Friday 13 September 2013

Nuper doctus, saepe dolens

Pots on terrace at night, 28-Aug-13

Once again, as so often before, I must apologise for my long silence. I suspected that finishing and submitting my thesis and finally being awarded a PhD would not make me more efficient, dynamic, proactive etc. – and I was right! Since getting the degree in July I’ve done… very little. Except: buy more 78s, LPs and CDs, a new laptop, books and DVDs and, not least, unnecessary camera gear (I have bad GAS*) – unnecessary because, as you can see, it hasn’t improved my photography. Instead, I should be buying the audio equipment I need to transfer my 78s.

To give you an idea of my accumulation of stuff, here’s the subject of this post, posed in a corner of the clutter that has increasingly taken over the Cave during the last six and a half years:

Lachrimae in front room, 3-Sep-13

Dowland Lachrimae (1604)
Schola Cantorum Basiliensis Viola da Gamba Quintet:
August Wenzinger (treble viol)
Hannelore Müller, Marianne Majer (tenor viols)
Jan Crafoord, Johannes Koch (bass viols)
Eugen Müller-Dombois (lute) 
Deutsche Harmonia Mundi 1C 065-99 604
rec. date & location n/a, p.1962

This is one of the latest LPs which can scrape through Europe’s restrictive, regressive and rentier-minded revised copyright legislation. Although I wonder if it wasn’t recorded slightly earlier than the publication date stated on the sleeve: the grainy stereo sound gives off a whiff of the late 1950s which can’t be entirely due to my transcription. It’s from a much later, German Electrola pressing; the first issue was in France, on Harmonia Mundi HM30623 (mono only, I believe). The group certainly recorded one LP in France, in Paris in April 1958 (also, as far as I know, issued only in mono, on Erato LDE 3083, which I have and hope to transfer and share). On the other hand, this sleeve credits WDR’s Alfred Krings as producer, so maybe I’m talking rubbish. Still, if it was recorded in Germany, does anyone know why wasn’t it issued there (or in stereo) until 1978?

It’s less strange than regrettable that this LP has never been reissued on CD, since I reckon it was the first complete and ‘proper’ recording of that masterpiece of English consort music, Lachrimae. Earlier efforts were either incomplete (a pity, in the case of Dennis Nesbitt’s fine but slightly abridged disc, which I transferred and shared elsewhere some years ago) or monkeyed about with (much as I admire Thurston Dart, I still don’t understand why he recorded early consort music, including Lachrimae, using quasi-orchestral forces). Here, we have the ensemble which I find best suited to this music, a five-part viol consort with lute.

And not just any old ensemble: a group of true pioneers, whose director had been recording Baroque ensemble music on period instruments since the 1930s. August Wenzinger badly needs a biographer – shockingly, the SCB makes little of him on its website, though it does have a special room in its library named after him and his colleague Ina Lohr (what’s in it?). I was lucky enough to meet not only Wenzinger but also the wonderful Marianne Majer and Hannelore Müller, all three at the latter’s house outside Basle, not long before Wenzinger’s death in 1996 (I’m not sure if the others are still alive). I must write about that experience some other time, or you’ll never get through this post.

Now, while I respect and admire Wenzinger for his achievements and legacy, here his tuning and tone are occasionally a little off, to my ears; and, like many of his recorded performances, this might at first strike you as a little dry and uninvolved – Nesbitt’s recording was notably more expressive. Although Lachrimae is recorded complete, I would have liked all repeats. Still, there’s more than enough evidence here of the Swiss group’s deep love of and absorption in what is one of my favourite works of any genre, time or country. If you’d like to know more about Lachrimae – much more, about its content, context, prehistory and reception and everything else you can think of – you simply must read Peter Holman’s slim, superb monograph in the Cambridge Music Handbooks series.

Front room, 11-Aug-13

“You never know when it might come in handy…”

The more I listened to this neglected record, the more I enjoyed it. And I listened a lot – I nearly went mad cleaning up the LP. That’s the trouble with stereo, you see – not only does it not benefit from the magical noise-reduction effect of monoing, there are individual nasties on each groove wall, which have to be hunted down and dealt with separately (that is, if ClickRepair hasn’t already done it). This recording is also closely miked (unlike the swimmy ones DHM would soon make in the Cedar Hall of the Fugger family seat, Schloss Kirchheim), picking up frequent touches of bows and fingers on strings – which are often hard to tell from vinyl clicks and pops. The close perspective doesn’t do the playing style many favours, either, helping the fairly constant vibrato to muddy the sound. Other problems remain, such as occasional slight drop-outs (not surprising, since this LP was mastered from a 20-year old tape) and audible edits.

