Covering the first five years of their partnership on Mercury, this edition celebrates the legacy of French conductor, Paul Paray and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Recorded from 1953 to 1957, during the golden era of the orchestra, this original jacket collection includes both mono and early stereo recordings, remastered from the original sources by Thomas Fine. They are presented chronologically as when first issued.
The activities of the Detroit Symphony had been suspended for two years when Paul Paray took over in 1951, and within a season he had raised them to a standard of excellence drawing breathless praise from exacting New York critics such as Virgil Thomson and Harold C. Schonberg. The partnership also kindled a renaissance in Parays career, and the ten-year period of his directorship was the most successful and fulfilling of his career.
The recently founded classical division of the Mercury label quickly spotted the unique qualities of the DSO/Paray partnership, and signed them up to an exclusive contract which produced several new albums a year and played to the strengths of Paray in both French and German music. Critics outside France were initially taken aback by his swift tempi in Beethoven and other composers, but Parays approach now seems strikingly ahead of its time.
Covering the first five years of the DSO/Paray albums on Mercury, including both mono and early stereo recordings, Volume 1 includes three spine-tingling Wagner recordings; a fiery account of the Franck Symphony which immediately invited comparison with Toscanini; a Rimsky-Korsakov album which introduced thousands of listeners to the lovable Antar Symphony; the first three volumes of a Schumann cycle which Paray esteemed as his proudest achievement on record; Saint-Saens Organ symphony, which reunited Paray with his childhood friend Marcel Dupr at the new Aeolian-Skinner organ of the Ford Auditorium in Detroit; and Parays own deeply felt Mass for the 500th Anniversary of the Death of Joan of Arc. Recordings in this new set have been remastered from the original sources by Thomas Fine, son of the Mercury producer Wilma Cozart Fine and the labels chief engineer Robert Fine. They are presented in this original jacket collection as they were first issued, and accompanied by a richly illustrated booklet which contains essays on the sessions by Thomas Fine and on the DSO/Paray partnership by Peter Quantrill.
Judging from the first releases by him and the newly resuscitated Detroit Symphony Orchestra, [Paray] should soon come into his own. His reading of this much-played symphony is a thrill from start to finish. High Fidelity, November 1953 (Franck)
Once again, Paray reveals his mastery at interpreting modern French music. The [Pellas Suite] emerges as the essence of beauty and simplicity, while La Valse, infused with new life, is made to rise to thrilling dramatic heights. High Fidelity, December 1954 (Faur/Franck/Ravel)
[The DSO] play French music with altogether admirable style and technique, and though the former may be due to Parays expert coaching, the latter is very clearly their own possession and a most remarkable one it is. Gramophone, February 1955 (Dukas/Faur/Roussel)
Recommended without reserve Paray and his orchestra play each [excerpt] most sympathetically the Tristan Prelude is extremely well built by Paray. Gramophone, July 1957 (Wagner)