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Haydn* / Mendelssohn* / The New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Arturo Toscanini – Symphony In D Major (The Clock) / Midsummer Night's Dream
Label: Victor Red Seal – M 57
Format:
4 x Shellac, 12", 78 RPM, Album
Genre: Classical
Style: Classical, Romantic
Symphony No. 4 In D Major
Composed By – Haydn*
A Part 1 - 1st Movement - Adagio And Presto
B Part 2 - 1st Movement - Presto (Concluded)
C Part 3 - 2nd Movement - Andante
D Part 4 - 2nd Movement - Andante (Concluded)
E Part 5 - 3rd Movement - Menuetto - Allegretto
F Part 6 - 3rd Movement - Menuetto - Allegretto (Concluded)
G Part 7 - 4th Movement - Finale - Vivace
H Midsummer Night's Dream - Scherzo (After Act 1)
Composed By – Mendelssohn*
Conductor – Arturo Toscanini
Orchestra – The New York Philharmonic Orchestra
Producer [Uncredited] – Charles O'Connell
Haydn Symphony recorded March 29-30, 1929, Carnegie Hall.
Midsummer Night's Dream recorded March 30, 1929, Carnegie Hall.
The full effects of the lush orchestral work were first captured effectively with the advent of electrical recordings, including the 1929 performance by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Arturo Toscanini, released by RCA Victor.
COMPLETE original issue Album M-57 4x12" Victor scroll 78 rpm record w booklet
[edit] Composition, premiere, and receptionHaydn completed the symphony in 1793 or 1794. He wrote it for the second of his two visits to London (1791-2, 1794-5).
The work was premiered on 3 March, 1794, in the Hanover Square Rooms, as part of a concert series featuring Haydn's work organized by his colleague and friend Johann Peter Salomon; a second performance took place a week later.[1]
As was generally true for the London symphonies, the response of the audience was very enthusiastic. The Morning Chronicle reported:
As usual the most delicious part of the entertainment was a new grand Overture [that is, symphony] by HAYDN; the inexhaustible, the wonderful, the sublime HAYDN! The first two movements were encored; and the character that pervaded the whole composition was heartfelt joy. Ever new Overture he writes, we fear, till it is heard, he can only repeat himself; and we are every time mistaken.[2]
The work has always been popular and continues to appear frequently on concert programs and in recordings.
Arturo Toscanini (March 25, 1867 û January 16, 1957) was an Italian musician. He is considered by many critics, fellow musicians, and much of the classical listening audience to have been the greatest conductor of all time. He was renowned for his brilliant intensity, his restless perfectionism, his phenomenal ear for orchestral detail and sonority, and his photographic memory which gave him extraordinary command over a vast repertoire of orchestral and operatic works, and allowed him to correct errors in orchestral parts unnoticed by his colleagues for decades
Biography
Toscanini was born in Parma, Emilia-Romagna, and won a scholarship to the local music conservatory, where he studied the cello. He joined the orchestra of an opera company, with which he toured South America in 1886. While presenting Aida in Rio de Janeiro, the orchestra's conductor was booed by the audience and forced to leave the podium. Although he had no conducting experience, Toscanini was persuaded to take up the baton, and led a magnificent performance completely from memory. Thus began his career as a conductor at age 19.
Upon returning to Italy, Toscanini self-effacingly returned to his chair in the cello section, and participated as cellist in the world premiere of Verdi's Otello (La Scala, 1887) under the composer's supervision. (Verdi, who habitually complained that conductors never seemed interested in directing his scores the way he had written them, was impressed by reports from Arrigo Boito about Toscanini's ability to interpret his scores. The composer was also impressed when Toscanini consulted him personally, indicating a ritardando where it was not set out in the score and saying that only a true musician would have felt the need to make that ritardando.)
Gradually the young musician's reputation as an operatic conductor of unusual authority and skill supplanted his cello career. In the following decade he consolidated his career in Italy, entrusted with the world premieres of Puccini's La BohFme and Leoncavallo's Pagliacci. In 1896 he conducted his first symphonic concert (works by Schubert, Brahms, Tchaikovsky, and Wagner), in Turin. By 1898 he was resident conductor at La Scala, Milan and remained there until 1908, returning during the 1920s. He took the Scala Orchestra to the United States on a concert tour in 1920-21; it was during that tour that Toscanini made his first recordings (for the Victor Talking Machine Company).
International recognition
Outside of Europe, he conducted at the Metropolitan Opera in New York (1908û1915) as well as the New York Philharmonic Orchestra (1926û1936). He toured Europe with the New York Philharmonic in 1930; he and the musicians were acclaimed by critics and audiences wherever they went. As was also the case with the New York Philharmonic, Toscanini was the first non-German conductor to appear at Bayreuth (1930û1931). In the 1930s he conducted at the Salzburg Festival (1934û1937) and the inaugural concert in 1936 of the Palestine Symphony Orchestra (now the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra) in Tel Aviv, and later performed with them in Jerusalem, Haifa, Cairo and Alexandria.
Toscanini ran in 1919 unsuccessfully as a Fascist parliamentary candidate in Milan and had been called "the greatest conductor in the world" by Mussolini; however, he became disillusioned with fascism and notably refused to conduct Giovinezza at a May 1931 concert at La Scala, after which he was roughed up by a group of blackshirts, and thereafter left Italy until 1938
He left for the United States where the NBC Symphony Orchestra was created for him in 1937. He conducted the first broadcast concert on December 25, 1937, in NBC Studio 8-H in New York City's Rockefeller Center. The acoustics were very dry, until some remodeling in 1939 added a bit more reverberation to the studio.
One of the more remarkable broadcasts was in July 1942, when Toscanini conducted the American premiere of Dmitri Shostakovich's Symphony No. 7. Due to World War II, the score was microfilmed in the Soviet Union and brought by courier to the United States. Stokowski wanted to conduct the premiere and there were a number of remarkable letters between the two conductors (reproduced by Harvey Sachs in his biography) before Stokowski agreed to let Toscanini have the privilege of conducting the first performance. Unfortunately for New York listeners, a major thunderstorm virtually obliterated the NBC radio signals there, but the performance was heard elsewhere and preserved on transcription discs. Shostakovich himself reportedly expressed a dislike for the performance, after he heard a recording of the broadcast.
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