NBC Symphony Orchestra
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The NBC Symphony Orchestra was an orchestra established by David Sarnoff of the National Broadcasting Company especially for conductor Arturo Toscanini. The NBC Symphony performed weekly radio concert broadcasts with Toscanini and other conductors and served as house orchestra for the network, beginning November 13, 1937 and continuing until 1954.
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Tom Lewis, in the Organization of American Historians Magazine of History, described NBC's plan for cultural programming and the origin of the NBC Symphony:
- David Sarnoff, the president of RCA who had first proposed the “radio music box” in 1916 so that listeners might enjoy “concerts, lectures, music, recitals,” felt that the medium was failing to do this. By 1937, RCA had recovered enough from the effects of the Depression for it to make a dramatic commitment to cultural programming. With the most liberal terms Sarnoff hired Arturo Toscanini to create an entire orchestra and conduct it. On Christmas night, 1937, the NBC orchestra gave its first performance—Vivaldi’s Concerto Grosso in D Minor—in an entirely refurbished studio in the RCA Building. “The National Broadcasting Company is an American business organization. It has employees and stockholders. It serves their interests best when it serves the public best.” That Christmas night, and whenever the NBC orchestra played over the next 17 years, he was right. [1]
Mr. Sarnoff spared no expense in creating the NBC Symphony. Artur Rodziński, a noted orchestra builder and musical task master in his own right, was hired to mold and train the new orchestra especially for Toscanini. Prominent musicians from major orchestras around the country were recruited for the orchestra. Conductor Pierre Monteux was engaged to help in the effort as well. In addition to creating prestige for the network, there has been speculation that one of the reasons NBC created the orchestra was to deflect a Congressional inquiry into broadcasting standards.[2]
The orchestra's first broadcast concert aired from NBC's Studio 8H on November 13, 1937 under the direction of Pierre Monteux. Toscanini conducted 10 concerts that first season making his NBC debut on December 25, 1937. In addition to weekly broadcasts on the NBC Red and Blue networks, the NBC Symphony Orchestra made many recordings for RCA Victor of symphonies, choral music and operas. Televised concerts began in March 1948 and continued until March 1952. In the fall of 1950, NBC converted Studio 8H into a television studio and moved the broadcast concerts to Carnegie Hall, where many of the orchestra's recording sessions and special concerts had taken place. The final broadcast concert (recorded in both mono and stereo) took place there on April 4, 1954, and the final recording sessions were in early June 1954.
Toscanini led the NBC Symphony for 17 years. Under his direction the orchestra toured South America in 1940 and the USA in 1950. It performed with a veritable who's who of the top conductors of the day, including Monteux, Ernest Ansermet, Erich Kleiber, Erich Leinsdorf, Charles Munch, Fritz Reiner, Leopold Stokowski, George Szell, Bruno Walter, the young Lorin Maazel and the promising young Italian conductor Guido Cantelli. Upon Toscanini's retirement in the spring of 1954, NBC disbanded the orchestra, much to Toscanini's distress.
Some NBC Symphony members went on to play with other orchestras, notably Frank Miller (principal cello) and Leonard Sharrow (principal bassoon) with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. However, many NBC Symphony Orchestra members regrouped to become the Symphony of the Air, making their first recording on September 21, 1954, and giving their first public concert at the United Nations 9th Anniversary Celebration on October 24.[3] On November 14 they appeared on Leonard Bernstein's acclaimed Omnibus TV show about Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, and Bernstein led the Symphony of the Air during its first season. With an Asian tour under the auspices of the State Department and an attendance of 60,000 at concerts in the Catskills that summer, the first season was a huge success.
For nearly a decade, the Symphony of the Air performed many concerts led by Leopold Stokowski, the orchestra's music director from 1955. The orchestra recorded widely (on Columbia, RCA, United Artists and Vanguard) under many famous conductors, including Bernstein, Monteux, Reiner, Stokowski, Walter, Kyrill Kondrashin, Thomas Beecham, and Josef Krips, before it disbanded in 1963.
RCA Victor began making studio recordings of the NBC Symphony for commercial release in 1938. The orchestra recorded initially in Studio 8-H but producer Charles O'Connell soon decided to hold most of the recording sessions in Carnegie Hall. The famously dry acoustics of Studio 8-H, designed for broadcasting, were found to be less than ideal for recording. Nevertheless, some recording sessions were held in the radio studio as late as June 1950. Acoustical modifications in 1939 were thought to have greatly improved the sound of Studio 8H. From the fall of 1950 until the orchestra was disbanded, all concerts and recording sessions took place in Carnegie Hall.
RCA released the orchestra's recordings on its flagship Red Seal label on the then standard 78-rpm records. In 1950, a 1945 recording of Ferde Grofe's Grand Canyon Suite became the NBC Symphony's first LP release. A mainstay of RCA's catalog through the 1950's, many of the NBC Symphony's recordings were later reissued on the lower priced RCA Victrola label where they remained until the demise of the LP. In the 1980's RCA began issuing digitally remastered recordings of the orchestra, including a complete issue of all Toscanini's RCA recordings in 1990. Later advances in digital technology has led RCA (now Sony/BMG Classics) to further enhance the sound of the magnetic tapes for additional reissues. RCA has only reissued recordings that were personally approved by Toscanini, however other labels have released discs taken from off-the-air recordings of NBC broadcast concerts.
The complete series of ten NBC Symphony telecasts has twice been issued on home video: On VHS and Laser Disc by RCA in 1990 and on DVD by Testament in 2006.
One of the NBC Symphony Orchestra's most ambitious projects was the recording of the 13-hour musical score for NBC Television's 1952 series Victory at Sea. Robert Russell Bennett conducted the orchestra in the arrangements he had done of Richard Rodgers' musical themes for the documentary programs. Bennett later conducted the RCA Victor Symphony Orchestra, drawn from New York musicians, in a series of stereophonic recordings of "Victory at Sea" for RCA Victor in the early 1960s.
- Toscanini and NBC Symphony Orchestra (1947): Berlioz' The Damnation of Faust (13 minutes)
- Toscanini and NBC Symphony Orchestra (1953): Beethoven's Eroica, Third Movement
- Toscanini and the History of the NBC Symphony plus Live WWII broadcast
- ^ Lewis, Tom. "'A Godlike Presence': The Impact of Radio on the 1920s and 1930s," Organization of American Historians Magazine of History 6, Spring 1992.
- ^ Lebrecht, Norman (2001). The Maestro Myth. Citadel Press, page 73. ISBN 0-8065-2088-4.
- ^ McLaughlin, Kathleen, "9th U.N. Birthday Widely Observed," 25 October 1954, New York Times, 1"