|
|
The 1922 HMV Pinafore
| ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Background
The Recording Sessions
At the first session, on 31st May, Derek Oldham played Ralph. The only side he recorded that day was Side 3, containing his two solos early in Act I. It is difficult to imagine why he was replaced. Oldham made many distinguished recordings over a long career, and it is hard to believe that he was sacked after recording just two takes of one side. Perhaps Oldham withdrew for other reasons. In any event, at the second sessionjust two days laterJames Hay sang Ralph ("Can I survive this overbearing," Side 9). Hay recorded the remainder of the role on 3rd & 27th July. Presumably, over the next three months, Rupert D'Oyly Carte and others reviewed the recording and found two sides unacceptable: Side 3 ("But tell me, who's the youth") and Side 14 ("Carefully on tiptoe stealing"). The one thing these sides have in common is the presence of Ralph, so one imagines that James Hay's performance was the cause of the problem. On 29th October 1922, the Company assembled and re-recorded these two sides. James Hay sang Side 14 (which evidently was recorded first), but Walter Glynne replaced him on Side 3. Whether this was planned all along or decided in mid-session is unclear. Either way, neither take was succesful. On 16th February 1923, the Company assembled again. Dewey Gibson, who otherwise made no G&S recordings for HMV, was now cast as Ralph. Nellie Walker replaced Bertha Lewis as Buttercup (presumably because Miss Lewis did not want to come in just to record three lines). Harry Norris, who had conducted the first five sessions, was also unavailable, and George W. Byng replaced him. Dewey Gibson was not an acceptable Ralph either, leading to the final recording session a month later, on 15th March 1923. This time, Walter Glynne sang Ralph on both sides. Darrell Fancourt, who had been at the previous six sessions, was unavailable, and Frederic Hobbs sang his two lines in "Carefully on tiptoe stealing." As was often the case with early recordings, roles were split among multiple artists. The multiple cast roles are allotted as follows:
Ralph, Buttercup, and Deadeye probably would have been cast consistently, had it not been that Sides 3 & 14 were redone so many times. The oddest bit of casting is Darrell Fancourt as Sir Joseph in "Never mind the why and wherefore." The record label credits only him, but HMV's artist sheets credit both Fancourt and Ranalow. The solo singer is certainly not Fancourt, but Chris Webster thinks he hears Fancourt's voice in the downward arpeggio in the last ensemble. It is also possible that this was an error, and Fancourt does not sing at all.
George Low's Comments On Wednesday, 31st May 1922, DOC were in Oxford, and after the recording session Oldham, Lewis, Granville, and Millidge (none of whom seem to have had a very heavy recording schedule that day), together with Norris, headed back to Oxford to perform in The Gondoliers. The next day saw a matinee of Yeomen and Ida in the evening, which may well have put a strain on Oldham's voice, because not only did he not travel up to London with the other singers for the second recording session on Friday morning, he did not appear in performance in Oxford that evening either (as Granville, Millidge, etc., did), understudy Charles Cecil going on as Frederic in Pirates. This suggests illness, perhaps vocal strain.
The Artists South Australian James Hay joined the D'Oyly Carte as principal tenor in May of 1914 and toured until September of 1914. A further stint with the company followed between July 1919 and June 1920, after which Hay returned to his homeland and signed on as principal tenor with the J. C. Williamson G&S Opera Co. for its Australasian tour of 1920-21. Back in Britain, Hay rejoined the D'Oyly Carte for its July 1922 - June 1923 tour, which proved to be his last with the principal repertory company, although he did tour briefly with D'OC's "small" company in July of 1925. Hay again returned to Australia for the J. C. W. G&S Opera Co's 1926-27 tour, during which time he directed the first production of Ruddigore to be staged by the company. (It received its belated Australian professional premiere at the Theatre Royal, Adelaide on Thursday, June 23rd, 1927. Hay played the role of Richard Dauntless and as he was hardly likely to cut one of his own songs the first Act duet "The Battle's Roar is Over" was retained and continued to feature in subsequent Australian revivals of Ruddigore. However, the other standard D'OC cuts and revisions to the score of the mid-1920s were followed.) During the company's Sydney season, the following biographical note was published on the theatre page of the weekly periodical The Bulletin, (February 3rd, 1927; page 36):James Hay, another of the Australians in the G&S company at Sydney, owns Clare (S[outh] A[ustralia]) as his birthplace; but he learnt to sing in the choir of the Anglican Cathedral at Perth [Western Australia]. After musical training in London he joined the D'Oyly Carte management in 1912. His first part was Colonel Fairfax in The Yeomen. So thorough was the drenching he had received in the G& operas that when he returned from Australia in 1921 he did Rackstraw in Pinafore at a moment's notice. He had called in at D'Oyly Carte's office merely to pay his respects, and while chatting with the entreprenuer word was received that Derek Oldham, who was playing the part, had fallen ill. Hay seemed to have been Heaven-sent; without him the show would have had to close down. In spite of his Australian