The New Symphony Orchestra (NSO) was founded in London in 1905 by the clarinettistCharles Draper and the flautist Eli Hudson. After ten years it became the orchestra of the Royal Albert Hall, and continued under that name until 1928, after which it resumed its original name, giving concerts during the 1930s. Thomas Beecham was succeeded as the orchestra's principal conductor by Landon Ronald. With Ronald the orchestra played for the Gramophone Company (HMV) in what were later recognised as the first extensive experiments in symphonic recording, beginning in the days of acoustic recording and continuing into the electrical era.
History
In the early years of the 20th century there was only one permanent orchestra in London – the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO). The orchestras of Covent Garden, the Philharmonic Society and the Queen's Hall were ad hoc ensembles, with players engaged
individually for each concert or for a season.[1] Vacancies occurred in the LSO's ranks only rarely, and the clarinettistCharles Draper and the flautist Eli Hudson conceived of a new cooperative, self-governing ensemble of medium size, drawing on the pool of talent available.[2]
Initially, the new orchestra gave Sunday concerts at a theatre in Notting Hill Gate. One of its cello section, Edward Mason, conducted. When the orchestra made its central London début at the Queen's Hall in June 1906, Draper invited the rising young conductor Thomas Beecham to a rehearsal. Beecham and the orchestra approved of each other and he accepted its invitation to become its regular conductor.[3]
Beecham quickly concluded that to compete with London's existing symphony orchestras his forces must be expanded to full symphonic strength and play in larger halls.[4] He and the enlarged New Symphony Orchestra gave concerts at the Queen's Hall, with considerable success, but after 1908 they parted company, disagreeing about artistic control and, in particular, the deputy system. Under this system, orchestral players, if offered a better-paid engagement elsewhere, could send a substitute to a rehearsal or a concert.[5] The treasurer of the Royal Philharmonic Society described it thus:
A, whom you want, signs to play at your concert. He sends B (whom you don't mind) 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.[6]
Henry Wood had already banned the deputy system in the Queen's Hall Orchestra but the players of the LSO and the New Symphony Orchestra insisted on retaining it. Orchestral musicians were not highly paid, and removing their chances of better-paid engagements permitted by the deputy system was a serious financial blow to many of them.[7] Beecham disagreed and left, founding an orchestra of his own.[8]
The NSO appointed Landon Ronald as its new chief conductor. He said that it boasted "a set of principal players such as I had never dreamed of".[9] Skilled at musical politics, Ronald engineered the NSO's supplanting of the LSO at the profitable Sunday concerts at the Royal Albert Hall from 1909.[10] He was also musical adviser to the Gramophone Company (HMV), and able to secure recording work for the NSO in preference to the LSO.[11]
The NSO became the Royal Albert Hall Orchestra in 1915 with Ronald as its conductor.[12] For a while the ensemble styled itself with both names, as "the Royal Albert Hall Orchestra (New Symphony Orchestra)".[13] After May 1928, reverting to its original name, the NSO gave concerts between then and the Second World War with conductors including Ronald, Wood and Malcolm Sargent.[14]
Later, after the introduction of electrical recording, Ronald and the orchestra recorded larger-scale orchestral works, including Beethoven's Fifth, Brahms's Second and Tchaikovsky's Fourth, Fifth and Sixth symphonies. An HMV catalogue for 1926 lists their recordings of concertos by Beethoven, Grieg, Liszt, Mendelssohn, Mozart and Schumann, with soloists including Isolde Menges, Arthur de Greef, Benno Moiseiwitsch, Fritz Kreisler and Alfred Cortot.[17]Fred Gaisberg of HMV wrote that the series of discs by Ronald and the orchestra "were the first extensive experiments in recording a symphony orchestra and opened our eyes to the great field of the masterpieces of Weber, Beethoven, Grieg, Tchaikovsky, Dvořák, etc".[18]
^"Record", Royal Albert Hall. Retrieved 23 November 2024
^"Concerts, Recitals &c", The Evening Standard, 22 January 1916
^"Concerts &c", The Times, 30 May 1928, p. 12; "Concert Comfort – Sir Landon Ronald at the Palladium", Daily News, 13 February 1933, p. 3; "Bach at the Palladium", The Era, 16 March 1939, p. 12; and "Royal Choral Society", The Musical Times, 1 April 1931, p. 289
Langley, Leanne (2012). "Joining up the Dots". In Bennett Zon (ed.). Music and Performance Culture in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Abingdon and New York: Routledge. ISBN978-1-4094-3979-0.
Lucas, John (2008). Thomas Beecham: An Obsession with Music. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. ISBN978-1-84383-402-1.