“Rimsky-Korsakov - what a name! It suggests whiskers stained with vodka!”
-Musical Courier, New York, 27 October 1897
Welcome back readers to Building a Classical Music Collection, and our survey of the top 50 classical recordings of all-time. Entering the count at #31 is a recording of Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade in a famous (some say infamous) account from 1964 performed by Leopold Stokowski conducting the London Symphony Orchestra on the Decca Phase 4 Stereo label.
Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade, also commonly spelled Sheherazade, is one of the most beloved and enduring classical works of all-time. In this, Leopold Stokowski, in his 1964 recording of the work (which he recorded at least five times), puts down his best version.
The Composer
Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov was born in March 1844 in Tikhvin, Russia and died in June 1908 in Lyubensk, Russia. A brilliant orchestrator with a talent for creating colors in his music, Rimsky-Korsakov left behind operas, chamber works, songs, orchestral works, and symphonies. Far and away his most popular works are the symphonic suite Scheherazade, the Capriccio Espagnol, and the Russian Easter Overture. Rimsky-Korsakov was also a member of “The Five”, a group of select Russian composers contemporary with each other. The other members of The Five were Mily Balakirev (the leader), Cesar Cui, Modest Mussorgsky, and Alexander Borodin. They all collaborated in St. Petersburg between the years 1856 and 1870.
Although Rimsky-Korsakov studied the piano as a young man, he chose to enter the College of Naval Cadets in St. Petersburg in 1856. All the while he continued piano lessons, and eventually met the composer Balakirev, who would become a mentor and friend. After graduating from the naval school in 1862, Rimsky-Korsakov was at sea for over two years. During that time he devoted his free time to composing. In 1865, his friend Balakirev conducted Rimsky-Korsakov’s First Symphony, which was well received and hailed as the most important Russian symphonic work to date.
By 1871, Rimsky-Korsakov had been appointed professor of composition and orchestration at the St. Petersburg Conservatory. During the next decade, he would compose, conduct, and collect Russian folk songs. Rimsky-Korsakov would focus much of his composition on operas, particularly some with fantastical or mythological themes. The death of Mussorgsky in 1881 saddened Rimsky-Korsakov greatly, and he spent a great deal of time editing his friend’s unpublished manuscripts. A master orchestrator, Rimsky-Korsakov became well-known for editing unfinished music by other composers, and in 1887 when Borodin died, he agreed to orchestrate and complete Borodin’s famous opera Prince Igor.
In 1887 Rimsky-Korsakov wrote the Capriccio Espagnol and finished the Russian Easter Overture and Scheherazade the following year. After achieving great success with these works, Rimsky-Korsakov experienced a period of depression and despondency shortly after with the deaths of members of his family and the death of Tchaikovsky in 1893. Rimsky-Korsakov’s progressive political leanings would later lead to him being dismissed from his teaching post. Undeterred, he went on to compose his last opera The Golden Cockerel in 1907, inspired by a politically subversive story by Pushkin. The subject matter definitely raised suspicions by the government censors, but it was finally produced in 1909 after Rimsky-Korsakov’s death.
Scheherazade, symphonic suite, Op. 35
One of Rimsky-Korsakov’s signature compositional characteristics is his imaginative display of orchestral color. The finest example of this is his symphonic suite Scheherazade from 1888. Rimsky-Korsakov’s most popular work, Scheherazade uses beautiful melodies against a backdrop of vast yet brilliant orchestral colors.
Based on the famous collection of Middle Eastern prose and folk tales One Thousand and One Nights or also in English The Arabian Nights, the conception of the work is due to the significant influence of the East in Imperial Russian, as well as a wide interest in Orientalism in general. “Scheherazade” refers to the main character Scheherazade from One Thousand and One Nights, and in the suite is represented by the first violin part, a very important aspect of the piece.
Rimsky-Korsakov’s own headnote explains the scenario: “The Sultan Schahriar, persuaded of the falseness and faithlessness of women, has sworn to put to death each one of his wives after the first night. But the Sultana Scheherazade saved her life by interesting him in tales she told him during 1,001 nights. Pricked by curiosity, the Sultan put off his wife’s execution from day to day, and at last gave up entirely his bloody plan.” The symphonic suite that follows depicts four such lifesaving narratives, set to music.
The composer deliberately made the titles vague so that they are not associated with specific tales or voyages of Sinbad. In a later edition, Rimsky-Korsakov did away with titles altogether, desiring instead that the listener should hear his work only as an Oriental-themed symphonic music that evokes a sense of the fairy-tale adventure, stating:
“All I desired was that the hearer, if he liked my piece as symphonic music, should carry away the impression that it is beyond a doubt an Oriental narrative of some numerous and varied fairy-tale wonders and not merely four pieces played one after the other and composed on the basis of themes common to all the four movements.”
