British Symphony Orchestra discography
This discography is an incomplete, chronological list of recordings originally released with the name British Symphony Orchestra on the label. The list also includes other recordings which fall outside this strict definition: either because they have been included in discographies of specific conductors ; or were never publicly released for general sale; or have been re-released as such on CD; or for comparison purposes only.
The discography is arranged into three main sections:
- The acoustic recordings made in the 1920s with HMV in Hayes, W. London and at Edison Bell in Peckham, SE London.
- The electrical recordings made by Columbia in the early 1930s in the Methodist Central Hall in Westminster.
- Modern digital recordings.
Background
Acoustic recordings
recorded four sides with the orchestra he founded, for Edison Bell's Velvet Face label in c. 1919-early 1920.Adrian Boult made the HMV recordings at Room 1, HMV, Hayes, Middlesex in 1920-1922, and the Velvet Face ones at the Edison Bell studio in Peckham, SW London, in 1923. He became chief conductor of the Birmingham Choir in late 1923, of the Birmingham Symphony Orchestra in 1924, Music Director of the BBC in 1929? and first chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra in 1930.
Electrical recordings
In the early 1930s the Columbia Graphophone Company made a number of recordings, released with 'British Symphony Orchestra' on the label. They were made in 1930–1932, mostly in the Methodist Central Hall, Westminster, which was built in 1911 and first used for recording by Columbia in January 1927. Columbia had been making recordings since 1924 with the orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society whose shadowy, occasional existence seems to be partially intertwined with that of the 'British Symphony Orchestra' of this period, and is discussed here first.Orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society
Since at least the beginning of the 20th century, the orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society was a somewhat ad hoc gathering of musicians which was engaged about once a month for an RPS concert under various conductors; from 1924 it also made a few recordings a year, again under different conductors. For recording purposes it was billed as "The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra" on Columbia record labels. The orchestra of this period is sometimes thus—by extension—often referred to as 'the RPO' or 'the old RPO'.The members, described a "kind of test match team" were hand-picked from the orchestral musicians of London. The players booked for an RPS concert by the Hon. Sec. were expected to attend all rehearsals and the concert. The [|§ deputy system] was at first specifically disallowed, although this rule came to be severely flouted.
From 1916 Sir Thomas Beecham had effectively taken over the running of the Royal Philharmonic Society, which financially was on its last legs, and ran it autocratically until his resignation two years later in 1918. Balfour Gardiner stepped in with a guarantee of £1,200 to allow concerts to continue. The Society was incorporated in 1922 as a "company limited by guarantee and not having a share capital", which allowed it to enter into a recording contract with Columbia for five years in late 1923.
The Columbia Graphophone Company made over 40 recordings of the orchestra. Bruno Walter made numerous records with the orchestra from 1924: other conductors included Sir George Henschel, Paul von Klenau and Beecham, Oskar Fried and Felix Weingartner. Venues included the Petty France studios; the Portman Rooms, Baker Street; the marble-lined Scala Theatre, Charlotte Street; and, from 1930, Central Hall, Westminster.
A number of players joined the newly-formed BBC Symphony Orchestra in 1930. The orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society was reformed in autumn 1932 as the London Philharmonic Orchestra, as a permanent ensemble under Beecham and Malcolm Sargent with backing from the Courtauld family. A number of players were also lured away from the LSO, through what the LSO Board regarded as "treachery by Beecham and disloyalty by Sargent." Beecham conducted the LPO's first concert at the Queen's Hall on 7 October 1932 to tumultuous applause.