breeding a slight Scotch burr clings to Hay's voice." Darrell Fancourt was the Company's principal bass for over thirty years, long enough to record most of the operas at least twice, and some of them three times. He joined the Company in 1920, replacing Frederick Hobbs, who evidently was recruited to sing chorus in several of the early recordings. It would thus have been logical for Hobbs to replace Fancourt in the one recording session he missed. Bertha Lewis had a distinguished career in the contralto roles. She joined the Company in 1905, played the contralto parts for six months in 1909, then left until 1914. She then remained continuously until her tragic death from injuries suffered in an auto accident in 1931. She recorded most of her roles at least once (except for Dame Carruthers) and some of them twice. Rollins & Witts say that Sydney Granville played Bill Bobstay as early as the 1908-9 repertory, under Gilbert's direction, but I am reliably informed by George Low that he played Deadeye (as an occasional substitute) in that Season, not Bobstay, although he did play it later. He played Captain Corcoran on stage with D'Oyly Carte on at least one occasion (18th February 1920, in Sheffield). He also played the role with the J. C. Williamson Company in Australia and New Zealand from 1926-28, after this recording was made. It has been suggested that Leo Sheffield, the stage Corcoran when this recording was made, was was afraid of the recording horn and bowed out at the last minute. Violet Essex and Bessie Jones never appeared with the Company, but shared the soprano parts on many of the early recordings. Nellie Walker sang the soubrette parts on many of the same sets. Pamela Baselow and Edward Halland also never sang with D'Oyly Carte, but apparently were in the chorus for most of the early recordings and sang the occasional small parts. Robert Morrison provided some background information on Frederick Ranalow: Frederick Ranalow (1873-1953) was a popular operatic baritone who had first recorded for the Gramophone Company around 1910. He achieved great success playing the highwayman Captain Macheath in Nigel Playfair's long-running revival of John Gay's The Beggar's Opera, first staged at the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith in 1920. H.M.V. recorded a selection of songs from the opera with Ranalow in December of 1920, which proved to be popular enough for the company to record a further selection in February of 1922, again with Ranalow as Macheath, and the Polly Peachum of the time, Kathlyn Hilliard, (George Baker's first wife.) (Sydney Granville too, appeared for a time in a later revival of Playfair's production of The Beggar's Opera when he took over the role of Lockit in February of 1928.) Ranalow also sang the roles of Ned Travers in recorded excerpts from Ethel Smyth's comic opera The Boatswain's Mate, (with former Savoyard Courtice Pounds as the Bo'sun), for H.M.V. in 1916 and Sharpless in the first English version of Madama Butterfly recorded by H.M.V. in 1924. (The latter recordings also featured Nellie Walker as Susuki, Bessie Jones as Kate Pinkerton and Edward Halland as The Bonze.) In most of the early sets, the principal comic parts were taken by George Baker. Presumably he was unavailable for this Pinafore, accounting for the presence of Ranalow, who never appeared with the Company and had no background in these parts. Henry Lytton, the stage Sir Joseph of the time, may have been judged unsuitable for the recording horn, or perhaps he declined to participate for some reason. He would record the role in the 1930 Pinafore, however (with Granville, Fancourt and Lewis recording their roles for a second time).
The Text
The CD Reissue In 1981, a colleague who knew of my interest in G&S sold to me for ukp5 the complete set of the HMV G&S acoustic albums. She thought she had duped me. No 'commercial' range of gramophones were then being sold capable of playing 78 rpm discs, and those machines which could produced sound just laughed at in those days of 'Hi-Fi'. On the cover of the topmost album in the pile I received was a gap-toothed sailor in a rope-bordered portrait frame. Judge then of my delight at seeing just the same face greeting me when I opened the packet containing latest offering from Chris Webster. | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
The Acoustical Mikado and Pinafore in America Detailed Review from The Gramophone, 1927 How to Get It on CD
Issue History
|
Recording Details
Notes:
|
Recording SessionsThe following table lists the order in which the sides were recorded. Where there were multiple attempts at a side on the same day, none of which are known to have been issued, the entire row is shown in italics, and the word "Rejected" appears in the "Result" column. Where there were multiple attempts at a side on the same day, at least one of which was issued, the word "Issued" and the side number appear in the "Result" column. For takes not known to have been issued, the matrix number is shown in italics. Details of unissued takes were supplied by Chris Webster, who had access to copies of the artist sheets made during the sessions. Where an artist is not listed on the sheets but clearly was singing, the name appears in [square brackets]. Where an artist may have been singing, the name appears in [square brackets] with a question mark.
Notes:
Marc Shepherd, oakapple@cris.com Copyright ©1995-2005. All Rights Reserved. Last Modified: 5-Apr-03 URL: http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/pin1922.htm | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||