Bursting onto the scene with a sensational two-year run at the Savoy Theatre (672 performances commencing on 14 March 1885), it was not long before ‘The Mikado’ was playing around the world in myriad different productions and translations – and it continues to be greeted with unparalleled global enthusiasm today.
This October 1957 recording of the opera, marked the start of a new and, for many collectors’ ‘golden’, era for the D’Oyly Carte company on record. Made only seven years after a very fine post-war LP set, this remake benefits from remarkably present stereo sound. The orchestral playing is of an appreciably higher standard than in the previous version and, following a major changing of the guard with company principals in the mid-1950s, the set features a strong array of soloists.
Performed 300 times in its first two years, ‘Trial by Jury’ was an acclaimed success that cemented the symbiotic relationship between composer and librettist. This 1974 recording, part of the D’Oyly Carte’s last cycle of Savoy Operas for Decca, was released the following year in a busy season celebrating the centenary of the work’s first performance and the foundation of the company. As with its 1963 predecessor, most of the principal roles in this ‘Trial’ recording are taken by the company’s leading lights – notably star patter-man John Reed, on sparkling form as the Judge – rather than the artists who routinely played them on stage.
ARTHUR SULLIVAN
GILBERT SCHWENCK GILBERT
The Mikado
The Mikado: Donald Adams
Nanki-Poo: Thomas Round
Ko-Ko: Peter Pratt
Pooh-Bah: Kenneth Sandford
Pish-Tush: Alan Styler
Yum-Yum: Jean Hindmarsh
Pitti-Sing: Beryl Dixon
Peep-Bo: Jennifer Toye
Katisha: Ann Drummond-Grant
D’Oyly Carte Opera Company
New Symphony Orchestra of London
Isidore Godfrey
Trial by Jury
The Plaintiff: Julia Goss
The Defendant: Colin Wright
Counsel for the Plaintif: Michael Rayner
The Learned Judge: John Reed
Usher: Kenneth Sandford
Foreman of the Jury: John Ayldon
D’Oyly Carte Opera Company
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Royston Nash
FIRST RELEASE ON DECCA CD
Recording Producers: Michael Williamson (The Mikado); Ray Horricks (Trial by Jury)
Balance Engineers: Kenneth Wilkinson, Alan Reeve (The Mikado); Martin Smith (Trial by Jury)
Recording Locations: Kingsway Hall, London, UK, 14–19 October 1957 (The Mikado); Decca Studio 3, West Hampstead, London, UK, 3, 4 & 6 June 1974 (Trial by Jury)
‘The new Decca set will hold its own for its authenticity among real lovers of Gilbert and Sullivan’ (The Mikado) Gramophone
‘The new recording … maintains expected high standards’ (Trial by Jury) Gramophone