The
NBC Symphony Orchestra was one of the world's fabled orchestras.
David Sarnoff, chairman of RCA which owned both RCAVictor Records and NBC radio -- offered conductor
Arturo Toscanini a specially-built orchestra of the highest standards.
Offering the highest salaries of any orchestra and a 52-week contract, NBC attracted top orchestral musicians: 21 of them were former section leaders of other orchestras.
Artur Rodzinski molded them into a precision ensemble and
Rodzinski led its first concerts. The orchestra took the air under
Toscanini on Christmas day, 1937.
It was immediately ranked as one of the world's great orchestras, famous for its precise, lean sound, even though the players had to do routine radio work in addition to symphony concerts. For 17 years it was conducted by many leading world-class conductors;
Leopold Stokowski was its co-conductor from 1941 to 1944. It made numerous classic recordings for RCA, sometimes recording as the "RCA Victor Symphony," including the famous recording of
Richard Rodgers' Victory at Sea.
The orchestra had many distinguished alumni: violist
William Primrose; violinist
Josef Gingold; cellists Naoum Benditzky (of the Gordon Quartet) and
Alan Shulman (Stuyvesant Quartet); and future conductors
Milton Katims and
Frank Brieff, to name just a few. Soloists who recorded with the orchestra included
Marian Anderson,
Vladimir Horowitz,
Jascha Heifetz, and
Artur Rubinstein. Some of these recordings, and a few complete opera recordings, were conducted by
Fritz Reiner.
Toscanini retired after his April 4, 1954, concert. NBC laid the orchestra off, but it refused to die. Most of its members (with a few new players) reassembled as the
Symphony of the Air, which went on to its own distinguished, if brief, renown. ~ Joseph Stevenson, All Music Guide