Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
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As for writers, Percy Young's book was successful - about the only thing from the centenary year of 1957 that was - but Michael Kennedy's Portrait of Elgar was different, an outstanding success that seemed to take a different view of Elgar - something that links it closer to Ken Russell's film than to Young's earlier biography. Again, Elgar became accessible to a younger generation. It's not scholarly, no, but that may have been its very success.
Of course it's all much more complex than this, but I would pinpoint Russell, Kennedy and Solti as being significant moments in the Elgar revival.
[EDIT]
On reflection, I'm being harsh. After the centenary in 1957, EMI promoted Barbirolli's Elgarian credentials more than they did Boult's, and he made some fine recordings (including the du Pre/Baker coupling) in the 60s. I remember the 2nd Symphony took 3 sides of an LP! I don't want to diminish that achievement. But from 1968 onward the pace quickened, and in particular other labels began to record Elgar. Decca, CBS and RCA especially started to widen the scope of what was available (Britten's Gerontius, Solti's 1st Symphony), particularly using non-British conductors such as Solti, Barenboim and Previn. Lyrita brought out the Boult symphonies. Philips and DG were slower (late 70s) and Chandos wasn't even a label then, but by the 80s almost everything was on record and all the main labels had both symphonies at least, conducted by big names. And of course EMI made that clutch of late Boult records as well as bringing along Vernon Handley to the party.
That's the 'Elgar revival' I was talking about. It was slow coming about, but it really took off.
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