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Ossy Renardy. The Great Violinists Volume XVIII
Niccolo PAGANINI (1782-1840)

24 Caprices Op. 1 arr Violin and Piano Ferdinand David
Alexsander ZARZYCKI (1834-1895)

Mazurka Op. 22
Antonín DVOŘÁK (1841-1904)

Ballad in D minor Op. 15
Heinrich ERNST (1814-1865)

Hungarian Airs Op. 22
Pablo de SARASATE (1844-1908)

Adios montaños mias Op. 37
Danzas Españolas No. 6 Op. 23 No. 2
Arcangelo CORELLI (1653-1713)

Sonata No. 8 in E minor
Ossy Renardy (violin)
Walter Robert (piano) except the Corelli where the pianist is Leo Taubman
Recorded (c1940)
SYMPOSIUM 1311 [75.40]


AVAILABILITY

www.symposiumrecords.co.uk

The meteoric career of Ossy Renardy and its tragic denouement could stand as a paradigm of gilded youth, silenced. Born Oskar Reiss in Vienna in 1920 a peripatetic, essentially untutored, boyhood career saw him starring in variety shows alongside showmen and strongmen until, like the Czech virtuoso Příhoda, he was discovered in Italy and a career was launched. He made a New York debut at the age of eighteen and in anticipation of the centenary of Paganini’s death he played the 24 Caprices at Carnegie Hall. The impact must have been substantial because the following year he was asked to record them, the first integral set ever committed to disc, albeit in David’s anachronistic piano accompanied version. From then his career was American based and after war service he resumed touring in 1947. He died in a car crash in 1953 having shortly before re-recorded the Caprices. His pianist in the earlier recording and steadfast accompanist Walter Robert survived the crash.

The focus of Symposium’s disc, rightly, is the 1940 set of the Caprices. Predating Ricci’s recording of them, the Renardy has a few nips and tucks in addition to the skeletal piano part – some repeats are omitted, and a number of very small cuts are made. In comparison with Ricci’s febrile playing and his daredevil persona Renardy is very much more elegant and Viennese and much less inclined to emotive and tonal volatility. The technique is not transcendental but it is certainly astonishing enough; and nothing is for show with Renardy lavishing great care and affection on them. There is not much to choose between this transfer and that by Biddulph a decade ago on their double CD tribute to Renardy. Maybe the Symposium has rather more surface noise but it sounds bright nevertheless.

That Biddulph disc, which I assume will be reintroduced to the market as the label gets into reissuing its back catalogue, also contained the Zarzycki, Ernst and Dvořák as well as Saint-Saëns’ first Violin Concerto in piano reduction form. Symposium includes a fine Corelli Sonata. Elsewhere he is dashing in the Zarzycki, not quite tonally adept enough in the Dvořák, and though convincing in the Ernst does tend to thinness – that intense vibrato and piquant playing and the devilishly good pizzicati can’t quite efface a lack of sophistication in vibrato usage. There is a definite change in recording quality in the two Sarasate morceaux which sound decidedly less good as recordings but are played with cavalier bravado.

The notes are useful and full matrix details are given but not issue numbers or recording dates. Brief as his career was and circumscribed though it necessarily had to be Renardy’s is a name that, like Hassid’s or Weisbord’s or Hochstein’s will always be tinged with a sense of loss and of promise unfulfilled.

Jonathan Woolf

 

 

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