Genre: Classical
Label: Horch House
Additional Artists: Igor Markevitch

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Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition - Night on Bald Mountain Master Quality Reel To Reel Tape (2 Reels)

Gewandhausorchester Leipzig

$549.99
 
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SKU:
HHRR100227
UPC:
HHRR100227
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Modest P. Musorgsky (1839–1881) wrote Pictures at an Exhibition for piano in 1874, inspired by an exhibition that was arranged to commemorate the painter and architect Viktor Hartmann, who had been a close friend of Musorgsky for several years. Musorgsky was devastated when the painter suddenly died of a heart condition in the summer of 1873. "Such grief!" he wrote in a letter. "Oh unfortunate Russian art! This silly fool, death, mows everything down without even asking whether or not his wretched visit is desired. If only talents could at least grow like mushrooms!" The critic Vladimir Stasov organised an exhibition of Hartmann's watercolours and drawings, which Musorgsky attended with a heavy heart. The pictures made a profound impression on him and inspired him to write a series of ten pieces, introduced and linked together by the recurring interlude of the Promenade.

In mid-1874 Musorgsky wrote in a letter to Stasov: "Wednesday, some date in June 1874... I am working at full steam on the 'Pictures', just as I once did on 'Boris'; sounds and ideas hang in the air; I am devouring them with a ravenous appetite and barely have time to scribble them on paper. I am writing the fourth number – the transitions are good (thanks to the 'promenades'). I want to bring the whole work to completion as soon and as aptly as possible. My physiognomy can be seen in the interludes..." The suite brilliantly captures the musician walking between the pictures, observing them and transmuting them into sound, melody, harmony and rhythm. The Promenade, with its irregular metre (changing between 5/4 and 6/4 time) and decidedly Russian intonation, undergoes surprising modification and colouration so as to suit each of the images it connects. The result is ten different character pieces, or "pictures in sound", that pass by in succession:

1. Gnomus: this picture shows a gnome who clumsily scampers about on deformed legs.

2. Il vecchio castello: a troubadour sings his song in front of a mediaeval Italian castle.

3. Tuileries: children at play squabble on one of the avenues of the Tuileries Garden in Paris.

4. Bydlo: a ponderous Polish ox cart gradually rattles along on its monotonously rolling wheels.

5. Ballet of the unhatched chicks: this piece is based on a drawing by Hartmann portraying the hatching of chicks.

6. Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuyle: this scene depicts a discussion between a poor and a rich Jew.

7. Market place at Limoges: amidst the whirring activity at the market in Limoges, this piece brings out the chatter and quarrelling of market women.

8. Catacombae: in this picture Hartmann had portrayed himself exploring the Paris catacombs by lantern light. Musorgsky noted the following in the manuscript: "The creative spirit of the departed Hartmann leads me to the skulls and calls to them, and the skulls start to glow softly from within."

9. The Hut of Baba Yaga: a clock designed in the form of a hut on chicken legs, representing the izbushka belonging to the dreaded witch of Russian folklore. Musorgsky incorporates the witch's frenzied flight in a mortar into his music.

10. The Great Gate of Kiev: this drawing by Hartmann shows his design for a gateway leading into the city of Kiev. The gateway appears in the grand, ancient Russian style, with a cupola shaped like a Slavonic helmet.

The unique character of Pictures at an Exhibition is predominantly defined by the sharpness of Musorgsky's piano-writing. That said, its vividness has frequently prompted reputable musicians to rearrange the pieces for other instruments. The orchestral version written by the French composer Maurice Ravel in 1922 on a commission from the conductor Sergei Alexandrovich Koussevitzky has attained international renown. Ravel carried out his task with ingenious intuition: the arrangement bears spectacularly colourful testimony to his highly acclaimed part-writing skills.

Night on Bald Mountain is a "fantasy for orchestra" written by Musorgsky between 1860 and 1867. He called it "a genuinely Russian work that burst forth from our native fields and was nurtured on Russian bread." After revising the score several times, he initially planned to incorporate it into a scene of the (eventually aborted) opera-ballet Mlada in 1872, but ultimately used it as a stage interlude for his comic opera Sorochinskaya yarmarka (Sorochintsy fair). The final arrangement of Night on Bald Mountain was done by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov in 1886, after Musorgsky's death.

