Download 
                  News 2013/1
                  
                  Brian Wilson 
                
Archive of past Download roundips and news is here. 
                
Recording 
                  of the Month and Reissue of the Month
                  
                  George Frideric HANDEL (1685-1759) 
                  Finest Arias for Base Voice
                  Sibilar gli angui dAletto (Argante) (Act 1 No 10. 
                  Aria from Rinaldo, HWV7a) [4:50] 
                  I rage, I melt, I burn! (Polyphemus) (Part 2 No 02. Accompagnato 
                  from Acis and Galatea, HWV49a) [1:21] 
                  O ruddier than the cherry (Polyphemus) (Part 2 No 03. Air from 
                  Acis and Galatea, HWV49a) [3:13] 
                  Fra lombre e glorrori (Polifemo) (No 23. 
                  Aria from Aci, Galatea e Polifemo, HWV72) [6:59] 
                  If I give thee honour due (LAllegro) (Part 1 No 14. Recitative 
                  from LAllegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato, HWV55) 
                  [0:12] 
                  Mirth, admit me of thy crew (LAllegro) (Part 1 No 15. 
                  Air from LAllegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato, 
                  HWV55) [2:34] 
                  Qualinsolita luce (Lucifero) (Part 1 No 3. Accompagnato 
                  from La Resurrezione, HWV47) [1:09] 
                  Caddi, è ver (Lucifero) (Part 1 No 4. Aria from 
                  La Resurrezione, HWV47) [4:15] 
                  Tears, such as tender fathers shed (Abinoam) (Part 3 Scene 2 
                  No 2. Air from Deborah, HWV51) [2:30] 
                  To powr immortal my first thanks are due (Gobrias) (Act 
                  3 Scene 3. Air from Belshazzar, HWV61) [3:55] 
                  Impari ognun da Orlando (Zoroastro) (Act 3 Scene 6 No 
                  10. Accompagnato from Orlando, HWV31) [1:11] 
                  Sorge infausta una procella (Zoroastro) (Act 3 Scene 
                  6 No 11. Aria from Orlando, HWV31) [4:35] 
                  Racks, gibbets, sword and fire (Valens) (Act 1 No 5. Air from 
                  Theodora, HWV68) [3:56]
                  Volate più dei venti (Porsena) (Act 3 No 6. Aria 
                  from Muzio Scevola, HWV13) [3:24] 
                  Vieni, o cara (Claudio) (Act 1 Scene 21. Aria from Agrippina, 
                  HWV6) [1:45] 
                  Nel mondo e nellabisso (Isacio) (Act 3 Scene 4. 
                  Aria from Riccardo Primo, Re dInghilterra, HWV23) 
                  [3:13] 
                  Mie piante correte (Apollo) (No 17. Aria from Apollo 
                  e Dafne, HWV122) [2:50] 
                  Cara pianta (Apollo) (No 18. Aria from Apollo e Dafne, 
                  HWV122) [7:27] 
                  Revenge, Timotheus cries (Part 2 No 2. Air from Alexanders 
                  Feast, HWV75) [7:55] 
                  Leave me, loathsome light (Somnus) (Act 3 Scene 1. Air from 
                  Semele, HWV58) [3:40]
                  Christopher Purves (bass)
                  Arcangelo/Jonathan Cohen
                  rec. All Hallows Church, Gospel Oak, London, 19-24 January, 
                  2011. DDD.
                  Booklet with texts and translations included  as pdf document 
                  with download
                  HYPERION CDA67842 [70:54]  from hyperion-records.co.uk 
                  (mp3, 16-bit and 24-bit lossless)
                  
                  
This 
                  just missed my 2012/24 Download News and its much too 
                  good anyway not to receive an airing among the main MusicWeb 
                  reviews  it may well have appeared there by the time that 
                  you read this Download News. Handels bass arias have rather 
                  gone out of fashion now but they deserve to be revived and Christopher 
                  Purves is just the man to do so, very ably abetted here by Arcangelo 
                  and Jonathan Cohen; this could well be one of my Recordings 
                  of the Year next time round.
                  