He went on to say that he kept the name Scheherazade because it brought to everyone’s mind the fairy-tale wonders of Arabian Nights and the East in general. Even so, the titles he used originally for each section have remained, and it may be relevant to describe some details from the original conception as related in the All Music Guide:
I. The Sea and Sinbad’s Ship - opens with growling chords that represent the Sultan, followed by the sinuous solo violin melody that depicts Scheherazade weaving her tales. Scheherazade recedes, and a swaying melody enters on the strings, swelling like the sea. Brass accents occasionally cause the sea to crash and storm, and sweetly scored interludes suggest island dalliances, but the movement ends with a quiet depiction of what must be calm seas and steady wind.
II. The Story of the Kalender Prince - concerns a prince who disguises himself as a beggar and searches for wisdom. His melancholy theme first appears in solo woodwinds, then enters the strings and quickens as the Prince sets out on his journey. Rimsky-Korsakov suggested that “one might see a fight” when a martial variant of the Sultan’s theme enters, surrounded by nervous string oscillations, while a later section with fluttering woodwinds and pizzicato string chords suggests “Sinbad’s might bird, the Roc.”
III. The Prince and the Princess - explores an unnamed Eastern palace; the Prince appears as a sensual, langorous string theme, the Princess as a relaxed arc of flute melody.
IV. Festival at Baghdad. The Sea. The Ship Breaks against a Cliff Surmounted by a Bronze Horseman - Sultan is in an irascible mood, and Scheherazade tries to appease him by describing the restless energy of the festival at Baghdad. From there, the action moves out to sea, where the weather has worsened. Brass cry out, winds sweep up and down, and the music grows to a massive climax topped by a frightening bitonal crash depicting the ship striking rocks and sinking. The storm subsides, and finally the themes of Scheherazade and the Sultan mingle, with Scheherazade’s violin playing its highest harmonies.
Scheherazade, in the form of the orchestra’s first violin playing her theme which returns throughout the work, is incredibly important to the feeling and mood of the piece.
Leopold Stokowski and the Recording
One of the most famous conductors of all-time, Leopold Stokowski was born in 1882 in London, England and died in 1977 in Nether Wallop, Hampshire, England. His father was Polish, his mother Irish, and he was raised as an Englishman. Later in his life he would develop a vaguely foreign accent, widely believed to be something he affected purposely in order to sound more exotic.
As a youth, Stokowski was a precocious musical talent, playing the violin, piano, and organ with little effort. He was admitted to the Royal College of Music at the age of 13, the youngest student ever admitted at the time. By 18, Stokowski had been appointed organist and choirmaster at St. James’ Piccadilly. He then attended Queen’s College, Oxford receiving a Bachelor of Music degree in 1903. He moved to the United States in 1905, but would return to Europe for further musical studies each summer in Berlin, Munich, and Paris. He made his conducting debut as an emergency substitute in 1908 when another conductor fell ill, and he made such an impression he earned an appointment as the conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. He quickly achieved a lot of success there, but was soon lured away to become the director of the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1912. Stokowski then began what was to be a long and fruitful relationship with the Philadelphians which would establish him as one of the leading musicians of his day.
In Philadelphia, Stokowski would very much mold the orchestra into his own instrument and he developed what would become known as the “Philadelphia Sound” or the “Stokowski Sound”, characterized by a luxuriant and velvety string tone and detailed attention to color. Stokowski pioneered the use of “free” bowing, which resulted in a rich homogenized string tone. He also became known for experimentation with orchestral seating, and especially for his use of spotlighting upon his own hands (Stokowski was one of the first conductors to give up using a baton, and his hand gestures were almost hypnotic) and his large head of hair to emphasize the theatrical aspect of performance. You will recognize Stokowski from his famous appearance as the leader of the Philadelphia Orchestra in Walt Disney’s classic animation film Fantasia from 1940. His famous conducting gestures from Dukas’ The Sorcerer’s Apprentice from the film are iconic. Stokowski was also the inspiration for the Looney Tunes’ conductor in The Rabbit of Seville starring Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd.
Later he would become obsessed with recordings and recorded sound, and often experimented with new technologies and microphone placements to enhance sound. Stokowski was one of the pioneers for the use of a recording process in the U.K. that came to be known as Phase 4 Stereo by Decca Records beginning in 1961. Over two hundred albums in Phase 4 were released, including several conducted by Stokowski. One of the features Stokowski liked was the “multi-miking” approach, which used many more microphones than usual strategically placed for maximum sound capture and effect. We will return to this point shortly regarding the recording at hand.
Stokowski would go on to have a long and successful career following his time in Philadelphia, directing the NBC Symphony Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, the Houston Symphony Orchestra, the Symphony of the Air, and the American Symphony Orchestra which he founded in 1962. He made many guest appearances and recordings, most notably with the London Symphony Orchestra and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Stokowski would continue conducting and recording well into his nineties.
Critics of Stokowski complained that he was a charlatan and a showman with little substance. His affected accent and gestures led many to surmise that his musical education was lacking, that he was disliked by other musicians, that he was an over the top eccentric, that the sound he produced was artificial, or that he was only interested in himself. None of those criticisms were true, and there has been quite a lot of reassessment of Stokowski since his death that has resulted in an increased appreciation for his talent, innovation, and legacy.
