This is the third of 
                CALA’s doggedly reliable NYPO-Stokowski 
                series. The first two are CACD0533 
                and CACD0534. 
                It should be irresistible to Stokowskians 
                everywhere even if the Symphony has 
                been on Sony previously. 
              
 
              
The RVW Symphony is 
                something special. The devil drives 
                in this blitzkrieg of a performance. 
                Stokowski takes the orchestra on a breathtaking 
                ride; a scorching whirlwind. I am not 
                sure that I like the work quite 
                this fast although it works outrageously 
                well in the first movement. The approach 
                can sound impatient which is fine until 
                it scouts over detail and feeling in 
                the bleak finale. This part of the symphony 
                really needs space and time. Oddly enough 
                at this speed the chilly Holstian Saturn-like 
                echoes are more evident than ever; try 
                track 4 at 3:00. Not ideal then but 
                a counter-blast to the precious and 
                the fastidious. 
              
 
              
Stokowski also takes 
                things fast in this Romeo and Juliet 
                but is more pliable with more of 
                a sense of give and take. He achieves 
                a lively correspondence of speed and 
                message; responsive, supple and volatile. 
                This proves a flammable mixture which, 
                while not at the fever pitch achieved 
                by Monteux with the LSO in Vienna in 
                the early 1960s (Vanguard), is certainly 
                exciting. Cala achieve a good open sound 
                superior to that in the Vaughan Williams. 
                The sensual accelerations of harp and 
                strings at 8.20 are marvellous and listen 
                to those spitting mitrailleuse trumpets 
                at 14.19. There is a magician’s art 
                in the invocation of flames that play 
                over the last pages. Golovanov might 
                well have approved if he could have 
                got over Stokowski’s capitalist credentials. 
              
 
              
Stokowski rips and 
                flails through the Haffner in 
                a major antidote to exaggerated sepulchral 
                reverence. It still has tenderness but 
                this is virile ‘speed merchant’ Mozart. 
                The whole symphony is over in just over 
                a quarter of an hour. It would be instructive 
                for Mozart devotees to hear this set 
                in an evening of Haffners conducted 
                by Pinnock, Böhm, Karajan and Walter. 
                The Menuetto-Trio is too fast but the 
                Finale-Presto flies by in an exhilaration 
                of greased lightning - like a supercharged 
                Nozze di Figaro overture. 
              
 
              
The Scott piece is 
                introduced by the composer in a placid, 
                confident and completely unbombastic 
                tone. Much the same can be said of his 
                From the Sacred Harp which is 
                pacific in inclination, calming, meditative, 
                referring to spirituals in a naturalistic 
                low-key way that links with Copland 
                at one node and the pastoral Vaughan 
                Williams (Dives and Lazarus and 
                Fifth Symphony) at the other. This is 
                taken from a V-Disc the inset label 
                of which is reproduced in the booklet. 
                This track is plagued with some wow 
                - unfortunate on a work that has such 
                long singing lines with prominence for 
                the voices of the violins and the woodwind. 
                It is clearly a delightful novelty and 
                could enrich the repertoire of any orchestra 
                if only the performing materials could 
                be had. 
              
 
              
Lastly comes Weinberger’s 
                orchestral diptych. The music is characteristically 
                cheeky and rambunctious. The whole opera 
                was recorded complete on CBS Masterworks 
                CD7934 back in 1981 when Heinz Wallberg 
                conducted a Bavarian production in Munich. 
                Such a pity that it is no longer available. 
                This present track was unfortunately 
                afflicted with what sounded uncommonly 
                like a repeating groove. You are advised 
                to check your copy in the shop. If the 
                problem is there at all you will encounter 
                it in the last few minutes of the Weinberger. 
              
 
              
The notes are by Richard 
                Gate. 
              
 
              
This is a collection 
                brimful of Stokowski’s confident, irreverent, 
                personable and intensely idiosyncratic 
                music-making. 
              
Rob Barnett