                  Perhaps the reason for the neglect of this repertoire stems 
                  from the fact that many of Handels bass roles are villains 
                   the monster Polifemo in his Italian version of Aci, 
                  Galatea e Polifemo and Polyphemus in the later English version 
                  written for Cannons, or Lucifer in his la Resurrezione, 
                  another work composed in Italy. Those villains are certainly 
                  represented here  and most villainously, too, from the 
                  very first track on which the Saracen King Argante sings of 
                  the hissing serpents of Alecto and the following track on which 
                  Polyphemus rages and burns.
                  
                  But theres tenderness, too, as on track 3 where Polyphemus 
                  expresses his love for Galatea, and Purves does tender equally 
                  well. This villain has a heart, too, and Purves joins the best 
                  interpreters of the role over the years who have brought out 
                  this tender side. Nor does he overdo the revengeful ire of Valens 
                  threatening racks, gibbets, sword and fire for those 
                  Christians like Theodora who oppose his decree (tr.13). Theres 
                  plenty of ire here, but he resists the temptation to make Valens 
                  into a pantomime villain.
                  
                  Handels basses are also powerful figures, like the mage 
                  Zoroastro who expounds on Orlandos loss of reason through 
                  love on track 11 and here too Im very impressed by the 
                  power of the singing. Its especially effective, following 
                  as it does the different moods of the preceding tracks, Abinoams 
                  Tears, such as tender fathers shed (tr.9) and Gobrias 
                  aria of thanks to Cyrus for having laid low the Israelites 
                  oppressor (tr.10). We have two excellent recordings of Orlando 
                  (William Christie/Warner Classical and Christopher Hogwood/Decca) 
                  but a new rival with Purves as Zoroastro would present a strong 
                  challenge.
                  
                  No collection of Handels bass arias would be complete 
                  without Revenge, Timotheus cries, from Alexanders 
                  Feast, the penultimate item on this recital  more 
                  snakes, of course, in the hair of the Furies, and very well 
                  done but again without going over the top. But we don�t end 
                  with a bang  nor with a whimper, either, with a sensitive 
                  evocation of the gentler tone of Leave me, loathsome light 
                  from Semele, in which Somnus lulls himself to sleep. 
                  
                  
                  That apart, sleep is the last thing that this new recording 
                  is likely to induce in its listeners. Not only is it worthy 
                  of comparison with such great predecessors as Owen Brannigan, 
                  whose Polyphemus, with Sir Adrian Boult conducting Acis and 
                  Galatea, is still worth seeking out on Chandos or Australian 
                  Decca Eloquence, it also continues Hyperions strong tradition 
                  of Handel performance. Three of these are advertised in the 
                  booklet  the most recent Arias for Guadagni (Handel, 
                  Hasse, et al., Iestyn Davies, again with Arcangelo, CDA67924 
                   review) 
                  and earlier releases from Emma Kirkby and Catherine Bott (CDS44271/3, 
                  3 CDs at a special price: Bargain of the Month 
                   review 
                  and review) 
                  and Heroic Arias sung by James Bowman with the Kings 
                  Consort on budget-price Hyperion Helios CDH55370 (July 
                  2012/2 Download 
                  Roundup). 
                  
                  I listened to the new recording in 24-bit download form, which 
                  makes it superior to the CD and it is, indeed, excellent  
                  but I doubt whether you would have any problems with the latter. 
                  At 700MB the 24-bit is probably a little too large to burn to 
                  CDR, so those who like to have the physical disc will have to 
                  buy the CD or download the 16-bit CD-equivalent version. As 
                  always with Hyperion, the quality of the booklet is an added 
                  advantage.
                  
                  Id encourage you to make a bee-line for all those Hyperion 
                  recordings of arias and duets in one format or another, but 
                  also to investigate some of Hyperions distinguished complete 
                  recordings of Handel operas and oratorios. Most of all its 
                  to the two CDs with Arcangelo in accompaniment, the current 
                  recording and the earlier Arias for Guadagni, that I 
                  would direct your attention. I didn�t make Arias for Guadagni 
                  a Recording of the Month (June 2012/2 Download 
                  Roundup) and, on reflection, Im wondering why, especially 
                  as it won an award, so the accolade is actually for both that 
                  and Finest Arias for Base Voice. No reservations? Well, 
                  that title with the cod spelling and mixed-up fonts is a bit 
                  of pseudo-eighteenth-century flummery, but thats hardly 
                  a serious criticism.
                  
