It was on the return trip from a tour to Australia that pianist
William Kapell's plane crashed outside of San Francisco. Dashing, handsome, and with a pompadour that would make James Dean envious,
Kapell was groomed by his handlers as a classical music glamour boy, although from a purely artistic standpoint he was thoroughly serious. In retrospect,
Kapell likewise shares with Dean a life cut short and a concurrent status as a legend, though not every legend produces a body of work consistently worthy of such footing. There are almost no dead spots in
Kapell's slim but instructive discography. In a way, this hard-working pianist had no time to produce bad recordings, although there is the inevitable wonderment about what
Kapell might have done had fate allowed him to mature past his 31 young years.
With RCA Red Seal's Kapell Rediscovered: The Australian Broadcasts, such wonderment may well be satisfied, as these recordings reveal that in the final months of his life,
Kapell was making something of an artistic breakthrough. His intense and dynamic playing matures in a way that is striking, even for
Kapell. Fortunately, he lived in a time when television was not quite king, radio broadcasts of classical music concerts were common, and hobbyists enthusiastically recorded such broadcasts for their own amusement on home disc-cutting machines. These broadcasts, made between July and October 1953 and literally representing some the last playing
Kapell did in public, were captured in just such a way. Although certain individual items, such as the
Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 and the
Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition, were previously known and circulated to a small extent, Kapell Rediscovered recovers the full extent of
Kapell's Australian broadcasts and puts them in the same place for the first time. It also introduces
Kapell's interpretations of works such as
Debussy's Suite bergamasque, and presents the whole in the best sound possible.
In terms of sound, Kapell Rediscovered is certainly not for the general public; while most of it is easily tolerable, there are numerous interferences -- crispy surfaces; a stray, distant radio voice yammering its way through
Kapell's only reading of Clair de Lune; distortion; and other vagaries endemic to home recordings made on radio sets. You have been warned, though ears skilled in listening to historical recordings -- and many of
Kapell's most die-hard fans come well equipped in such measure -- will not have any trouble picking the player out of the noise. There is occasional patching from other recordings to cover gaps, and this can be momentarily distracting, though is necessary in order to deliver a complete performance. Nevertheless, RCA Red Seal's Kapell Rediscovered is a first-class job of restoration, and in a sense, it is for the
Kapell collector that has everything -- and RCA's 1998
Kapell Edition is practically everything -- yet this is far better a historical set than such a cliché would imply.