Robert Denzler – The Decca Recordings
Robert Denzler
Label
Decca
Catalogue No.
4840262
Barcode
00028948402625
Format
2-CD
About

Zurich-born and trained, the conductor Robert Denzler (1892–1972) found a summer home in Bayreuth as an assistant to the likes of Hans Richter and Karl Muck. He thus established his Wagnerian credentials early on, and from 1925 to 1931 he ran an annual Wagner Festival in Geneva in cooperation with L’Orchestre de la Suisse Romande. Later that decade he directed the premieres, in Zurich, of both Hindemith’s Mathis der Maler and Berg’s unfinished Lulu.

Following the final rehearsal of a Die Walküre staging in 1951 the city’s Grand Theatre was gutted by all-too-real fire, and Denzler directed the opera in concert at the Victoria Hall. One performance survives, revealing Denzler as an impulsive, incandescent Wagnerian in the mould of Artur Rodzinski: qualities which readily transfer themselves to the opulent Symphony by Ernst Chausson. This was the work’s first stereo recording, and both Denzler and the Decca engineers did it proud.

Too little of Denzler’s work is preserved on record, making this anthology of his complete Decca recordings all the more valuable. His work with the company began in May 1954 with sessions for a medium-play, 10-inch disc of two Berlioz overtures, well received for Denzler’s accomplished sense of theatre and clarity of direction. In June 1955 there followed the first recording of Honegger’s wartime symphony, the ‘Liturgique’. This was made with the Paris Conservatoire Orchestra, which was then going through a golden period, directed by the likes of Erich Kleiber and Carl Schuricht, and Denzler secures from them playing of no less power and authority.

The Chausson was recorded in Paris in May 1956, and Denzler’s slender Decca discography was brought to a fiery close with the Fourth Symphony of Tchaikovsky, recorded back in Geneva in October and November of 1960. With all their experience of recording the Suisse Romande under its founder-director Ernest Ansermet, the Decca engineers had made a home from home in the Victoria Hall, and Denzler’s reading makes for fascinating comparison with the Decca OSR account conducted by Ataulfo Argenta five years earlier: more rhythmically solid, more brass-heavy, hardly less rousing. The compilation is enhanced by a new appreciation of Denzler’s recorded legacy by Jonathan Summers. Original covers are pictured within the booklet.

TRACK LISTING / ARTISTS

CD 1      

ERNEST CHAUSSON (1855–1899)

1–3 Symphony in B flat major, Op. 20*                                                                   

ARTHUR HONEGGER (1892–1955)

4–6 Symphony No. 3 ‘Symphonie Liturgique’
7 Chant de joie

 

CD 2      

HECTOR BERLIOZ (1803–1869)

1 Benvenuto CelliniOverture*
2 Béatrice et BénédictOverture*

PIOTR ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY (1840–1893)

3–6 Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 36*                                                                 

Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire de Paris (Chausson, Honegger)
L’Orchestre de la Suisse Romande (Berlioz, Tchaikovsky)
Robert Denzler

*FIRST CD RELEASE ON DECCA

Track previews
Symphony in B Flat, Op. 20: 3. Animé - Très animé
Symphony No. 3 - "Liturgique": 1. "Dies Irae" - Allegro marcato
Symphony No. 3 - "Liturgique": 2. "De Profundis Clamavi" - Adagio
Symphony No. 3 - "Liturgique": 3. "Dona Nobis Pacem" - Andante
Chant de joie
Benvenuto Cellini: Ouverture
Overture Béatrice et Bénedict
Symphony No. 4 In F Minor, Op. 36, TH.27: 1. Andante sostenuto - Moderato con anima - Moderato assai, quasi Andante - Allegro vivo
Symphony No. 4 In F Minor, Op. 36, TH.27: 2. Andantino in modo di canzone
Symphony No. 4 In F Minor, Op. 36, TH.27: 3. Scherzo. Pizzicato ostinato - Allegro
Symphony No. 4 In F Minor, Op. 36, TH.27: 4. Finale. Allegro con fuoco
Symphony in B Flat, Op. 20: 1. Lent - Allegro vivo
Symphony in B Flat, Op. 20: 2. Très lent
Recording information

Recording Producers: James Walker (Honegger); John Culshaw (Chausson); James Walker (Berlioz); Michael Bremner, James Walker (Tchaikovsky)
Balance Engineers: Kenneth Wilkinson, Roy Wallace (Honegger, Chausson); Gil Went, Roy Wallace (Berlioz); Karl Brugger, Roy Wallace (Tchaikovsky)
Recording Locations: La Maison de la Mutualité, Paris, France, 15 & 16 June 1955 (Honegger: Symphony No. 3), 17 June 1955 (Honegger: Chant de joie), 14–16 May 1956 (Chausson); Victoria Hall, Geneva, Switzerland, May 1954 (Berlioz), October/November 1960 (Tchaikovsky)
Original Decca Releases: LXT 5118 (Honegger): February 1956; LXT 5244 (Chausson): August 1957; LW 5125 (Berlioz): September 1954; ACL 127 (Tchaikovsky): April 1961

Reviews

‘Berlioz would have liked this disc. Like his music, and his orchestration, it is brilliant and clear.’ Gramophone, November 1954 (Berlioz)

‘A record that must obviously be recommended to all Honegger enthusiasts.’ Gramophone, April 1956 (Honegger)

‘The slow movement is beautifully done.’ Musical Times, September 1956 (Honegger)

‘Throughout there is a richness and warmth in the playing that suits the late-romantic style of the music very well.’ Gramophone, September 1957 (Chausson)

‘Denzler’s approach is refreshingly direct and unaffected.’ Gramophone, June 1961 (Tchaikovsky)

‘A vigorous and straightforward account … the performance is unfussy and has conviction, while the stereo recording is remarkably good for its age.’ Gramophone, April 1972 (Chausson)