                  George Frideric HANDEL English 
                  Arias
                  Yet, can I hear that dulcet lay (Hercules) (Air from The 
                  Choice of Hercules, HWV69) [3:59] 
                  How can I stay, when love invites (Assueras) (Aria from Esther) 
                  [3:02] 
                  O fairest of ten thousand fair (Michal/David)* (Act 2. Duet 
                  from Saul, HWV53) [3:11] 
                  Great God! who, yet but darkly known (Cyrus) (Act 1. Aria from 
                  Belshazzar, HWV61) [3:28] 
                  The raptur�d soul (Didymus) (Act 1 Scene 2. Aria from Theodora, 
                  HWV68) [8:14] 
                  Air: Father of heavn! From thy eternal throne (Priest) 
                  (from Judas Maccabæus) [7:24] 
                  Overture (Esther): Andante  Larghetto  
                  Allegro [6:28] 
                  O Lord, whose mercies numberless (David) (Act 1 Scene 5. Aria 
                  from Saul, HWV53) [3:30]
                  What though I trace each herb (Solomon) (Act 1. Aria from Solomon) 
                  [6:13] 
                  Martial Symphony  Destructive war (Cyrus) (Act 3 Scene 
                  3. Symphony  Aria from Belshazzar, HWV61) [2:50] 
                  
                  Welcome as the dawn of day (Solomon/Solomons wife)* (Act 
                  1. Duet from Solomon) [3:33] 
                  Kind heaven, if virtue be thy care (Didymus) (Aria from Theodora, 
                  HWV68) [5:13] 
                  Almighty powr (Solomon) (Accompagnato from Solomon) 
                  [2:45] 
                  Now persecution shall lay by her iron rod  Tune your harps 
                  (Israelite) (Act 1. Recitative  Aria from Esther) 
                  [5:06]
                  James Bowman (countertenor); with Susan Gritton (soprano)* 
                  The Kings Consort/Robert King  rec.1992 and 1995. 
                  DDD
                  Pdf booklet with texts included
                  HYPERION HELIOS CDH55419 [66:03]  from hyperion-records.co.uk 
                  (mp3 and lossless)
                  
                  
At 
                  the time that I wrote the above I didn�t know that Hyperion 
                  had yet another treat in store for Handelians, for release on 
                  CD in January 2013 but available as a download in advance. Its 
                  really enough just to draw your attention to this budget-price 
                  reissue and leave the names of James Bowman and Robert King 
                  to be their own self-recommending advertisement. 
                  
                  I�d go for Bowmans earlier recording of Handel 
                  Heroic Arias first  see above  
                  but whichever you choose first youre sure to want the 
                  other and they both come at budget price.
                *** 
                
Johann Sebastian BACH 
                  (1685-1750)
                  Organ Trio Sonatas, BWV 525-530, arranged for multiple instruments
                  Florliegium (Ashley Solomon (director, flute); Rodolfo Richter 
                  (violin/viola); Reiko Ichise (viola da gamba); Jennifer Morsches 
                  (cello / piccolo cello); Eligio Quinteiro (lute); James Johnstone 
                  (harpsichord))  rec. May 2007. DDD.
                  Pdf booklet included
                  CHANNEL CLASSICS CCSSA27012 [75:41]  from channelclassics.com 
                  (SACD, mp3, 24/44.1, 24/96, 24/192 lossless and DSD.)
                  
                  [In general terms Florilegiums set of the Organ 
                  Trio Sonatas is a terrific success. See review 
                  by Dominy Clements.]
                  
                  Trio Sonatas for organ arranged by Richard Gwilt
                  London Baroque (Ingrid Seifert (violin); Richard Gwilt (violin; 
                  Trios Nos. 2 & 4: viola); Charles Medlam (cello); Terence 
                  Charlston (harpsichord; Trios Nos. 4 & 6: organ))  
                  rec. October-November, 2001. DDD
                  BIS BIS-CD-1345 [74:38]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless)
                  
                  [Recording of the Month  see review 
                  by Kirk McElhearn]
                  
                  [See also my review of the excellent recording by the Brook 
                  Street Band on Avie AV2199  February 2011 Roundup]
                  
                  
Despite 
                  my admiration for the technique recommended in a late medieval 
                  mystical treatise, The Cloud of Unknowing, I can�t un-know 
                  the fact that Dominy Clements, in awarding high praise to the 
                  Channel Classics recording, thought the BIS slightly preferable. 
                  For that reason I played the Florilegium recording first 
                  and soon found myself enamoured of their gentle, lyrical performances, 
                  just a little sober by comparison with organ performances that 
                  I�ve heard.
                  