Deputy system
The standard of orchestral playing in London had been seriously affected for many years by the deputy system, by which orchestral players—if offered a better-paid engagement—could send a substitute to a rehearsal or a concert. When Wood banned the practice in the Queen's Hall orchestra in 1904, forty disgruntled players left en masse to found the LSO. The Honorary Secretary of the Royal Philharmonic Society, John Mewburn Levien, described it thus: "A, whom you want, signs to play at your concert. He sends B to the first rehearsal. B, without your knowledge or consent, sends C to the second rehearsal. Not being able to play at the concert, C sends D, whom you would have paid five shillings to stay away."By the 1930s the standard of orchestral playing at Society concerts had fallen so much that "it had become a commonplace that 'not one in twenty concerts were properly prepared', and critics and audiences were accustomed to making allowances". The frequent changes of players meant that only "a few celebrated batons, except Beecham's, and possibly Wood's were a regular match for prevailing conditions in the orchestra." Arthur Schnabel was so unhappy about a performance of Mozart's A Major concerto K488 which he had given at a Royal Philharmonic Society concert with Basil Cameron that he wrote to The Times on 18 Jan 1930 to explain that the concert had been inadequately rehearsed. Walter J. Turner, the music critic of the New Statesman commented that the orchestra were "tired and apathetic", and that Schnabel's gesture to pay for an extra 30 minutes' rehearsal had to be refused since the extensive use of deputies reduced it to a meaningless gesture.
'British Symphony Orchestra'
"Quot homines, tot sententiae."From 1930 to 1932, Columbia released fifteen recordings mostly made in the Central Hall with the name 'British Symphony Orchestra' on the label: one each conducted by Smyth and Fried; three each by Wood and Weingartner; and seven by Walter. In addition Weingartner recorded Beethoven's 5th symphony with an unnamed ensemble, released in the US only as performed by a 'Symphony Orchestra'. It has been re-released on CD as being by the 'British Symphony Orchestra', but the basis for this is flimsy to non-existent.
The first recording with 'British Symphony Orchestra' on the label was of Ethel Smyth conducting the overture to her opera The Wreckers. Her connection with a BSO may appear valid, since Raymond Roze had promoted The Wreckers during his 'Opera in English' season in 1909. when the very first BSO under William Sewell was giving concerts in London. In 1919 Roze had formed the second British Symphony Orchestra, which existed as a semi-permanent ensemble until 1923.
The other conductor with perhaps a vague contemporary connection to the earlier BSO formations is Sir Henry Wood, who would have certainly have come across them in the 'old days': but he doesn't appear to have conducted the old orchestra when William Sewell, Harty, or Boult were giving concerts with the BSO. Hamilton Harty conducted concerts with the BSO in 1906 at the Queen's Hall, where Wood conducted his own New Queen's Hall Orchestra. His association with this later 'British Symphony Orchestra' may have been somewhat tongue-in-cheek.
Identity
Record producers, reviewers and discographers have puzzled over the identity of the named and unnamed ensembles. It seems fairly clear that it was not Adrian Boult's old orchestra, which hadn't given a concert since 1923. According to George Frow, "this must have been a general pseudonym, since the original name of British Symphony Orchestra was used in 1919 by Raymond Roze, who founded an orchestra to give employment to soldiers returning from the Great War, but this worthy ambition petered out after a season or two, when it foundered through lack of support."The London Symphony Orchestra had a contract with HMV, and the New Queen's Hall Orchestra was disbanded by Chappell & Co. in 1927, or by 1930. The BBC Symphony Orchestra was in the process of being formed, and gave its first concert at Queen's Hall under Boult on 22 October 1930. There were few other major London-based permanent symphonic ensembles, although the Hallé made frequent trips to the capital from Manchester, and made recordings there with Hamilton Harty for Columbia.
One other sizeable orchestra was that of the Royal Philharmonic Society, which was essentially an ad hoc or pickup orchestra engaged by the Hon. Secretary of the Philharmonic Society for about eight concerts a year at Queen's Hall.
A partial clue may lie in the Weingartner recordings of 1931 which haven't received much scrutiny because of their lesser musical content. Although they state 'British Symphony Orchestra' on the label, Michael Gray's data shows that it was the Orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society under a cover name.
