When
Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg launched her own boutique label, NSS Music, she did not specify whether the label's offerings would be limited to her own performances; one would assume naturally that they would be. With John Cerminaro: A Life of Music,
Salerno-Sonnenberg has stepped outside the box in order to provide a generous tribute to a colleague, legendary horn player
John Cerminaro. In the process,
Salerno-Sonnenberg has contributed something to the catalog for which there is genuine need and has opened a door to a seldom-explored realm of historical recording. Of course, there is a worldwide industry of persons, legally or surreptitiously, trading in historical recordings of various kinds; mostly the same "legendary" dead people -- the Furtwänglers, the Toscaninis, and so on. What about "historical" recordings of key artists who are still very much active, and whose legacy is under-represented -- will there be any demand for them?
Cerminaro made his reputation as the finest horn player to hold down first chair in the
New York Philharmonic in the post-World War II period. Unfortunately this was from 1969 to 1976, the last years of
Leonard Bernstein's tenure, where the orchestra was busy indeed, but not doing a lot in the way of recording.
Cerminaro has more than made up for it with four outstanding solo albums for Crystal, but these recordings, allegedly coming from a "shoebox" in
Cerminaro's closet, predate all of the Crystal efforts, and even come before the recording
Salerno-Sonnenberg made with
Cerminaro of the Brahms Horn Trio in E flat, Op. 40, in 1993 for EMI. Here we have the Glière Horn Concerto in B flat, Op. 91, from a concert in Aspen from 1991;
Richard Strauss' Horn Concerto No. 2 in E flat in Melbourne, Australia, in 1974; and the Mozart Horn Concerto in E flat, K. 417. Naturally the recording quality is variable, but the restoration work by Al Swanson is very well done on all of these tracks and is easily tolerable for the average listener.
There has been a debate as to just when and who began the turn back from serial-derived techniques to traditional tonality, including a televised sparring match between composers
William Bolcom and
Louis Andriessen. Curiously, in such context one never sees to hear mention of composer
David Amram, who never joined onto the serialist camp and even worked bits of rock and jazz into his otherwise concertized pieces. Here is represented
Amram's Concerto for horn and wind symphony from a performance given way, way back in 1967. Here even the restoration work really isn't able to do much more than "save" the distantly recorded, rather hissy tape. Nevertheless, what a wonderful piece it is, and it makes a great
Cerminaro available of a work that would make for a dandy inclusion on a horn recital. Thanks be to
Salerno-Sonnenberg for having the vision to extend her resources to such a worthy project as John Cerminaro: A Life of Music. If you are a horn fancier or player, this is required listening.