducted his last concert the following year. He clearly 
                  hasn’t got the attention of the orchestra, with ragged playing 
                  just about everywhere and horn bloopers more the rule than the 
                  exception. It’s hard to believe that the ropy provincial band 
                  that seems to be playing here was making such memorable recordings 
                  with Monteux not long before, and shortly afterwards embarked 
                  on the orchestrally sizzling Dvořák cycle with Kertesz. 
                  But these names, with Previn and Abbado to come, remind us that 
                  the LSO has never been particularly close to the older Kapellmeister 
                  tradition, This emerged again when Jochum was engaged to record 
                  a Beethoven cycle with them, to the increasing disenchantment 
                  of both parties and Jochum’s irritated declaration that “they 
                  are not a Beethoven orchestra”. This in turn angered their then 
                  principal conductor Abbado, and in fact they were an excellent 
                  orchestra for his type of Beethoven.
                Under 
                  the circumstances the fact that Schuricht had been a pupil of 
                  Reger makes the present offering doubtfully definitive. It is 
                  to be hoped that some European radio station has an alternative 
                  Hiller Variations set down a bit earlier. This one lumbers, 
                  playing into the old prejudice that Reger himself wrote with 
                  a heavy hand. Sometimes the performance seems to be picking 
                  up, but then comes another blooper and one’s heart sinks. The 
                  penultimate variation actually goes rather well. The final fugue 
                  is quite impressive, but loud things usually are impressive 
                  if they’re noisy enough and more or less together. A pity.
                Boult’s 
                  “Grosse Fuge” is not overwhelming in its initial attack but 
                  grows in strength and authority. Well before the half-way mark 
                  Boult is achieving playing of the utmost conviction and his 
                  structural command is well in evidence. The recording is a little 
                  strange, rather diffuse and with a sort of metallic sheen. The 
                  audience makes itself felt at the beginning but Boult soon gets 
                  their attention.
                Recently 
                  I said 
                  that Klemperer seemed “born to conduct this work”. Boult is 
                  mighty impressive too. The main difference is that Klemperer 
                  takes the contrasting, more legato material faster, giving it 
                  a parenthetical feeling. This enables him to present the structure 
                  as a seamless flow. His timing is 16:31. Boult gives this material 
                  more space, presenting a structure which, rather than a seamless 
                  flow, consists of the alternation, and eventual conciliation, 
                  of the different ideas. Just for curiosity I got out an off-the-air 
                  version under Hindemith (Rome 1962). He goes even further down 
                  this road, with the contrasting material going at about half 
                  Klemperer’s speed. His timing is 21:35. Rather to my surprise 
                  I find I prefer this to either of the others. The structure 
                  does not suffer and the slower sections achieve their full sublimity. 
                  The Rome orchestra acquits itself at least as well as the NPO. 
                  Maybe Arts Archive should take a look at RAI’s Hindemith recordings.
                The 
                  Klemperer is an essential recording, but it comes with some 
                  Mozart and Handel that represent the gruffer side of his art. 
                  The Boult is a valuable addition to his discography, but look 
                  what it comes saddled with. Couldn’t BBC Legends re-couple it 
                  with some more Boult?
                Christopher 
                  Howell