This
                    is the first volume in a new series devoted to historic recordings
                    by Norwegian artists. In the case of volume one “historic” stretches
                    back as far as 1946 and as far forward as 1973. The parameters
                    are set at 1945 to 2000 so we can expect a wide range of
                    material, ranging I suppose from acetate to digital, though
                    being curious I searched but failed to find enticing details
                    of subsequent volumes. 
                
                 
                
                
                The musicians include a
                    violinist, a singer, a pianist, organist and a flautist.
                    Their careers were variable, some having international reputations,
                    some ploughing a more native soil. Violinist Ernst Glaser
                    was born in Hamburg in 1904 and studied with Flesch for four
                    years. He took up a position as leader of the Oslo Philharmonic
                    in 1928, a seat he was to occupy for fully forty years, less
                    the war years when he had to leave Norway for obvious reasons.
                    He premiered concertos by Kielland, Egge and Arnestad and
                    was an admired teacher. These are the earliest recordings
                    in volume one, made in 1946 with his wife as accompanist.
                    It was clearly a dance-themed recital of six short pieces,
                    preserved in the NRK Archives. Glaser was rather a charming
                    player, small scaled and with the typical rhythmic surety
                    of an orchestral leader. The ethos is old fashioned, sparing
                    of vibrato, sometimes unvarnished and exposed and flirting
                    dangerously with intonation. Portamenti are quick but pervasive
                    and the vibrato when extensively used rather slow. Unusually
                    he plays the Elgar Serenade, originally written for piano.
                    This is not acknowledged in the booklet but is actually the
                    Szigeti arrangement - so perhaps Glaser had heard Szigeti’s
                    1934 Columbia recording of it. Glaser died in 1979.
                
                 
                
                Mezzo
                    Marit Isene had a wider career. Born in 1923 she sang early
                    in Stockholm and Oslo, then Zurich. She later sang under
                    Solti in Frankfurt and Sieglinde and Gutrune in Wagner performances
                    with Knappertsbusch in Paris. It was Flagstad herself who
                    invited Isene to return to sing at the Oslo opera, which
                    she did until 1973 after which she taught. She retired at
                    seventy and died at eighty and the notes tell us that she
                    compiled a documentary archive of her career and personally
                    considered the recordings here representative. They show
                    her voice as strong and expressive, albeit with a rather
                    florid portamento in the Strauss Ständchen. The Wagner
                    is a sliver of a memento of her performances of the composer,
                    and in rather occluded sound as well. Her Verdi comes from
                    1965 and shows the voice is commanding but has deepened and
                    hardened, and is less mobile, though she was only forty-two
                    at the time.
                
                 
                
                Organist
                    Arild Sandvold (1895-1984) is the elder statesman of the
                    quintet of featured musicians. He’d studied in Oslo and with
                    Karl Straube in Leipzig. Cathedral organist in Oslo for over
                    thirty years he was a choral director and teacher. I’m not
                    aware how many recordings he may have made, if any, but fortunately
                    broadcast performances have been preserved. He plays a work
                    by Ludvig Mathias Lindeman, a predecessor of his at Oslo,
                    and does so with imagination and romantic sweep. Registrations
                    are apposite, colour is warm, and there’s a sense of spacious
                    nobility allied to a fine declamatory peroration. 
                
                 
                
                Born
                    in 1917 flautist Ørnulf Gulbransen died in 2004. One more
                    Oslo associations are strong and long lasting. He was a member
                    of the Philharmonic for thirty years, at a time when Glaser
                    led the orchestra, and he toured internationally. He taught
                    widely, and that included a six year period in Vermont, spending
                    time working with Casals and Serkin, and also in Canada.
                    He was a highly admired soloist and chamber player and a
                    clearly demanding teacher. He plays the concerto by Johan
                    Kvandal as preserved in a 1966 performance. This is a sprightly
                    neo-classical work, spongy and pert, strongly Stravinskian
                    with quite an intense slow movement. Flecks of Shostakovich
                    are there; maybe a nod to Hindemith. Which makes it seem
                    far less spirited and enjoyable than it actually is; Gulbransen
                    plays with great verve and sensitivity. 
                
                 
                
                Maybe
                    the best known of the quintet of musicians is Robert Riefling
                    (1911-1988). He studied in Oslo and made his professional
                    debut at fourteen before studies with Karl Leimer, Kempff
                    and Fischer. He was apparently the first Norwegian pianist
                    to play the “48” in concert, recording it twice. He was also
                    a proponent of concertos by Egge, Sæverud, Rivertz and Valen.
                    His career was distinguished and his teaching life equally
                    so. Given the foregoing it’s no surprise that we hear him
                    in Bach. He plays the Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue in D Minor
                    with limpid and rounded tone that reminds one in particular
                    of his tutelage with Kempff. Tone colours and clarity are
                    subsumed to a warmly romanticised reading; the conception
                    is entirely pianistic, the execution first class, the tempi
                    not pressing but singing and under perfect digital command.
                    Maybe his Sicilienne is over accented in the left hand but
                    Riefling always leaves a strong impression in Bach. 
                
                 
                
                So
                    that’s volume one. The sound quality is never less than good,
                    even in the case of the 1946 broadcast. Notes are apposite
                    and the mini biographies are useful for school and graduate
                    entry levels. Each musician has a photograph as well. I can
                    imagine pedants complaining about miscellaneous programming
                    but so far as I’m concerned this is fine reclamation work
                    by Simax. These are musicians we should hear. And let’s hear
                    more of them and the others to come in this valuable series.
                
                 
                    
                    Jonathan Woolf