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===1930s=== In 1931, Beecham was approached by the rising young conductor [[Malcolm Sargent]] with a proposal to set up a permanent, salaried orchestra with a subsidy guaranteed by Sargent's patrons, the [[Samuel Courtauld (industrialist)|Courtauld]] family.<ref>Aldous, p. 68</ref> Originally Sargent and Beecham had in mind a reorganised version of the LSO, but the orchestra baulked at weeding out and replacing underperforming players. In 1932 Beecham lost patience and agreed with Sargent to set up a new orchestra from scratch.<ref>Reid, p. 202</ref> The [[London Philharmonic Orchestra]] (LPO), as it was named, consisted of 106 players including a few young musicians straight from music college, many established players from provincial orchestras, and 17 of the LSO's leading members.<ref>Morrison, p. 79</ref> [[File:W. Mengelberg.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Willem Mengelberg]] To try to raise its own standards the LSO had engaged Mengelberg, a famous orchestral trainer, known as a perfectionist.<ref>Shore, pp. 111–113</ref> He made it a precondition that the deputy system must be abandoned, which occurred in 1929.<ref name=lso20s>[http://lso.co.uk/page/3281/1920s-and-1930s "1920s and 1930s"], London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 16 July 2012</ref> He conducted the orchestra for the 1930 season, and music critics commented on the improvement in the playing.<ref>Morrison, p. 66</ref> Nonetheless, as patently the third-best orchestra in London, the LSO lost work it had long been used to, including the Covent Garden seasons, the Royal Philharmonic Society concerts and the Courtauld-Sargent concerts.<ref>Morrison, pp. 66 and 82</ref> The orchestra persuaded [[Hamilton Harty|Sir Hamilton Harty]], the popular conductor of the Hallé Orchestra, to move from Manchester to become the LSO's principal conductor. Harty brought with him eight of the Hallé's leading players to replenish the LSO's ranks, depleted by defections to the BBC and Beecham.<ref>Morrison, p. 84</ref> Critics including [[Neville Cardus]] recognised the continued improvement in the LSO's playing: "On this evening's hearing the London Symphony Orchestra is likely, after all, to give its two rivals a gallant run. Under Sir Hamilton it will certainly take on a style of sincere expression, distinguished from the virtuoso brilliance cultivated by the B.B.C. Orchestra and the London Philharmonic Orchestra under Beecham."<ref>Cardus, Neville. "London Symphony Orchestra", ''The Manchester Guardian'', 8 November 1932, p. 5</ref> Among the milestones on the orchestra's path to recovery were the premieres of [[William Walton|Walton]]'s ''[[Belshazzar's Feast (Walton)|Belshazzar's Feast]]'' (1930) and [[Symphony No. 1 (Walton)|First Symphony]] (1934), showing the orchestra "capable of rising to the challenge of the most demanding contemporary scores" (Morrison).<ref>Morrison, p. 86</ref> The foundation of the [[Glyndebourne Festival Opera|Glyndebourne Festival]] in 1934 was another good thing for the LSO, as its players made up nearly the entirety of the festival orchestra.<ref>Morrison, p. 83</ref> An important additional source of income for the orchestra was the film industry. In March 1935 the LSO recorded [[Arthur Bliss]]'s incidental music for [[Alexander Korda]]'s film ''[[Things to Come]]''. According to the LSO's website the recording took 14 full orchestral sessions and "started a veritable revolution in film production history. ... For the first time, music for the cinema, previously regarded as a lowly art form, captured the attention of classical music scholars and enthusiasts, music critics and the film and music public. The LSO had begun its long historic journey as the premier film orchestra."<ref name=film>[http://lso.co.uk/page/3151/LSO-and-Film-Music "LSO and Film Music"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110930173905/http://lso.co.uk/page/3151/LSO-and-Film-Music |date=30 September 2011 }}, London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 16 July 2012</ref> In London Harty did not prove to be a box-office draw, and according to Morrison, he was "brutally and hurtfully" dropped in 1934, as his LSO predecessor Elgar had been in 1912.<ref>Morrison, p. 34</ref> After this the orchestra did not appoint a chief conductor for nearly 20 years.<ref>Morrison, p. 174</ref> By 1939 the orchestra's board was planning an ambitious programme for 1940, with guests including Bruno Walter, [[Leopold Stokowski]], [[Erich Kleiber]] and [[George Szell]].<ref>Morrison, p. 89</ref>
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