Pierre Monteux discography

Monteux circa 1912

The conductor Pierre Monteux made a large number of recordings throughout his career. His first recording was as a violist in "Plus blanche que la blanche hermine" from Les Huguenots by Meyerbeer in 1903 for Pathé with the tenor Albert Vaguet.[1] His first recording as a conductor was the first of his five recordings of Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring.[2] His last studio recordings were with the London Symphony Orchestra in works by Ravel at Wembley Town Hall at the end of February 1964.[3] He recorded works by more than fifty composers.[4] However, he disliked recording, saying of studio sessions,

You may give an excellently played, genuinely felt performance of a movement, but because the engineer is not satisfied because there is some rustling at one point, so you do it again and this time something else goes wrong. By the time you get a "perfect" take of the recording the players are bored, the conductor is bored, and the performance is lifeless and boring. … I detest all my own records.[5]

In Monteux's lifetime it was rare for record companies to issue recordings of live concerts, although Monteux would much have preferred it, he said, "if one could record in one take in normal concert-hall conditions".[5] Some live performances of Monteux conducting the San Francisco Symphony and Boston Symphony orchestras survive alongside his studio recordings, and many have been issued on compact disc.

Many of Monteux recordings have remained in the catalogues for decades, notably his RCA Victor recordings with the Boston Symphony and Chicago Symphony orchestras; Decca recordings with the Vienna Philharmonic; and Decca and Philips recordings with the LSO.

Monteux's recordings include:[6]

Franco Alfano

Johann Sebastian Bach

Ludwig van Beethoven

Hector Berlioz

Alexander Borodin

Johannes Brahms

Emmanuel Chabrier

George Chadwick

Ernest Chausson

Luigi Cherubini

François Couperin arr Darius Milhaud

Claude Debussy

Léo Delibes

Paul Dukas

Antonín Dvořák

Edward Elgar

Manuel de Falla

César Franck

Alexander Glazunov

Mikhail Glinka:

Christoph Willibald Gluck

André Grétry

Joseph Haydn

Paul Hindemith

Jacques Ibert

Vincent d'Indy

Aram Khachaturian

Franz Liszt

Jules Massenet

Felix Mendelssohn

Olivier Messiaen

Darius Milhaud

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Otto Nicolai

Willem Pijper

Sergei Prokofiev

Maurice Ravel

Ottorino Respighi

Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov

Gioachino Rossini

Rouget de Lisle

Camille Saint-Saëns

Franz Schubert

Robert Schumann

Jean Sibelius

John Philip Sousa

Richard Strauss

Igor Stravinsky

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Ambroise Thomas

Giuseppe Verdi

Richard Wagner

William Walton

Carl Maria von Weber

Notes

  1. Meyerbeer CD reissue index, Marston Records, accessed 17 March 2012
  2. Canarina, pp. 325 and 328.
  3. Discographical information in booklet for: Pierre Monteux - Decca and Philips Recordings 1956-1964 (475 7798). Decca Music Group Ltd, 2006.
  4. Canarina, pp. 321–326
  5. 1 2 "Conductor of 102 Orchestras",The Times, 31 March 1959, p. 11
  6. Canarina, pp. 321–340
  7. This is in effect the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, which alternated with the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Alfred Wallenstein for these hour-long Sunday broadcasts. A few of the pieces have cuts. Canarina, pp. 154-6.

References

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