                  Of these I was surprised to discover that Christopher Herricks 
                  1989 recording on Hyperion (CDA66390 [70:15]) had fallen 
                  by the wayside and is now available only to special order on 
                  CD or as a download (mp3 or lossless from hyperion-records.co.uk). 
                  With Herrick as my benchmark for both the instrumental adaptations 
                  I have to say that thats where I shall return most often 
                  for these sonatas. It seems odd to write that a single instrument 
                  can actually sound more colourful than a combination but that 
                  is the case here as between the organ and the various instrumental 
                  combinations.
                  
                  In addition to the Herrick recording, Hyperion have another 
                  treasure hidden away in their Archive Service or for download 
                  in mp3 or lossless in the form of a set of instrumental transcriptions 
                  of these trios recorded in 1995 by the Kings Consort (CDA66843 
                  [69:58]). These recordings capture much of the variety that 
                  I found in Herricks performances and they are noticeably 
                  more sprightly than the Channel Classics versions.
                  
                  Sprightliness, where called for, is also the order of the day 
                  with the London Baroque BIS recordings. For all the virtues 
                  of the Florilegium recording  and I enjoyed their performances, 
                  so you could hardly go wrong with them  my final choice 
                  must rest between London Baroque and the Kings Consort.
                  
                  All four downloads come with a booklet and all four recordings 
                  are very good; I listened to the Channel Classics in 24/96, 
                  to the BIS in their best version, 24/44.1 and to the Hyperions 
                  in 16-bit flac. As between 24/44.1 and 24/96 there is usually 
                  a significant but hardly startling improvement in quality and 
                  I found that to be the case here. Equally, 24-bit has advantages 
                  over the Hyperion 16-bit sound but, again, the difference is 
                  hardly of a major order.
                  
                  The BIS recording comes in mp3 and 16-bit flac for $10.91 and 
                  in 24-bit for $13.09. The prices for the Channel Classics range 
                  from £7.30 for mp3 via £11.36 for 24/44.1 to £16.23 
                  for 24/192, while the Hyperion recordings both cost £7.99 
                  whether you choose mp3 or the superior flac.
                  
                  For the arrangements on Channel Classics some alterations have 
                  been made, including a few key signatures:
                  
                  Sonata No.1 in E flat (BWV 525) arr in G (flute, violin, cello, 
                  harpsichord)
                  Sonata No.2 in c minor (BWV 526) arr in e minor (flute, violin, 
                  gamba, lute, harpsichord)
                  Sonata No.3 in d minor (BWV 527) arr in g minor (piccolo cello, 
                  harpsichord)
                  Sonata No.4 in e minor (BWV 528) arr in e minor (viola/violin, 
                  gamba, cello, lute)
                  Sonata No.5 in C (BWV 529) arr in D (flute, harpsichord)
                  Sonata No.6 in G (BWV 530) arr in G (violin, gamba, harpsichord)
                  
                  Francisco António DE ALMEIDA 
                  (c.1702-c.1755)
                  La Spinalba ovvero Il vecchio matto 
                  (Spinalba, or the Mad Old Man, Dramma comico in Three Acts, 
                  1739) 
                  Luís Rodrigues (bass)  Arsenio, a merchant, Spinalbas 
                  father 
                  Cátia Moreso (mezzo-soprano)  Dianora, Spinalbas 
                  step-mother 
                  Ana Quintans (soprano)  Spinalba 
                  Fernando Guimarães (tenor)  Ippolito, Spinalbas 
                  faithless lover 
                  Inês Madeira (mezzo-soprano)  Elisa, Arsenios 
                  niece 
                  Joana Seara (soprano)  Vespina, a servant 
                  Mário Alves (tenor)  Leandro, Elisas lover 
                  
                  João Fernandes (bass)  Togno, a servant 
                  Os Músicos do Tejo/ Marcos Magalhães  rec 
                  15-23 November 2011. DDD.
                  First complete recording on period instruments
                  Italian libretto at www.naxos.com/libretti/660319.htm
                  NAXOS 8.660319-21 [3CDs: 65:00 + 66:08 + 75:43]  
                  from classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
The 
                  conductor, Marcos Magalhães, shares his surname with 
                  the famous explorer whose name is usually corrupted to Magellan 
                  in English and this is certainly a metaphorical voyage of discovery 
                   not just the first complete recording on period instruments 
                  but the only other recording was released on LP as long ago 
                  as 1969. The plot is pretty daft and theres a good deal 
                  of recitative to sit through, but both those things are also 
                  true to an extent of le Nozze di Figaro.
                  
