Beginning 
                  at the end of the 1940s, the administrators of Louisville Orchestra 
                  took the brave decision to commission an extensive series of 
                  new works from leading composers. In 1949 and 1950 alone they 
                  commissioned works from, amongst others: Hindemith, Villa-Lobos, 
                  Milhaud, Virgil Thomson, William Schuman, Carlos Chavez and 
                  Roy Harris. The striking success of some of these ventures – 
                  especially Schuman’s Judith – led in 1953 to very substantial 
                  funding from the Rockefeller Foundation. Many more new works 
                  were commissioned and an extensive programme of recording was 
                  undertaken. Between 1952 and 1967 some 125 LPs were recorded. 
                  They included premiere recordings of works by, for example, 
                  Ginastera and Dallapiccola, Elliott Carter and Lukas Foss, Roger 
                  Sessions and Henry Cowell. 
                I 
                  have memories – mostly favourable - of hearing performances 
                  of music by Ned Rorem and Norman Dello Joio recorded as part 
                  of that programme. Now the First Edition Music label is reissuing 
                  this archive of recordings on CD; their website 
                   gives details of the project.
                All 
                  four of these compositions by Villa-Lobos received their world 
                  premiere recordings at the hands of the Louisville Orchestra 
                  and it is these recordings that are issued here. As such the 
                  CD is obviously of considerable historical interest and value.
                For 
                  regular listening, however, there are some serious drawbacks. 
                  Throughout there are occasional lapses in the orchestral playing, 
                  which falls short of the very highest standards. Erosão 
                  and Alvorada Na Floresta Tropical are 
                  presented in mono recordings of which the sound is generally 
                  very scrawny, occasionally somewhat shrill and eventually rather 
                  wearing on the ears. In these two recordings the sound is simply 
                  not full or clear enough to do justice to the colour of Villa-Lobos’s 
                  orchestral writing. Sonically, at least, things improve a good 
                  deal with the two later, stereo recordings – although there 
                  are still a few problems. 
                Bachianas 
                  Brasileiras No. 4 will 
                  be familiar to most; the music is characteristic of its composer. 
                  The score of Erosão is prefaced by a Brazilian legend 
                  about how the tears of the moon – unable to marry his great 
                  love the sun – gave birth to the Amazon. Villa-Lobos’s score 
                  is aptly evocative without being over-simply pictorial. Alvorada 
                  Na Floresta Tropical employs Brazilian Indian scales and 
                  contains some potentially very striking effects, though much 
                  of its richness is lost in the recorded sound. The Danses 
                  Africaines start with a rumba. Throughout the three dances 
                  syncopated rhythms and some unfamiliar Brazilian instruments, 
                  as well as some fine writing for clarinet, celesta and harp, 
                  ensure some highly individual music. 
                So, 
                  an interesting document of the Louisville Orchestra’s important 
                  work for contemporary music; but there are too many shortcomings 
                  as regards performance and - especially - recorded sound for 
                  this to be generally recommendable. There are better performances, 
                  better recorded, of all of these pieces.
                Glyn Pursglove