The programme notes pertaining to the work run as follows: "Subterranean sounds of unearthly voices. – Appearance of the spirits of darkness, followed by Chernobog (the "black god"). – Glorification of Chernobog and celebration of the black mass. – Witches' sabbath. – At the height of the orgy, the bell of the little village church is heard from afar. The spirits of darkness are dispersed. – Daybreak." The Lysa Hora (barren mount) is a large wooded hill on the outskirts of Kiev and is said to be the site of "bald mountain", the place where, according to legend, witches and evil spirits gather at night.

Wolfgang Börner (original LP sleeve notes, 1974)
Translation: J & M Berridge

Repertoire classic stripped of its patina

Igor Markevitch enjoys a legendary reputation. He was successful both as a conductor of leading orchestras and as a composer and (university) lecturer. His pupils include Daniel Barenboim, Herbert Blomstedt and Wolfgang Sawallisch. In his autobiography Die Musikmein Leben (music, my life) Barenboim recalls that Igor Markevitch had taught him "a personal, highly individual style of conducting". In his Salzburg course he was "completely preoccupied with the clarity of the sound, the clarity of the rhythm and the clarity of the gesture".

In many ways it was these characteristics that Markevitch introduced to the collective consciousness of the orphaned late-60s Gewandhaus orchestra. 1968 had seen Václav Neumann resign his position as conductor in protest at the suppression of the "Prague Spring" and its echo in the publications of East Germany's ruling Socialist Unity Party. Despite his short term of office, Neumann was able to advance from the Konwitschny era with a new approach to programming and a new style – by means of new or additional core repertoire and a leaner, more highly articulated sound. Markevitch was the ideal person to continue this task. The extent to which the Gewandhaus orchestra valued his qualities is evident from the monograph by former principal dramaturg Fritz Hennenberg. Apart from the honour of a half-page photo, granted in this little book of 1984 to very few conductors, Hennenberg draws the following conclusion: "The concerts of the 1968/69 and 1969/70 seasons were assigned to guest conductors. Deep artistic insights were gained from the encounters with Igor Markevitch and the soloist and conductor David Oistrakh."

Markevitch laid down his understanding of maintaining tradition through renewal with his 1973 ETERNA recording of a work that is one of the world's best known: Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition in Maurice Ravel's orchestration. Ravel's version has clearly acquired more of a patina than the original piano version written half a century earlier, as even a first hearing of Markevitch's recording proves. His interpretation suggest an imagined reorchestration of Mussorgsky's work – rough and angular rather than polished and elegant. The recording venue favoured his aesthetic preferences. The acoustics of the Versöhnungskirche in the Leipzig suburb of Gohlis permit a striking clarity and directness of sound, whereas the conditions in other, mostly older churches often lead to a blurring and darkening of the orchestral timbres. Built in the style of the New Objectivity in 1932, the church at the edge of the inter-war housing development in north Gohlis offered the ideal recording venue for the (first) Mendelssohn and Schumann cycles by the new Gewandhaus conductor Kurt Masur. Ravel's classical favourite after Mussorgsky's original did not find favour with Masur, however. He preferred Sergey Gorchakov's 1955 version for its closeness to Mussorgsky's specific tonal language and recorded it with the Gewandhaus orchestra two decades after Markevitch. Masur's choice of Gorchakov was entirely in character. The director of the Gewandhaus archive, Claudius Böhm, was able to report in 1998 in his foreword to the opening season by Masur's successor Herbert Blomstedt that for the first time for 25 years – since Markevitch's time – Ravel's brilliant orchestration of the Pictures would be heard.

One witness to that period in the orchestra's history is solo cellist Jürnjakob Timm, a full member of the Gewandhaus orchestra since 1973 and a stand-in even earlier. Looking back he spontaneously recalls Markevitch's "very good conducting technique" as "an impressive experience". It was "through sheer ability" (and not as a tyrant of the rostrum) that the conductor had communicated his concepts to the orchestra. His way of working had been a sound compromise between the extremes of rehearsal fetishist and Abenddirigent (a conductor who rises to the occasion in the actual performance). After a thorough rehearsal of the work to be played, "making music with him was highly intensive on the night".

