Gerhard - The Plague; Walton - Facade; Stravinsky - The Soldier’s Tale
£14.20
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Label: Australian Eloquence
Cat No: ELQ4842200
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 2
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Release Date: 14th May 2021
Contents
Artists
Alec McCowen (narrator)Peggy Ashcroft (reciter)
Paul Scofield (reciter)
Glenda Jackson (narrator)
Rudolf Nureyev (reciter)
Micheal Mac Liammoir (reciter)
National Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, Washington D.C.
London Sinfonietta
Instrumental Ensemble
Conductors
Antal DoratiWilliam Walton
Gennady Zalkowitsch
Works
The PlagueThe Soldier's Tale (L'Histoire du Soldat)
Facade
Artists
Alec McCowen (narrator)Peggy Ashcroft (reciter)
Paul Scofield (reciter)
Glenda Jackson (narrator)
Rudolf Nureyev (reciter)
Micheal Mac Liammoir (reciter)
National Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, Washington D.C.
London Sinfonietta
Instrumental Ensemble
Conductors
Antal DoratiWilliam Walton
Gennady Zalkowitsch
About
Roberto Gerhard’s imagination was immediately fired by reading Albert Camus’s 1947 novel, La Peste, about a French-Algerian town in the sudden grip of bubonic plague. He determined to make a musical setting (The Plague), and after its premiere in 1964 few were left unmoved, or in any doubt about the work’s significance as a bitter, retrospective allegory on the evils of Nazism so recently extinguished.
Now that Gerhard’s score has taken on a new and unwonted relevance, this reissue of its first recording on Argo should win new converts to his music. It is led with remarkable sympathy by Antal Doráti, the Hungarian-born conductor who had become a friend of the composer as well as a mainstay of the Decca and Mercury catalogues. It was through Gerhard that Doráti met William Glock, who engaged him as principal conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra.
Also originally issued by Argo, the 1972 recording of Walton’s Façade enjoys a unique authority as the composer’s only stereo version of the score, featuring Peggy Ashcroft and Paul Scofield as narrators. Though Walton arranged and revised the score many times after its scandalous premiere in 1922, for the Argo recording he returned to his 1951 version scored for the original combination of six instruments. Ashcroft – in the tradition of Façade’s author and first narrator, Edith Sitwell – and Scofield declaim the absurdist texts with all their famed resources of nuance, timing and eloquence.
To record The Soldier’s Tale in 1975, Decca acquired the services of Glenda Jackson, known worldwide at the time for her Oscar-winning performance in Women in Love (1969) and Ken Russell’s next film, The Music Lovers (1970), in which she played the unfortunate wife of Tchaikovsky. She was joined in Decca’s Hampstead studios by the Irish actor and founder of Dublin’s Gate Theatre, Micheál Mac Liammóir, and none other than Rudolf Nureyev, who gave a somewhat stilted, authentically arch performance as the Soldier of the tale. They were backed by a small ensemble of expert London-based musicians, headed by the former leader of the London Symphony Orchestra, Erich Gruenberg, in a rare, complete recording of Stravinsky’s original version of the score, with a new translation of the narrative.
“Dorati’s sympathy and authority are everywhere to be noted. No one plays Gerhard’s larger scores better than he ... It deserves to arouse a lot of interest.” – Gramophone, December 1974
“One of a series of first-rate recordings of large-scale new music that Decca recorded with Dorati and his Washingtonians ... absolutely compelling ... Enthusiastically recommended.” – Fanfare, November 2006 (Gerhard)
“The Argo ensemble plays with greater bite [than the Boston recording on DG] and no less precision ... Erich Gruenberg a seductively saturnine fiddler.” – Gramophone, July 1977 (Stravinsky)
“Micheal Mac Liammoir as a marvellous crawling toad of a Devil and Nureyev in there somewhere, high accented, beset by his colleagues and seeming quite the ingenu.” – The Times, July 1977 (Stravinsky)
“Peggy Ashcroft is aptly characterful ... The composer keeps the music going as a subtle, quiet commentary in the background, and the effect is unique. The stereo is both atmospheric and immediate, and you can hear every word.” – Penguin Guide (Walton)
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