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              "Some
                      conductors have the almost uncanny ability to interpret
                      freshly a composer's work and to inspire the most jaded
                      orchestral players to breathe life into music once thought
                      overexposed." Biographer Paul Robinson (1977) from 
			  "Stokowski - The Art of the Conductor".
 
 Sometimes the casual listener can become
                    perplexed by the continuing Stokowski phenomenon.. There
                    is something very special about this maverick conductor/arranger
                    who captures the heart of so many music-lovers and continues
                    to be feted by an increasingly large body of enthusiasts
                    who have elevated him from mere cult-status.
 
 Born in London of Polish-Irish ancestry, Leopold Stokowski (1882-1977) found considerable success
                    in the United States, where he became naturalised as an American
                    citizen.. In addition to his sixty-year legacy of making
                    studio recordings Stokowski was an inveterate transcriber
                    of music for the symphony orchestra. I believe he made some
                    two hundred
                    orchestral arrangements of works which had started life in
                    other forms, such as: piano solos, songs, organ music, chamber
                    works etc. Stokowski's reputation suffered a decline following
                    his death in 1977, some of which was due to a bad press and
                    also to a change in fashion. There is currently a resurgence
                    of interest in Stokowski, for his recordings as a conductor
                    and for his orchestral transcriptions, with several high
                    quality recordings both new and re-issues being available
                    in the catalogues.
 
 Stokowski was one of the leading conductors in the recording 
			  industry virtually throughout the whole of his career. He was 
			  prolific in the recording studio right from the fledgling 
			  acoustics with the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1917 to electrical 
			  recordings in 1924, with pioneering concert broadcasts in the 
			  early 1930s and delivering symphonic music to Hollywood with the 
			  release of the soundtrack to Walt Disney's Fantasia in
                    1940. He loved to be in control and with the advantage of
                    his powerful personality and innate musical gifts he was
                    acknowledged over many years for his ability to inspire record
                    companies, music producers and orchestral performers with
                    his amazingly strong artistic vision. Often detractors would
                    criticise his tendency for idiosyncratic interpretations
                    of his recordings that seemed very radical compared to that
                    of his contemporaries. Furthermore his frequent tinkering
                    with published orchestral scores was a source of great annoyance
                    for some.
 
 Stokowski
                    made several recordings of Beethoven symphonies during his
                    career, including the Symphony No. 6 in F major, 
			  Op.68 'Pastoral' (1808)
                    more than once, using it in the film score to Fantasia, although he was never generally thought of as a specialist Beethoven
                    interpreter. He never completed a cycle of Beethoven symphonies
                    only recording five of them.
 
 The 'Pastoral' formed a fairly regular fixture in 
			  Stokowski's concert programmes. The 1954 recording of the 'Pastoral' has divided opinion
                    over the years. It was generally considered to be beautifully
                    performed with the orchestra radiating a most impressive
                    range of colours. The slow pace of the Andante molto mosso movement
                    became and continues to be a controversial issue with many
                    authors holding the view that his tempo is unacceptably sluggish.
 
 In
                    the opening movement Allegro ma non troppo one is
                    struck by the freshness of Stokowski's reading that contains 
			  a solid sense of nature and the great outdoors in every bar. It 
			  has long been acknowledged that the second movement 'Scene
                    by the brook' is played exceptionally slowly. Feeling
                    able to accept the good grace of Stokowski's exceptional
                    insights I experienced the music as gentle and relaxing as
                    if basking in the warmth of the afternoon sun..
 
 I loved the rustic evening picture that Stokowski fruitfully 
			  evokes in the 'Peasant's merrymaking' movement, here 
			  joyously conveyed in a carefree manner with great vivacity. In the 
			  fourth movement 'Thunderstorm' the tremolo in
                    the lower strings makes a superb evocation of thunder that
                    gains in intensity into a furious and violent eruption. In
                    the final movement marked Allegretto Stokowski expertly
                    relieves the tension with playing that is lovingly and gloriously
                    performed. It feels as if the conductor is assisting Beethoven
                    to announce a brand new day with uninhibited delight and
                    majestic playing.
 
 The disc also includes three orchestrated versions of Franz 
			  Liszt's Hungarian
                    Rhapsodies; originally piano works. Stokowski selected
                    and recorded three of the Hungarian Rhapsodies with
                    the NBC Symphony Orchestra at the Manhattan Center in New
                    York in 1954. He clearly admired No. 2 in the orchestration
                    by Karl Muller-Berghaus as he recorded it several times.
                    The other two are performed here in the versions to which
                    Stokowski has added his own touches to the orchestration.
                    In the Third he has added a cimbalom but also using a solo
                    viola. These are spirited and vibrant performances that thrill
                    and delight. Some may find the addition of the cimbalom something
                    of an acquired taste.
 
 This disc also includes a six minute 'illustrated discussion' 
			  entitled the 'Sounds of Nature'. It is difficult not to agree
                    with the view of Stokowski's biographer Paul Robinson who 
			  wrote, "... he is no Bernstein. His talks have an
                    Olympian aura about them. He comes across as stiff
                    and somewhat pompous and his comments are superficial rather
                    than penetrating or perceptive." In truth the talk is
                    brief and fairly interesting and Stokowski uses musical examples
                    to illustrate a few of Beethoven's musical ideas.
 
 I
                    found the sound quality, that we are told has been through
                    a 'digital remastering' process, to be generally unpleasant,
                    rather over-bright and poorly focused at the edges. The woodwind
                    section performs superbly throughout and comes up well in
                    the recorded sound, however the timbre of the strings is
                    uninspiring. The booklet notes are interesting and reasonably
                    informative.
 
 Stokowski
                    continues to divide opinion and with this idiosyncratic interpretation
                    of the Pastoral most will either love it or hate it.
                    I loved the interpretation but not the sound.
 
 Michael
                        Cookson
 
 see
                    also review by Jonathan Woolf
 
   
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