                  Almeida is no undiscovered genius but the music is very agreeable, 
                  often much more, as are the performances, with no weaknesses 
                  among the voices. The recording is good and Keith Andersons 
                  notes, as usual, are an additional incentive to try this out. 
                  Eclassical.com offer it in lossless flac as well as the mp3 
                  from classicsonline.com, but the mp3 sounds well enough for 
                  me to think the extra outlay ($37.25 as against £14.97) 
                  probably unnecessary in this case.
                  
                  Pieter HELLENDAAL (1721-1799) 
                  Six Concerti Grossi, Op.3
                  Concerto No.1 in g minor  Ouverture [3:53]; Largo [2:33]; 
                  Presto [1:34]; Menuet [2:33]
                  Concerto No.2 in d minor  Ouverture [1:41]; Allegro [2:41]; 
                  Affettuoso [2:11]; Presto [2:58]; Borea [1:13]
                  Concerto No.3 in F  Largo [2:04]; Allegro [1:54 ]; Adagio 
                  [2:22]; Alla breve [1:28]; March [2:41] 
                  Concerto No.4 in E-flat  Grave sostenuto [3:41]; Alla 
                  breve [1:50]; Affettuoso [1:01]; Presto [1:32]; Pastorale [3:17]
                  Concerto No.5 in D  Largo [3:56]; Allegro [3:59]; Larghetto 
                  [3:52]; Allegro [2:19]; March [2:32]
                  Concerto No.6 in F  Largo [1:44]; Largo [4:11]; Adagio 
                  [2:54]; Allegro [2:40]; Menuet [1:43]
                  Andrew Manze (violin )
                  European Community Baroque Orchestra/Roy Goodman (violin)  
                  rec. Oxford, 1992. DDD
                  CHANNEL CLASSICS 3492 [72:57]  from channelclassics.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless)
                  
                  
This 
                  is a real discovery from Channel Classics back catalogue. 
                  The spirits of Bach, Handel and Vivaldi need not fear that they 
                  are about to be ousted from my affections by this younger contemporary, 
                  but this is attractive music, worthy at least to be mentioned 
                  in the same context as its betters; if you know the music of 
                  Heinichen, I�d place Hellendaal about on a par with him.
                  
                  With nimble performances and good recording  16/44.1 this 
                  time, before Channel Classics began to offer 24-bit sound, but 
                  they were already producing some fine recordings  this 
                  is well worth investigating. Unfortunately theres no booklet. 
                  The CD is out of stock at Channel Classics and theres 
                  no other recording devoted to his music, just the odd item on 
                  compilations, so the download is particularly welcome.
                  
                  Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809)
                  Trumpet Concerto in E-flat (cadenzas by Kurt Redel) [15:02]
                  Bernard Jeannoutot (trumpet)
                  Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra, Munich/Kurt Redel  rec. 1961. 
                  ADD/stereo
                  BEULAH EXTRA 1-3BX231 [15:02]  from eavb.co.uk.
                  
                  
The 
                  Trumpet Concerto, with dozens of recordings to its credit, is 
                  the best known of Haydns somewhat neglected concertos 
                   with 104+ wonderful symphonies, almost as many ground-breaking 
                  string quartets and some marvellous Mass settings, its 
                  not surprising if the concertos get missed. At the end of 2012 
                  Beulah treated us to the Gendron-Casals recording of Haydns 
                  Cello Concerto in D, now known as No.2, and thats the 
                  work and recording to which I would direct you in the first 
                  instance. (If you turn back to that review youll see that 
                  I�ve corrected my erroneous statement that that recording was 
                  originally coupled with a corrupt edition of the Grützmacher 
                   an alert reader has reminded me that it was, in fact, 
                  the first recording of the genuine article.)
                  
