New Symphony Orchestra (London)
| New Symphony Orchestra | |
|---|---|
| Orchestra | |
| Founded | 1905 |
| Disbanded | c. 1940 |
| Later name | Royal Albert Hall Orchestra (1915–1928) |
| Location | London |
| Concert hall | Queen's Hall |
| Principal conductor |
|
The New Symphony Orchestra (NSO) was founded in London in 1905 by the clarinettist Charles Draper and the flautist Eli Hudson. After ten years it became the orchestra of the Royal Albert Hall, and continued under that name until 1928, after which it resumed its original name, giving concerts during the 1930s. Thomas Beecham was succeeded as the orchestra's principal conductor by Landon Ronald. With Ronald the orchestra played for the Gramophone Company (HMV) in what were later recognised as the first extensive experiments in symphonic recording, beginning in the days of acoustic recording and continuing into the electrical era.