Dirk Stöve
Translation: Janet and Michael Berridge

WHAT EXACTLY IS AN 'ORIGINAL MASTER TAPE'?
Good question. The term is sometimes misused or misinterpreted, so it's worth getting clear on what's what. When an album is recorded, whether in the studio or on stage, it will either be a multi-track recording using several microphones and/or different sessions to record each individual element separately (instruments, vocals), or a live or semi-live recording in which one or several microphones capture the performance as a whole. The recording engineers will then bring the various elements together, editing and mixing them to achieve the desired sound and to remove unwanted noise, culminating in the album's first final arrangement. This is the original studio master tape, of which there will be not just one, but several: each of these is considered an 'original master'.

This original master is then used as the 'blueprint' for all subsequent copies, pressings, remasterings, etc. But of course with each subsequent treatment, something of the original information and hence sound quality is lost. Which is why nothing sounds quite like the original studio master tape. It's the original source of the album in its completed state.

DOES HORCH HOUSE DO ANY KIND OF REMASTERING DURING THE COPYING PROCESS?
Absolutely not! Why mess with the best? The whole point of what they do lies in capturing the magic of the original analogue master tape in its purest, most faithful form possible.

'Remastering' can be compared to using computer software to edit an original photograph. The benefits are that you can remove unwanted marks or noise, clean things up, remove distortion and boost clarity. The downside is that in doing so, you often lose the natural essence of the original and the result can seem rather synthetic, lacking in real life character.

The unfortunate fact is that tapes, like photographs, do tend to age over time, and most analogue masters are now between 30-80+ years old.

So Horch House undertake a painstaking 'soft refurbishing' process, which is key to recapturing the original quality of a master tape.

CAPTURING THE MAGIC OF MASTER TAPE
How exactly does Horch House translate an original analogue master tape into faithful copies on reel-to-reel tape and vinyl records?

They use a process that's been meticulously researched and developed by their expert team of sound engineers, with input from some of the world's leading specialists.

The first step is to carefully assess the sound quality of the original master tape, which their experts do in great detail. The unfortunate fact is that tapes do tend to age over time, and most analogue masters are now between 30-80+ years old. What they're looking to do, therefore, as an integral part of their copying process, is to restore the sound quality back to its original level. They want you to hear exactly what the first sound engineers heard (and indeed the musicians themselves), on the day that the original recording was made. This is in stark contrast to any kind of 'remastering', which they most definitely do not do! They're not looking to 'improve' the recording in any way, but rather to return it as closely as possible to its full original beauty.

They call this their 'soft refurbishing' process.

HOW CLOSE ARE HORCH HOUSE COPIES TO THE ORIGINAL MASTER TAPES?
Horch House believe that they're as close as it's possible to get - not simply to the master tape in its current condition, but to that master tape's original condition. Thanks to their detailed 'soft refurbishing' process, their master tape copies could, in a sense, now be considered as better than the current originals because they've been lovingly restored to deliver the same sound quality that the originals had on the day they were first recorded.

WHAT ABOUT COPYRIGHT? ARE MASTER TAPE COPIES LEGAL?
All Horch House master tape copies are fully authorized, licensed and approved by the relevant record label/music publisher.

** It is standard practice in all recording studios to keep the tape "tail out". This reduces "pre-echo" and it means that the tape should be placed on the right hand side of the recorder, re-wound and then played.

Features

  • Studio Master Copy
  • 2-Reel Tape
  • Tape Material: RTM SM900
  • Recording Speed: 15 IPS-38cm/sec-510 nWb/m
  • Equalization: CCIR
  • Width & Tracks: 1/4" - 2 Track
  • Reels: Metal - 10.5" - 26,5 cm
  • Production on Studer machines refurbished to factory specification
  • Handmade
  • Fully authorized, licensed & approved by the record label/music publisher
  • Horch House Deluxe Packaging

Musicians

Gewandhausorchester Leipzig
Igor Markevitch conductor

Selections

Modest P. Mussorgsky (1839-1881)

Pictures at an Exhibition
  1. Promenade
  2. Gnomus
  3. Promenade
  4. Das Alte Schloß
  5. Promenade
  6. Tuileries
  7. Bydlo
  8. Promenade
  9. Ballett Der Küchlein In Ihren Eierschalen
  10. Samuel Goldenberg Und Schmuyle
  11. Der Marktplatz Von Limoges
  12. Catacombae (Sepulchrum Romanum) Con Mortuis In Lingua Mortua
  13. Die Hütte Der Baba-Jaga
  14. Das Große Tor Von Kiew
Night on Bald Mountain

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