This post has also taken me much longer than usual because I had serious problems uploading the files to my storage site. I’ve had a free account there since 2008 and rarely had any trouble uploading my transfers. But when I tried to upload this a couple of weeks ago, absolutely nothing worked. The site’s opaque and misleading error messages made me think its policies had changed and I needed to start paying – so I did (there was a special offer). Well, whad’ya know? Still couldn’t upload anything, not even the smallest image or a message to Customer Support.

After a long call to the US (friendly enough, despite the standard
‘Switch everything off and on again’), it dawned on me that my ISP is to blame. Grumpy emails are often labelled as luncheon meat by other ISPs’ servers, if not bounced back, since my company is apparently black-listed as hosting real purveyors of such viands. Which? recently reported that it enjoys a ‘Customer score’ of 47%. And my upload speed? 0.5 Mbps, which amazed my Customer Support person. Sure enough, when I went to a fellow-collector’s cave, I was able to upload the files via his internet connection without a problem. I’ll be switching soon. Ideally, I’d like to switch countries - notoriously, Britain’s broadband provision is among the worst in Europe, never mind everything else that’s wrong with it.

Anyway, download the 21 stereo, fully-tagged FLAC files, in 2 .rar archives, from here and here.

Broken vase in front room, 13-Sep-13

Fools are everywhere…

*GAS = Gear Acquisition Syndrome

18 comments:

  1. Good to see you back in the groove Doc

    Jols

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    1. Too kind! Very best wishes, G

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    2. By the way, have you clocked that Blogger can't tell the time?

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  2. Nice to see you back!

    Neal (wondering when I'll be "back"!)

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    1. Thanks, Neal - great to hear from you! No hurry, take your time - you've already done more than most of us. Are you coming over at any point? Very best wishes, G

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  3. Excellent, I look forward to listening to this! Never seen one in my neck of the woods. I think we have found our Wenzinger biography, by the way, thank you very much Mr Dr.! Now get to work, I can't wait to read it! :)

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  4. err that was supposed to read "biographer"...

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  5. You're too kind! But how will I do my epoch-making discography? By the way, I gather this was issued in the USA, on RCA Victrola - and, in fact, I've just found that someone posted a transfer of it online a year ago! Best wishes, G

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  6. Ah yes, I see it too -- perhaps the inconsistency was that the Harmonia Mundi and RCA issues were crediting the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis rather than Wenzinger et al.

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  7. Welcome back, dear Nick.
    I missed you.

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    1. Thank you, that's very kind! I see we share a love of Winsor McCay... I've missed posting here - and I'm frustrated, as I'm still unable to upload files to MediaFire. I have a very nice LP lined up and ready to go and more which I can't wait to share! Best wishes, G

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  8. I only use services free of charge for up- and downloads, like Filepost, Hotfile, Putlocker, Rapidgator, Mediafire (for free too!).

    I dropped depositfiles (troubles when uploading) and embedupload (troubles when downloading).

    What do you think?

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    1. I must admit, I really don't know. I've only ever used MediaFire for uploading; until now I used the free version but that had stopped working. Most free sites are plagued by pop-ups and malware and I'd rather not expose my kind followers to those! I'm hoping my problem will end when I switch ISP. Best wishes, G

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  9. It is good to read your updated blog.Many thanks for the Dowland. Your edition reveals far more detail than I ever heard from my somewhat battered lp! Listening again -after a long time -confirms confirms my view that fashions in what is allegedly considered"authentic" at the moment can limit one's appreciation of the music.

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    1. Thank you for your kind comment! I'm glad you enjoyed revisiting this old favourite. One of my aims is to help music-lovers hear recordings which are out of fashion! I'm only sorry not to post more - the Cave has become almost too cluttered for me to do anything constructive. I hope that, in a few months, I will have got on top of things. Best wishes, G

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  10. thanks for taking the trouble to share this lovely slab of vinyl

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  11. Many, many thanks for the Lachrimae. I don't think it's possible to have too many recordings of Dowland. Thanks also for keeping the files available for all these years.

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    1. Thank you for your very kind comment! I'm glad you enjoyed this Lachrimae. Yes, an abundance of Dowland more necessary than ever 'his dolendis temporibus'... All the very best, G

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