Here are three of my favourite Meyer covers, all on Columbia Masterworks, all from 1952: the Dancers of Bali, Gershwin by Andre Kostelanetz and Schoenberg's Erwartung.
Here's the Corydon Singers' version of the Missa:
News about Heitor Villa-Lobos on the web and in the Real World.
Blogging Villa-Lobos since October 2001.
On December 10, 1958, at the Town Hall in New York, Villa-Lobos conducted 32 cellos from the newly-constituted Violoncello Society in a performance of a new work, the Fantasia Concertante for an Orchestra of Violoncellos. Soon afterwards, according to the liner notes on this LP, the same group recorded this album: the Fantasia on Side 1, and on Side 2: Transcriptions of J.S. Bach Preludes & Fugues from "The Well-Tempered Clavier", for cellos. Villa wrote these works in eight parts, but indicated that larger multiples would sound better. Certainly the cellists here come up with a rich sound, playing four to a part. All 32 cellists are named in the liner notes, which is cool, though the only name I recognized was Bernard Greenhouse, a founding member of the Beaux-Arts Trio, and the person who commissioned the work on behalf of the Society. Interestingly, when the Society went to Rio de Janeiro to play the Brazilian première of the work in November 1967, sixteen of their cellists managed the trip!
The Bach transcriptions are wonderful; Villa takes full advantage of the rich sound of the massed cellos to express his love for Bach. Though far from Historically Informed Performance, this is a sound we know well from the Bachianas Brasileiras series, and from the orchestral transcriptions of another close friend, Leopold Stokowski.
There's no photographer credit for the shot on the cover, but I do know two things. You couldn't walk through this room without tripping over a cello. Secondly, Villa-Lobos is not looking healthy here. He had survived eleven years after an operation for bladder cancer, but succumbed to kidney failure on November 17, 1959. This recording, his last as conductor, is a wonderful memorial to our Villa.
There's such an interesting mix of instruments and instrumental colours here: Choros #1 for solo guitar; #2 for flute and clarinet (with a second version on the album for solo piano); #3 for clarinet, alto sax, bassoon, trombone, horn and male choir; #4 for three horns and trombone; #5 for solo piano; and #7 for flute, oboe, alto sax, clarinet, violin, cello and tam-tam. The album concludes with the two Choros Bis, two encore pieces for violin and cello.
These are wonderful performances. Over the years I've enjoyed many Villa-Lobos works played by musicians such as bassoonist Noel Devos, saxophonist Paulo Moura, clarinettist José Botelho, pianist Murillo Santos and guitarist Sérgio Assad. When I first came across this album on CD back in the early days of The Villa-Lobos Website (the mid-90s), I was hearing many of these works for the first time. It certainly helped in building an understanding of the strong modernist strain in Villa-Lobos's music.
The cover features a marvellous painting, "Serenata", by Candido Portinari, who was a friend of Villa's and another of the leading lights of Brazilian modernism. The painting is from 1959, the year of Villa's death.
This album was recorded in November and December of 1962, in one of my favourite places in the whole world: the Library in Kenwood House in Hampstead, London.