Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Solti was lost by the 5th bar which left the orchestra in a quandary but unusually, at the crucial moment, the tympanist, Alan Cumberland, was required to play more than just his beloved tymps. He had to operate the lion roar machine. Alan picked the thing up to pull the chord through and it all came to pieces in his hand, at which point he dropped it, missed his next tymp cue and uttered a loud expletive, inaudible to the audience, but not the brass section who collapsed with laughter.
All we were aware of in the audience was one horrendous racket and some obvious heaving at the back of the orchestra. Meanwhile most of the orchestra were ad-libbing material which had nothing to do with the score, which of course was highly irresponsible, but Sir Georg didn't have a clue what was going on.
Nor did the Times critic who complemented Sir Georg and the orchestra on their lucid realisation of what the composer was asking. Little did he know. Interestingly, many, many years later, the LPO played the piece again under the watchful eye/ear of Frans Welser-Most, played it far better, and, whadjaknow, it turned out to be quite a good piece!
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