Like many of our top 50 pieces, there are many fine recordings of Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade. But Stokowski clearly loved the work, recording it at least five times commercially. Furthermore, he seemed to understand the dreamy and fantastical nature of the music better than most. For me, he recorded two Scheherazades that compete against each other for the best version available, but the one that rises to the top is his 1964 recording with the London Symphony Orchestra, recorded in Decca Phase 4 Stereo in London. The sound is bold, immediate, and spectacular for its time. The Phase 4 20-channel system with wide microphone placement obtains what is without a doubt truly stunning sound. Like Stokowski himself, the sonics are exciting and flamboyant.
Fair warning, not everyone will enjoy the “enhanced” sound on this recording because it is not as natural or as balanced as other versions. I love the immediacy and the “juiced” sound, but there are moments of garishness and a few times you can hear the sound “overload” in the form of static feedback at high dynamic ranges. The sound can be overbearing in spots, so take it easy on your ears.
But the sound is only one factor in this recording’s placement in our top 50. The performance is also the best ever in my estimation. Leading the way is the violinist Erich Gruenberg of the LSO (who incidentally would record Scheherazade other times with the LSO and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, most notably in Stokowski’s other contender from 1975 on RCA/Sony). Gruenberg is simply THE finest Scheherazade on record (if anything he is even finer on Stokowski’s later recording) and here he plays sensitively and seductively. Gruenberg is matched by the rest of the orchestra in its passion and energy, something that is a bit lacking in the 1975 recording. This is a vital performance, bringing out all the color from every section, and each movement has moments of brilliance. It is the vision of Stokowski that brings out the best in this work. The cellos, brass, woodwinds, and percussion practically jump out at you. That is not to say there isn’t subtleness, indeed the phrasing and rubati are admirable, as well as Stokowski’s feel for lyricism. The strings are luminous and gorgeous, the brass are clear and thrilling. Stokowski was surely an “idiosyncratic” conductor, and he even encouraged this in his players, but in this recording it adds up to a powerful and evocative reading with bright sound to match. If you prefer your listening experience to be calmer and more relaxed, you may want to look elsewhere. But in terms of visceral excitement and spectacular sound, this Scheherazade cannot be beat.
I was able to find this recording to stream on Spotify reissued on the Urania label with this cover art:
Other recommended recordings:
The aforementioned classic recording with Leopold Stokowski leading the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra from 1975 on RCA/Sony. The 91 year-old Stokowski leads a beautiful Scheherazade with sublime solo playing from Erich Gruenberg. While not as exciting as the 1964 recording above, some prefer this recording for its more natural sound and balance, still with plenty of Stokowski touches. It should also be noted that this recording is paired with a fantastic Russian Easter Overture from a Stokowski visit with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, a really brilliant performance.
Igor Markevitch conducting the London Symphony Orchestra from 1962, originally on Philips and now reissued on Decca Eloquence and also in a new Markevitch boxed set. Once again Erich Gruenberg plays brilliantly on solo violin, and Markevitch has a special affinity for this piece that captures the eastern flavor more than most.
Fritz Reiner and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra on RCA Living Stereo from 1960. Long admired by listeners and critics, this recording took advantage of the Living Stereo recording techniques to maximum effect. Reiner brings out the idiomatic feeling from his Chicagoans, and with shimmering sound, and sensuous playing, this remains one of the greatest Scheherazades on record.
Kirill Kondrashin conducting the Concertgebouw Orchestra from Amsterdam, recorded by Philips in 1979 with Herman Krebbers adding the beautiful violin parts. Excellent warm sound, with Kondrashin an expert guide. The individual instruments are also caught very well, and Kondrashin never lets the proceedings drag. A very solid choice.
Sir Thomas Beecham leading the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, recorded in 1958 by EMI (now Warner). Another classic account, for many listeners over the years this has been their preferred version. Beecham draws committed playing from his orchestra, and the sound is exceptional for its time. Perhaps not quite as idiomatic as some, but quite enjoyable nonetheless.
Happy Labor Day to all, and have a good week!
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Notes:
Abraham, Gerald, ed. (1990). The New Oxford History of Music, Volume IX, Romanticism (1830–1890). Oxford University Press. pp. 508, 560–62. ISBN 0-19-316309-8.
Brennan, Gerald. Malone Lindemann, Andrew. Minderovic, Zoran. Schrott, Allen. Woodstra, Chris. All Music Guide to Classical Music, The Definitive Guide. All Media Guide. Pp. 1100, 1102, 1311. Backbeat Books, San Francisco. 2005.
Lieberson, Goddard (1947). Goddard Lieberson (ed.). The Columbia Book of Musical Masterworks. New York: Allen, Towne & Heath. p. 377.
Mason, Daniel Gregory (1918). The Appreciation of Music, Vol. III: Short Studies of Great Masterpieces. New York: H.W. Gray Co. p. 35. Retrieved 2008-11-02.
Rimsky-Korsakov, Nikolay Andreyevich (1942). My Musical Life. translated by Judah A. Joffe (3rd edition). Alfred A. Knopf.
http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2003/nov03/Scheherazade_Stokowski.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikolai_Rimsky-Korsakov
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scheherazade_(Rimsky-Korsakov)