These are significant 
                      additions to the discography of the sadly short-lived Rabin, 
                      better known for his virtuoso fireworks in Paganini and 
                      the flashier repertoire in the book. In fact he had long 
                      been an adherent of the Fauré sonata, a piece he’d been 
                      performing since his teens, and with which he was certainly 
                      no stranger when he came to broadcast it in Berlin in 1961 
                      by the time he was twenty-five. His accompanist here, as 
                      in the 1962 Beethoven G major, was Lothar Broddack, a very 
                      diligent though not especially inspiring musician from the 
                      sound of things. 
                    The Fauré doesn’t 
                      show Rabin in quite such scintillating form, tonally and 
                      expressively, as one can hear elsewhere. His tone isn’t 
                      hard-pressed, it’s true, but he certainly doesn’t go in 
                      for the kind of battery of inflections that his hero Heifetz 
                      espoused in this work when he recorded it in the 1930s (on 
                      Biddulph). Similarly he doesn’t modify and mould the lyric 
                      line with as much sensitivity as Grumiaux (try the Crossley 
                      recording which I admire most of the violinist’s traversals 
                      of it). Though he does lavish some well-calibrated bigger 
                      tone on the second subject quite a bit of his passagework 
                      generally is very straightforward and rather plain. With 
                      a rather undifferentiated slow movement, more than a bit 
                      hard toned as well, we have a few intonational blips - though 
                      he does bring out some finger position changes that impart 
                      vibrancy and intensity to some of the playing. Oddly for 
                      such a wonderful player his scherzo sounds a touch rushed 
                      in places, even though it’s the same tempo that Grumiaux 
                      and Crossley take; the distinguishing feature is that the 
                      Belgian’s articulation is the finer. The piano action is 
                      rather nosily evident in the finale where chewy playing 
                      from Rabin doesn’t compensate for some unrelaxed phrasing.
                    The Beethoven 
                      receives in many ways a far more unproblematic interpretation 
                      though there’s not a great deal in it that rivets attention, 
                      even from a player of Rabin’s class. In terms of stylistic 
                      matters it receives an acceptable traversal though the central 
                      movement is certainly not slow – more a Rosand tempo than 
                      a Perlman. But whilst the finale is quite buoyant one is 
                      left with a feeling that nothing especially distinctive 
                      has been said. The fill-up is in the context a pleasant 
                      anomaly; a Bell Telephone Hour three-minute snippet of an 
                      orchestrally accompanied Paganini Caprice from 1950, Rabin’s 
                      youth. Despite the mushy recording and the syrupy accompaniment 
                      we can still hear Rabin’s dazzling affinity for the repertoire. 
                    
                    I began by saying 
                      that this issue is valuable for the preserved radio recordings 
                      because they represent items otherwise absent from Rabin’s 
                      meagre discography. I’ll reinforce that even though the 
                      performances are in some ways disappointing. What’s not 
                      at stake is the fine work Doremi have demonstrated in making 
                      these performances widely available for the first time.
                    Jonathan 
                      Woolf