This is the second 
                and last of Stokowski’s commercial recordings of the Pastoral. 
                The earlier traversal was with the New York City Symphony Orchestra 
                in 1945, a recording already reviewed 
                on Musicweb.
              
I see now I was needlessly brief, though 
                  admiring, in that review claiming the Mozart-Beethoven disc 
                  was “one in the eye” for those who routinely belittled Stokowski’s 
                  handling of these composers. I have to say that, once again, 
                  there’s little in this later performance to disappoint and a 
                  huge amount to admire. Once again the principal idiosyncrasy 
                  is one of tempo relationships. In an interesting temporal shift 
                  over nearly a decade Stokowski slowed forty five seconds in 
                  the first, second and last movements. The Peasants’ Merrymaking 
                  and the Thunderstorm obviously have less room for 
                  manoeuvre of this sort but also show subtle shifts. 
                The ear will be struck by the spacious preparation 
                  of phraseology and by the elegance and affection that underlines 
                  the reading. The NBC section leaders are all noted in the booklet 
                  so we can hear and put a name to some of the stronger contributions. 
                  I’m thinking here of clarinettist Arthur Williams in the first 
                  movement and the very resonant double bass team led by Philip 
                  Sklar whose over recorded trenchancy is a distinctly enlivening 
                  part of the proceedings. The brook certainly moves very slowly 
                  and limpidly but it’s full of fine wind incident and caressing 
                  care. Stokowski unfolds it with loving security and leisurely 
                  affection inspiring some hushed violin playing as well as perky 
                  bassoon lines. It’s not only the double basses that leap from 
                  the sound perspective. The winds in The Peasants’ Merrymaking 
                  positively jump out of their seats to attract your attention. 
                  Not perhaps quite as earthy and tight as that earlier 1945 recording 
                  this is still a reading full of humanity and drive. In fact 
                  character and ardour are prime features of the conductor’s way 
                  with the Pastoral. Some might demur at the finale’s balancing 
                  of first violins and some questions of string weight but the 
                  curve of the phrasing, as such, is often delectable. Nothing 
                  sounds milked or done for effect. And once more Stokowski proves 
                  a highly personalised but very sensitive Beethovenian. 
                We get a number of bonuses. There’s a talk 
                  from the conductor called Sounds of Nature where we find 
                  him sporting his fake Polish accent amidst native English vowels. 
                  It’s reminiscent of his talks for 78 sets in its almost deliberate 
                  naivety, fusing the sound of a running brook with Beethoven’s 
                  own depiction of it. And then giving us bird song.
                The Liszt Hungarian Rhapsodies make for colourful 
                  ballast. The second is richly saucy with more of those deeply 
                  etched basses to the fore. In the third there’s an unlikely 
                  role for cimbalon and viola - the latter replacing the clarinet 
                  – with the string instrument deliberately guilty of some highly 
                  facetious camp. 
                If you only know of Stokowski’s way with 
                  the Pastoral through the soundtrack to Fantasia 
                  this NBC performance will cement the generally fine interpretative 
                  gestures heard both there and in the New York City Symphony 
                  performance. Latitude will prove necessary in some respects 
                  but those attuned to his sensibility will find him a most humane 
                  and generous guide.
                Jonathan Woolf