With his renditions of Kodály's big orchestral works, and given his precise yet passionate conducting style, Kertész was particularly well-suited to get the full orchestral swoop and swoon endemic to Psalmus Hungaricus and the Peacock Variations. The sonority Kertész managed to elicit from the LSO was expertly executed. Little wonder that Barry Tuckwell, the principal hornist of the LSO spoke of the élan and enthusiasm Kertész could coax out of the orchestra, many of whom Tuckwell regarded as "old codgers not bloody likely to dance to any youngster's tune".Another interesting factoid is that in 1972 the musicians of the Cleveland Orchestra voted 93 to 2 to request to the Board to favor Kertesz as a replacement for George Szell. The Board declined, however. So much for Szell's unassailable reputation!
The Hary Janos and Galanta pieces I knew rather well from Fricsay's highly prized recording. New to me were, however, the Peacock Variations. An intriguing piece that came relatively late in Kodaly's output (1939). It was commissioned by the Amsterdam Concertgebouw to celebrate its 50th birthday.
If I had to guess in a blind audition whose composition it was, I would have come up with perhaps a rather surprising suggestion: Ralph Vaughan Williams. Indeed, the Variations' harmonic language harks back quite precisely to the impressionistic opulence of relatively early RVW symphonic scores such as the London and Pastoral Symphony (1913 and 1921, respectively). Also the instrumentation reminds me time and again of the British composer.
But maybe this isn't so surprising if one is reminded of the fact that both of them spent a short while in Paris to study with the French masters. Kodaly studied with Widor in 1906-1907 and VW arrived barely a year later to study three months with Ravel. I believe indeed that this is the connecting element. Whilst Kodaly may not have studied with Ravel directly, he must have thoroughly absorbed his idiom. Even only the introduction to the Peacock Variations conjures up the world of Ma Mère L'Oye in an exemplary way. Another interesting tidbit is that at one point (1911) Ravel's Valses Nobles et Sentimentales were premiered anonymously. When the audience was allowed to guess who was the composer it appears that also Kodaly's name was mentioned. So perhaps it should not surprise us. On the other hand, as far as I know in 1911 Kodaly was still to compose all his major works so one wonders where his reputation was based on at that early stage.
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