More particularly, there seems to be little discographical basis for the 'British Symphony Orchestra' which appears on CD reissues of the recording of Beethoven 5th Symphony with Weingartner in 1932. It was made by an unnamed orchestra at an undisclosed location. It wasn't even issued in Britain because of the faintness of the recording and the variable recording speeds throughout the work.
The very next day after Weingartner recorded Beethoven 5th, Columbia recorded the waltz from Naila by Delibes on an unissued matrix CAX 6358, with the Columbia Symphony named as the performer. This is not at all the first example of the Columbia Symphony Orchestra.
The last recording released with 'British Symphony Orchestra' on the label was made by Henry Wood on 16 October 1932, about one week after the LPO had given its first concert.
As George Frow commented in 1979: "At this distance it is becoming difficult to break through the defences of the pseudonyms without deep research, and there is a great deal that will one day be done by somebody, not only on early individual performers, singers and comedians in particular, but orchestras, as has been shown".
Summary
The painstaking work carried out by, for example, Robert Marsh on his Bruno Walter discography, and also by Michael Gray on the discographical data of record companies other than HMV and available on the CHARM database, tends to indicate that the term 'British Symphony Orchestra' was little more than a cunning marketing ploy, and was used as a cover name for the orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society on at least a handful of recordings by Weingartner in 1931. Having a named ensemble rather a plain 'Symphony Orchestra' on a record label or re-issue on CD can improve sales, since categorising things is a significant human activity."The British Symphony Orchestra" in this context appears to be simply a name used by Columbia for an ad hoc recording ensemble of musicians, or pickup orchestra, quite possibly the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Any connection with the old BSO from the 1920s appears tenuous at the very least and borders on improbability, although some of the musicians may have played in both. The British Symphony Orchestra appears to have led the same type of existence as the Columbia Symphony which made its first appearance in 1913.
Columbia recordings, matrix and catalogue numbers
A full Columbia electrically-recorded matrix number is typically given in this discography as e.g. CAX 6048-2
On the record disc itself the initial 'C' is enclosed in a circle, ©AX
. The -2
at the end indicates it was the second 'take' of that side, although Columbia didn't specify the actual take number on the record. In some other discographies the takes are given in Roman numerals: e.g. WAX 6048-II
. Matrix numbers are given in full where known. A sequence of matrix numbers is shown as e.g. WAX 6104/7
. Catalogue numbers are shown without spaces, e.g. HMV D521
or, as a sequence, Columbia LX144/5
.Having released a recording with a catalogue number, Columbia was in the infamous habit of issuing newer recordings with the same catalogue number a few years later, sometimes of completely different works, and/or composers & musicians. Thus two entirely different recordings may share the same label number, and matrix numbers are the key to identifying specific recordings.
Sometimes information printed on the record label is at variance with the printed record catalogues. The operations of Columbia in the UK and the US can lead to confusion. They used different catalogue numbers, and some recordings were only released in the US, e.g. Weingartner's Beethoven 5th symphony or Walter's Prometheus Overture.
Acoustic Recordings 1919–1923
Raymond Roze
- Mozart: Overtures to The Magic Flute and Le Nozze di Figaro. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Roze.
- Nicolai: Overture to The Merry Wives of Windsor. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Roze.
Adrian Boult
Boult made a number of unissued takes with the BSO: these are listed along with the released recordings.
- Scarlatti-Tommasini: The Good-humoured Ladies. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Butterworth: Rhapsody, A Shropshire Lad. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Wagner: Siegfried Idyll. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Holst: Two Songs Without Words, Op 22, No. 1 - Country Song. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Rossini-Respighi: La Boutique fantasque. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Bliss: Rout. Stella Power, British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Humperdinck: Hansel and Gretel - Overture. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Holst: Two songs without words, Op. 22, No. 2 - Marching Song. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Wagner: Siegfried Idyll. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Humperdinck: Hansel and Gretel - 'Hexentritt' & 'Traum'. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Butterworth: Two English Idylls - No 1. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Liszt: Piano Concerto No.1 in E flat. Anderson Tyrer, British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Schubert: 'Unfinished' Symphony. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Offenbach: Orphee Aux Enfers, Overture. British Symphony Orchestra, conductor unknown.
