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              This triptych of concertos
                    bears witness to three soloists - which explains the rather
                    cumbersome title of the disc. In essence we have one superman,
                    one klaviertiger of ravenous divinity, the great Barere,
                    one pianist whose star has waxed and waned over the years
                    - Jesús Mariá Sanroma – and one almost unknown, Reginald
                    Paul. The dice are loaded against Paul biographically so
                    let’s start with him.
 
 Alan
                    Bush, who was at college with him, always maintained that
                    Paul was the best sight-reader he’d ever met. That’s not
                    necessarily a qualification for pianistic status but Paul
                    was undoubtedly a fine chamber player and later an equally
                    fine teacher. Born in London in 1894 he was a Matthay pupil
                    at the Royal Academy and later formed a duo with violinist
                    Harold Fielding, who’d taken lessons with Sammons and was
                    later a well-known music promoter. Paul founded the London
                    Pianoforte Quartet in 1932 a group that contained the core
                    of the Stratton Quartet (George Stratton, Watson Forbes and
                    John Moore). He taught at his old college for many years.
                    Yet he didn’t record heavily and this makes this 1930 traversal
                    all the more valuable as a document of his playing in its
                    youthful prime.
 
 Recorded
                    for Broadcast in 1930 this performance of the Saint-Saens
                    G minor concerto was the first electric set to be issued.
                    Arthur de Greef and Landon Ronald had earlier collaborated
                    on an HMV acoustic. Broadcast Twelve was one of the cheap
                    British labels that proliferated at around this time and
                    copies often turn up in less than pristine condition. The
                    set used here is generally fine but has some scrunchy moments
                    and some blasting at fortes. Paul proves a good soloist,
                    though not one who could attain the degree of sparkle that
                    someone such as, say, Moiseiwitsch could find in this work – even
                    granted that Moiseiwitsch sounded a touch tired in his 1947
                    recording with Basil Cameron. Paul has the work under his
                    fingers and if he can seem a touch reserved in the finale
                    he compensates with fine legato and a sure stylistic awareness.
 
 This
                    is fine retrieval work from Symposium and while I have the
                    floor they would do a real service in investigating the rest
                    of the Broadcast and other catalogues. Paul’s British contemporary
                    Maurice Cole made a number of highly impressive discs for
                    Broadcast – I think especially of his Chopin, Rachmaninov
                    and the Grieg Concerto with the same Metropolitan band (and
                    Stanley Chapple) that accompanies Reginald Paul. He also
                    made some less well-known sides for Aco – and they are no
                    less impressive. Cole is an undeservedly neglected figure
                    though some will remember his Bach LPs from the 1960s. He
                    was married to the fiddler Winifred Small, with whom he also
                    recorded, and we should have examples of his musicianship
                    on CD. End of sermon.
 
 Jesús
                    Mariá Sanroma gives us his excellent Paderewski concerto
                    but unlike the Paul, which has hitherto never been reissued,
                    this is terra cognita. Pearl has an all-Sanroma disc
                    but this Symposium is better done and better pitched as well.
                    Whatever the vicissitudes of his career and reputation I’ve
                    always greatly liked his playing. Maybe he doesn’t have Earl
                    Wild’s leonine magnetism in this kind of work – but then
                    few do - but he’s rhythmically alert and vivacious and has
                    a beautiful cantabile tone in the slow movement. The first
                    movement cadenza is played with romantic finesse and freedom.
                    It’s a slight pity that there’s some flutter in the copy
                    used for the finale as it’s slightly distracting from the
                    performance. Symposium omits the recording date, which was
                    1939.
 
 There’s
                    not much to be said about the blistering Liszt. This has
                    seen service on APR’s Barere edition but again this Symposium
                    has the better copy. It’s a more immediate transfer, sharper
                    in detail without being graphic; less muffled and indistinct.
                    So a big improvement for Barere adherents. The performance
                    is occasionally accident-prone but the dropped notes are
                    mere bagatelles in the face of such coruscating and occasionally
                    exhausting pianism. Barere’s singing line in the slow movement
                    is a wonder in itself. Symposium is reluctant to credit an
                    orchestra; it was the New York Philharmonic.
 
 Yoking
                    together these three very different pianists and concertos
                    obviously has pitfalls and I can imagine objections. For
                    collectors, though, one could advance counter-arguments as
                    to the desirability of hearing the Paul, and the technical
                    advances in the other two concerto performances. And let
                    me repeat my hopes regarding the rest of the Broadcast catalogue.
 
 Jonathan Woolf
 
 
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