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June 1, 2006 The Reiner Sound Preserved
Reiner (1888-1963) did not quite fill out a full ten years as music director in Chicago, but what he achieved there was phenomenal. In reaching the capstone of his own career he brought the Chicago Symphony to such a level that it was regarded by many as the finest orchestra in the world. By way of illustration, one remembers the reopening of Viennas famous Opera House, in November 1955. The building had been destroyed toward the end of World War II more than ten years earlier, and it was rededicated in a month-long series of festival performances. The official announcements listed the conductors of the various operas pretty succinctly -- for Fidelio, "Conductor: Böhm"; for Aida, "Conductor: Kubelík"; for Der Rosenkavalier, "Conductor: Knappertsbusch" -- but for Die Meistersinger alone there was an exception: "This opera will be conducted by Dr. Fritz Reiner of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra." Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of the status thus implied was that the Chicagoans did not tour internationally under Reiner: the recognition was earned in very large part through their remarkable recordings. Fortunately for us, those recordings were numerous enough to show Reiner and his troops in a broad range of repertory, and, while they marked the very beginning of stereophonic recording for LP (Reiners first Chicago sessions were made toward the end of his first season there, in the spring of 1954), they were outstanding technically, and in their various reissues over the decades they have held their place as "demonstration class." Richard Mohr and Jack Pfeiffer, the famous producers who made those landmark recordings, are gone now. The company in its present form (the wildly unimaginable merger of what used to be RCA Victor and what used to be American Columbia!) has been bringing them back, a few at a time, in stunning new SACD editions. Perhaps the most telling factor in these revivals is that they are not merely reissues in the ordinary sense, but in each case have been made from the original master tapes. In a recent interview with Tully Potter, the editor of the British quarterly Classic Record Collector, John Newton (of Soundmirror), the engineer responsible for these SACD versions, pointed out that the master tapes had not been used for the earlier CD reissues, which "were made from stereo mixdowns from the 1960s and 1970s." Among other considerations, that meant, of course, that everything was limited to a two-channel format; now, however, most of the material on the hybrid SACDs is offered in the three-channel form in which it was actually recorded. The two-channel layer, too, as John Newton noted in that interview, "is completely new, from the original tapes."
...Richard Freed
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