Los Angeles was a magnet 
                to European émigré composers 
                fleeing pogroms whether Nazi or Soviet 
                during the 1930s. The city yielded employment 
                and teaching opportunities for music 
                celebrities who could almost call their 
                own tune. If they had a foreign name 
                well that helped as well. LA provided 
                employment in the film industry for 
                pragmatists. Idealists found it a soul-destroying 
                place but at least the storm-troopers 
                were thousands of miles away. 
              
 
              
As the end of the Second 
                World War came in sight Nathaniel Shilkret 
                hit upon a grand collaborative project. 
                Shilkret was director of light music 
                at RCA Victor Records. He was also a 
                composer active in the film studios 
                and a conductor. In the music world 
                he knew pretty much everyone who was 
                anyone. He approached six other composers 
                with an ambitious collaborative project 
                to work on large-scale tableaux for 
                orchestra, chorus, and narrator. The 
                chosen texts were from the Book of 
                Genesis. The composers were Castelnuovo-Tedesco 
                in exile from Italy, Milhaud from France, 
                Alexandre Tansman from Poland and France 
                and Ernst Toch from Austria. The illustrious 
                giants who provided the great flanking 
                buttresses for the work were Schoenberg 
                and Stravinsky. 
              
 
              
The resulting Genesis 
                Suite had a single live performance, 
                in 1945, by the 
                Janssen Symphony Orchestra at 
                the Wilshire Ebel Theatre in Los Angeles. 
                The week after Shilkret took the same 
                forces into RCA’s Hollywood studio for 
                a privately-commissioned recording. 
                While Stravinsky and Schoenberg kept 
                copies of their movements all the performing 
                materials were lost in a fire at Shilkret’s 
                home. In 1998 musicologist James Westby 
                found manuscript orchestral scores of 
                the Milhaud and Castelnuovo-Tedesco 
                movements filed at the Library of Congress, 
                as well as short scores for the episodes 
                by Shilkret, Tansman and Toch. Patrick 
                Russ reconstructed these three movements 
                with the aid of the private recording; 
                now that I would also like to 
                hear! It will not be as virile and immediate 
                as the present recording; that’s for 
                sure. 
              
 
              
Schoenberg was 
                well chosen for his uncompromising portrayal 
                of the primordial chaotic miasma. The 
                music is suitably dodecaphonic - whirling 
                and active. Shilkret was a film 
                music composer and his eclectic opulence 
                in The Creation supplies a richly 
                stocked and constantly allusive Hollywood-style 
                score. The music is super-Straussian 
                with the vocalising choir painting the 
                dawn of light in a blindingly cinematic 
                evocation. One can easily imagine a 
                film to accompany this music and narration. 
                It is very much a case of the Bible 
                according to Heston and Mature. Great 
                fun - an example of saturated cinema 
                kitsch. Golden Age film score aficionados 
                must lose no time and get a copy of 
                this disc immediately. Tansman’s 
                Adam and Eve is much more subtle 
                but still vividly imagined and pictorial. 
                Tansman uses a developed Ravelian style 
                - impressionism on steroids. There are 
                several moments where the debt to Ravel’s 
                Daphnis is direct and unashamed. 
                The Milhaud movement takes us 
                through the tale of Cain and Abel. 
                It is a brisk and vigorous retelling 
                with dramatic music. Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco 
                is in this case closest to Shilkret 
                in style. He too was a Hollywood film 
                music composer. His The Flood 
                is stormily histrionic and his tender 
                music is genuinely touching (2:58 tr. 
                5) as you find whenever the narration 
                speaks of Noah and his family. Something 
                of the same loving kindness can be heard 
                in Vaughan Williams’ Fifth Symphony. 
                Ernst Toch’s The Rainbow/The 
                Covenant provides the work’s optimistic 
                centre of gravity with its repeated 
                imperious concluding fanfares. Stravinsky 
                admits both narration and choral 
                singing into his Babel. The style 
                links with various of his concert works 
                including Oedipus Rex and the 
                Symphonies of Wind Instruments. 
                Throughout each of the six movements, 
                where there is narration, the speaker 
                changes among the five from one section 
                to the next within a movement. 
              
 
              
As a single work this 
                ‘collaboration’ does not quite work 
                as an entity. The end of Babel is 
                too inconclusive to provide a sense 
                of journey’s end. Perhaps one day this 
                will be redressed. For now this is a 
                fascinating record of a remarkable moment 
                in time. Its chrome-plated musical sensationalism 
                is enjoyable provided you have no hang-ups 
                about kitsch. I thought it was great 
                fun. I recommend it to listeners who 
                have already contracted the revelatory 
                bug that hangs around the music of a 
                generation of composers who wrote in 
                exile. 
              
Rob Barnett