THE FIRST BOX SET COMPRISING THE COMPLETE PHILIPS S OF
THE POWERFULLY INDIVIDUAL DUTCH CONDUCTOR PAUL VAN KEMPEN.
ORIGINAL JACKETS | NEW REMASTERING | LIMITED EDITION. Alongside
Willem Mengelberg and Bernard Haitink, Paul van Kempen is one of
three Dutch conductors who were regular and esteemed leaders of
both the Concertgebouworkest and the Berliner Philharmoniker,
live and on record. Van Kempen was an unabashed Romantic in
style, in the mould of Mengelberg but with his own approach, and
a sensitivity that made him a perfect foil to Wilhelm Kempff and
Wolfgang Schneiderhan on Deutsche Grammophon s of
Beethoven concertos for which he is best remembered. This new box
set from Eloquence, however, enables us to reassess Van Kempen as
a powerfully individual conductor in his own right. It mixes
repertoire classics with music off the beaten track, opera,
oratorio, light classics and symphonies, including several
s receiving their first-ever release on CD. In fact, his
discography was surprisingly extensive given his relatively brief
career. Born in 1893, he trained as a violinist and became a
member of the Concertgebouworkest under Mengelberg at the age of
just seventeen. In the 1930s he conducted orchestras across the
Netherlands and Germany, and in 1942 he took over from ert
von Karajan as music director of the opera house in Aachen. While
he made several prewar s for Telefunken and DG, however,
his career in the studio only took off after 1949, when he took
charge of the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, based in
Hilversum. The earliest here was made in July 1947
78rpms of two Wagner overtures with the La Scala Orchestra of
Milan. The remainder of the box dates from the first half of the
1950s Van Kempen died at the age of 62 in 1955 documenting his
fruitful relationships with the NRPO, Berlin Philharmonic and
Concertgebouw Orchestras , but also with ensembles farther
afield: overtures with the Lamoureux Orchestra in Paris and a
Verdi Requiem in Rome with the Santa Cecilia Orchestra and an
unusual cast of international soloists led by the superb Dutch
soprano Gré Brouwenstijn. Core repertoire includes a trio of
Beethoven symphonies made in Berlin (Nos. 3, 7 and 8), spaciously
conceived but marked by a driving pulse, as well as the
less-familiar Consecration of the House Overture which originally
appeared on a DG 10-inch EP curiously paired with Ferdinand
Leitner leading Bach's Third Brandenburg Concerto. Brouwenstijn
reappears in Italian operatic excerpts made for Philips with the
NRPO, but the real Hilversum rarity is the first of
Isaiah the Prophet, an opulent neo-Romantic oratorio written by
Alexander Tansman in 1950 to celebrate the creation of the Jewish
state of Israel. Van Kempen had a special feeling for the music
of Tchaikovsky, and the Concertgebouw s of the last two
symphonies can fairly be considered classics of the gramophone,
alongside the Romeo and Juliet, 1812 and Capriccio Italien. In
all of these, Van Kempen's vivid contrasts of tempo and sure
dramatic grip were much admired. In a perceptively-written
booklet essay, music historian Niek Nelissen's extended
appreciation of the conductor reveals how he was more respected
than liked by orchestras for his autocratic approach, but also
how his firm grip on an orchestra was an early inspiration for
Haitink. For all admirers of the art of conducting, the box will
be an invaluable acquisition. "Paul van Kempen
is a faded rose
in a few collectors' memories. By the evidence of this invaluable
reissue, however, more of us should be paying attention. Van
Kempen interprets the "Eroica" to match any recorded version I
know.' Fanfare, September 2015 (Beethoven) "Blistering
performances of all three works by Van Kempen and the famous
Concertgebouw, who whip up a veritable tempest of sound. At first
hearing it's almost overpowering." High Fidelity, March 1954
(Tchaikovsky) "A fine, fiery performance
The playing of the
orchestra is well up to their high reputation and, apart from a
few dry patches, the is excellent." Musical Times,
January 1955 (Beethoven, Symphony No. 3) "This is, perhaps, the
best performance of [Tchaikovsky's Fifth] symphony yet to appear
on LP. The Concertgebouw Orchestra plays with its customary
virtuosity and van Kempen is able to produce a performance of
great fire and verve." EMG Monthly Letter, September 1955 "The
work is of the highest interest and the performance is superb."
High Fidelity, March 1957 (Tansman) "Highly idiomatic and
entirely satisfying performances." Gramophone, May 1958 (Brahms,
Hungarian Dances "Finely played and spaciously recorded
an
introduction of great charm and spontaneity
an excellent
issue." Gramophone, September 1958 (Rossini: William Tell
Overture) *FIRST CD RELEASE ON DECCA