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               Great Czech Conductors: Rafael Kubelík   
              Antonín DVOŘÁK (1841-1904)
     Symphony No 8 in G, Op 88 (B 163) [37:52]
     
              Piano Concerto in G minor, Op 33 (B 63; ed. Kurz) [37:09]  
              Dmitry SHOSTAKOVICH (1906-1975)
     Symphony No 9 in E flat, Op 70 [27:10]
     Bohuslav MARTINŮ (1890-1959)
     Symphony No 4, H 305 [31:53]
     Memorial to Lidice, H 296 [9:09]
     Václav DOBIÁS (1909-1978)
     Stalingrad Cantata [11:34]
 
             
            Rudolf Firkusný (piano) (Dvorák); Zdenek Otava
(baritone), Army Recitation Corps, Typografia Male Chorus (Dobiás)
     Czech Philharmonic/Rafael Kubelík
 
			rec. 30 November 1944 (Dvořák Symphony), 7 November 1945
(Dobiás), 13 December 1945 (Shostakovich), “probably”
14-15 March 1946 (Memorial to Lidice), Smetana Hall; 4 June 1946
(Dvořák Concerto), Rudolfinum; 10 June 1948, Domovina Studio
(Martinů Symphony), Prague, Czech Republic
 
                
              SUPRAPHON SU 4080-2   [75:01 + 79:44]  
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                  This is an excellent collection honoring Rafael Kubelík. 
                  The two jam-packed CDs of live 1940s broadcasts include his 
                  central repertoire, works he championed very early on, and indeed 
                  multiple world-premiere recordings. Not least is the first-ever 
                  recording of Shostakovich’s Ninth Symphony, a live concert 
                  dating from December 1946; we also get a live reading of Dvorak’s 
                  Piano Concerto with Rudolf Firkusny, from the first-ever Prague 
                  Spring festival, and, although the booklet doesn’t identify 
                  the premiere recordings, I’d be surprised if any earlier 
                  performances of the Martinů Fourth Symphony or Memorial 
                  to Lidice, or Dobiás’ Stalingrad Cantata, 
                  exist.  
                     
                  The collection begins with Dvorak’s Eighth, in quite constricted 
                  sound - turn up the volume more than normal - but glittering 
                  with the kind of brilliance Kubelík brought to the piece 
                  for his entire career. Aside from a prominent trumpet flub in 
                  the finale, it’s a highly accomplished live reading by 
                  the Czech Philharmonic, revealing they and the conductor were 
                  masters of the symphony even in the besieged year of 1944. The 
                  piano concerto, in sound which suggests that the orchestra is 
                  playing somewhere very far away, nevertheless powers forward 
                  with energy and vigor. Firkusny plays the old “revised” 
                  piano part, with the absolute command which explains why he 
                  has long been associated with this piece. Luckily for us, the 
                  recording of his piano is much better than we’d expect 
                  from the murky-sounding orchestra. Firkusny’s cadenza 
                  is especially fine, although more recent interpreters - Aimard 
                  with Harnoncourt, say - are more to my liking in the poetic 
                  slow movement with its beautiful opening horn solo.  
                     
                  Shostakovich’s Ninth - the first recording of the work 
                  - is given a performance unlike any since. The outer movements 
                  are remarkably speedy affairs, with some live sloppiness but 
                  a lot of spirit and neoclassical sharpness; by contrast the 
                  second movement sprawls over ten minutes, the slowest I’ve 
                  ever heard it. Compare 10:33 to Vasily Petrenko’s 8:46, 
                  Leonard Bernstein’s 8:10, or indeed Rudolf Barshai’s 
                  5:43. The scherzo is rather languid, too. All in all a fascinating 
                  account of how different it is from the way the symphony is 
                  performed today, and it’s worth overlooking the constant 
                  audience noise. What may cause distress is the fact that distortion 
                  in the tape results in the entire symphony sounding like it 
                  is being performed in E rather than E flat!  
                     
                  Bohuslav Martinů’s Fourth, a celebratory masterpiece 
                  inflected with joy, energy, and inner peace, receives a great 
                  performance here (1948). It’s hard to imagine a more thrilling 
                  scherzo than Kubelík’s, whirling forward in a great 
                  rush of excitement, but by contrast he really milks the gorgeous 
                  romanticism of the slow movement, unafraid to play up the different 
                  moods - doubt at the beginning, something very like love after 
                  6:00. Belohlávek’s recent recording on Onyx with 
                  the BBC Symphony may be preferable in the finale, where the 
                  new account’s freer tempos underscore the triumph of the 
                  ending, which Kubelík - maybe intentionally - leaves 
                  more ambivalent. The recorded sound is sufficient to give the 
                  orchestral piano its place, although you will miss some bass 
                  lines and timpani and the incredible colors of the opening pages. 
                  Supraphon engineers have, as elsewhere, used technology which 
                  removes the hisses and pops but at the expense of a slightly 
                  constricted acoustic.  
                     
                  The disc is rounded out with Martinů’s Memorial 
                  to Lidice - a moving rendition which goes more slowly and 
                  tragically than many, although Eschenbach’s reading on 
                  Ondine is the most anguished I’ve heard - and a novelty, 
                  the Stalingrad Cantata of Václav Dobiás. 
                  Written in 1945, the cantata for baritone, male chorus, and 
                  orchestra is an eleven-minute paean to the Soviet forces, or 
                  at least I’m assuming so, because the sung texts are not 
                  provided. The music sounds a bit like a ramshackle Nevsky 
                  Cantata, with the same wildness and raw masculine energy 
                  but without the tunes or distinction. It counts as a welcome 
                  rarity, though, because recordings of Dobiás are otherwise 
                  basically non-existent.  
                     
                  These are valuable historical broadcasts all around, then, from 
                  the world premiere recordings of Shostakovich’s Ninth 
                  and probably a few other works too, to the Dvorak concerto from 
                  the first Prague Spring festival. Rafael Kubelík’s 
                  conducting is consistently superb and insightful; his Martinů 
                  is energetic but powerful, his Shostakovich like nobody else. 
                  This can all be had in more modern recordings - the Dvořák 
                  symphony from Mackerras or Kubelík himself, the Martinů 
                  from Belohlávek or Thomson - but as a two-disc monument 
                  to Kubelík’s superb work with the Czech Philharmonic, 
                  this can’t be beaten. For a one-CD tribute to that pairing 
                  of great artists, though, we must remember the unforgettable 
                  Smetana concert they gave after the end of the Cold War.  
                     
                  Brian Reinhart   
                   
                  Masterwork Index: Dvorak 
                  Symphony 8 ~~ Shostakovich 
                  Symphony 9  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
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