- Franck: Symphonic Variations. Anderson Tyrer. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult.
- Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Boult
Electrical recordings 1930-1932
1930
;Felix WeingartnerThese are the last issued recordings of the 'old' Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, the recording name of the orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society.
- Beethoven : Hammerklavier Sonata, Op. 106. Orchestra of the RPS cond. Weingartner
- Josef Strauss: Sphärenklänge-Walzer, op. 235. Orchestra of the RPS cond. Weingartner.
- Smyth: The Wreckers Overture. British Symphony Orchestra, cond Smyth.
These three recordings were issued by Columbia with a plain 'Symphony Orchestra' on the label. At least one source assigns the British Symphony Orchestra as the ensemble, although neither Columbia's own data nor the label back this up.
- Wagner: Siegfried Idyll. 'Symphony Orchestra', cond. Walter.
- Wagner: Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg, Prelude to Act I. 'Symphony Orchestra', cond. Walter.
- Beethoven: Prometheus Overture, Op. 43. 'Symphony Orchestra', cond. Walter.
Although none of these recordings by an unnamed 'Symphony Orchestra' have been attributed to the British Symphony Orchestra, Mark Obert-Thorn puts forward the view that the ensemble was the orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society, "the old RPO".
- Sibelius: Symphony No. 1. 'Symphony Orchestra', cond. Kajanus
- Sibelius: Symphony No. 2. 'Symphony Orchestra', cond. Kajanus
- Sibelius: Karelia Suite - Intermezzo. 'Symphony Orchestra', cond. Kajanus
- Sibelius: Karelia Suite- Alla marcia. 'Symphony Orchestra', cond. Kajanus
- Délibes: Sylvia Ballet suite. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Fried.
1931
These three recordings were issued with 'British Symphony Orchestra' on the label, but Columbia's matrix logs state just 'Symphony Orchestra', and Michael Gray identifies the ensemble as the orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society.
- Leopold Mozart? Toy Symphony. 'British Symphony Orchestra' cond. Weingartner.
- Johann Strauss II: A Thousand and One Nights. 'British Symphony Orchestra' cond. Weingartner.
- Johann Strauss II: Voices Of Spring, Op. 410. 'British Symphony Orchestra', cond. Weingartner.
- Mozart: Serenade for Strings, No. 13, K.525. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Walter.
- Wagner: Götterdämmerung, Act 3 - Siegfried's Funeral March. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Walter.
1932
The recording of Beethoven's median symphony has been subject to considerable scrutiny.
- Beethoven: Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67. Unnamed orchestra cond. Weingartner.
- Leo Delibes: Ballet, Naila - Waltz. Columbia Symphony and unnamed conductor.
These five recordings all state 'British Symphony Orchestra' on the label, although according to Michael Gray Columbia's own logs only specify the Marriage of Figaro overture as actually being played by the BSO: the other four have the usual plain 'Symphony Orchestra'.
- Wagner: Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg - Prelude to Act III. Symphony Orchestra cond. Walter.
- Wagner: Götterdämmerung: Siegfried's Rhine Journey. Symphony Orchestra cond. Walter.
- Mozart: Le nozze di Figaro, K.492 - Overture. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Walter.
- Beethoven: Violin Concerto in D, Op. 61. Joseph Szigeti, Symphony Orchestra cond. Walter.
- Wagner: Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Act III – Dance of the Apprentices. Symphony Orchestra cond. Walter.
The three final recordings listed here were all released with 'British Symphony Orchestra' on the label, although the first pressings of the Bach arrangements unaccountably stated 'London Symphony Orchestra' on the label. Wood's last previous recording was of Brandenburg 6 in June 1930. The final recording listed here was made about a week after Beecham's first concert with the LPO, formed out of the 'old' RPO, the orchestra of the Royal Philharmonic Society, which has figured throughout this discography.
- Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G. British Symphony Orchestra cond. Wood.
- Bach-Wilhemj: Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D, BWV 1068 - Air on the G String
Table of selected Columbia recordings 1930-1932
Date | Venue | Orchestra | Conductor | Composer | Work | Matrix | Cat. Num. | Refs. |
Central Hall | Orchestra of the RPS | Weingartner | Beethoven | Hammerklavier Sonata in B Flat, Op. 106 | WAX 5485//92 | LX43/7 | ||
Central Hall | Orchestra of the RPS | Weingartner | Josef Strauss | Sphärenklänge-Walzer, op. 235 | WAX 5500/1 | LX40 | ||
— | British Symphony Orchestra | Smyth | Smyth | The Wreckers - Overture | WAX 5567/8 | DX287 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Walter | Wagner | Siegfried Idyll | WAX 5584/7 | LX79/80 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Walter | Wagner | Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg - Act I, Vorspiel | WAX 5588/9 | DX86 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Walter | Beethoven | The Creatures of Prometheus - Overture | WAX 5590 | LX277 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Kajanus | Sibelius | Symphony No. 1 | WYX 1/9 | LX65/69 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Kajanus | Sibelius | Symphony No. 2 | WYX 10/18 | LX50/54 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Kajanus | Sibelius | Karelia Suite - Intermezzo | WYX 19 | LX54 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Kajanus | Sibelius | Karelia Suite - Alla marcia | WYX 20 | LX69 | ||
— | British Symphony Orchestra | Fried | Delibes | Sylvia - Ballet suite | WAX 5836/9 | LX114/5 | ||
Central Hall | Orchestra of the RPS | Weingartner | Leopold Mozart? | Toy Symphony, Cassation in G major | WAX 6046/7 | DX311 LX45 | ||
Central Hall | Orchestra of the RPS | Weingartner | J. Strauss II | Waltz, A Thousand And One Nights, Op. 346 | WAX 6048/9 | LX133 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Weingartner | J. Strauss II | Waltz, Voices Of Spring Op. 410. | WAX 6050/1 | DX266 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Walter | Mozart | Serenade No. 13 in G major, KV525 Eine kleine Nachtmusik | WAX 6104/5 | LX144 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Walter | Wagner | Götterdämmerung - Funeral March | WAX 6108/9 | LX156 | ||
— | — | Weingartner | Beethoven | Symphony No. 5 in C minor, op. 67 | CAX 6348/54 | 68078/81-D | ||
— | Columbia Symphony | — | Delibes | Naila ballet - Waltz | CAX 6358 | Unissued | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Walter | Wagner | Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg - Prelude to Act 3 | CAX 6383/4 | LX180 | ||
— | Symphony Orchestra | Walter | Wagner | Götterdämmerung - Siegfried's Journey to the Rhine | CAX 6385/6 | LX191 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Walter | Mozart | Le nozze di Figaro K.492 - Overture | CAX 6387 | LX232 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Walter | Beethoven | Violin Concerto in D major, op. 61 | CAX 6388/97 | LX174/8 | ||
Central Hall | Symphony Orchestra | Walter | Wagner | Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg - Dance Of The Apprentices | CAX 6398-2 | LX232 | ||
— | Symphony Orchestra | Wood | Bach | Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G major, BWV1048 | CAX 6439/40 | LX173 | ||
— | — | Wood | Bach | Orchestral Suite No. 3 in G major - | CAX 6441 | L1994 DX475 | ||
— | — | Wood | Bach | Partita for Violin No. 3 in E, BWV 1006 - Gavotte | CAX 6442 | L1994 DX475 | ||
— | British Symphony Orchestra | Wood | Grainger | Molly on the shore and Mock Morris | CAX 6443/4 | LX200 |