                  There are recordings at all prices, including Alison Balsams 
                  recent EMI recording, with the Hummel concerto for £4.99 
                  from amazon.co.uk, 
                  with pdf booklet and theres a good inexpensive version 
                  with Crispian Steele-Perkins on Alto, but the best bargain of 
                  all, on Philips Duo, seems to have disappeared from the catalogue 
                  in any format. Jeannoutots is as good a performance as 
                  I�ve heard and the recording still sounds well. Released by 
                  EMI/Angel in 1963, its a collectors item in some 
                  quarters  a French pressing of the LP is on sale as I 
                  write for 20 Euros or $26.42 and a Time Life LP box set containing 
                  it is being offered at $350. At £1.50, therefore (£0.50/$0.81 
                  per track), the Beulah reissue is a bargain well worth having.
                  
                  Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
                  Piano Concerto No. 11 in F, K413 [21:37]
                  Piano Concerto No. 12 in A, K414 [23:44]
                  Piano Concerto No. 13 in C, K415 [25:01]
                  Susan Tomes (piano)
                  The Gaudier Ensemble  rec. April 2003. DDD.
                  HYPERION HELIOS CDH55333 [70:39]  from hyperion-records.co.uk 
                  (mp3, 16 and 20-bit lossless)
                  
                  Piano Concerto No.20 in d minor, K466 [30:51]
                  Piano Concerto No.23 in A, K488 [25:21]
                  London Mozart Players/Howard Shelley (piano)  rec. March 
                  1991. DDD.
                  Pdf booklet included.
                  CHANDOS CHAN8992 [60:11]  from theclassicalshop.net 
                  (mp3 and lossless)
                  
                  
The 
                  chamber-music arrangements of the Mozart Piano Concertos Nos. 
                  11-14, as sanctioned by the composer, have been recorded before, 
                  notably by Jos van Immerseel and Musica Eterna (nos.11, 13 and 
                  14, Channel Classics CCS0990  CD only, no download) 
                  and Im not about to dispose of that CD, especially as 
                  the fortepiano employed there has such a distinctive sound. 
                  If youre looking for a download version and don�t mind 
                  the modern piano  perhaps even prefer it  you need 
                  look no further than the inexpensive Hyperion Helios version. 
                  Everything that I�ve heard which Susan Tomes has recorded for 
                  Hyperion has been excellent and these performances are no exception. 
                  Don�t judge the music or the playing from the Watteau on the 
                  cover which might make you expect just a pretty sound. The recording 
                  is good  unusually theres a 20-bit version; its 
                  worth paying all of £0.36 for that over the mp3 and 16-bit 
                  downloads.
                  
                  Its interesting to compare Susan Tomes and the Gaudiers 
                  in No.12 with Volume 4 of the Chandos series of Mozart piano 
                  concertos from Howard Shelley and the London Mozart Players 
                  (see below). Both achieve delicacy without any hint of fragility 
                  and, though the Chandos cannot repeat the intimacy of the Hyperion 
                  version with chamber forces  nor, indeed, the authenticity 
                  of the fortepiano on Channel Classics  its excellent 
                  within its own terms. Shelley is a fraction slower than Tomes 
                  in each movement, but not so that you would notice. Im 
                  not surprised to see that this volume was singled out for special 
                  praise by the Gramophone Guide, the 2012 edition of which is, 
                  I see, to be the last.
                  
                  
As 
                  its quite a while since I recommended Volume 2 of the 
                  Chandos series (Concertos Nos. 9 and 17, CHAN9068 
                   March 2009 Roundup), 
                  it seemed high time that I reviewed some of the other volumes 
                  and theres nowhere better to begin than with Volume 1 
                  on which Shelley plays two of the mature masterpieces in performances 
                  to equal the finest, a category which includes Alfred Brendel 
                  and Neville Marriner in 19-21, 23 and 24 (Decca Duo 442 2692 
                   see 2012/24 Download 
                  News) and Clifford Curzon, Benjamin Britten and István 
                  Kertész (Decca 468 4912). With good recording 
                  and a pdf booklet to download the only disadvantage of the Chandos 
                  is that Brendel and Curzon come at budget price; on the other 
                  hand, they are not currently available in other than mp3, while 
                  the Chandos download is also offered in lossless format.
                  
                  Volume 3, containing Concerto No.14 in E-flat, K449 [23:57], 
                  and Concerto No.27 in B-flat [31:21], K595, recorded in 1992, 
                  on CHAN9137 
                  [55:01] is equally recommendable. I�ve already referred to the 
                  quality of the performance and recording of No.12 on Volume 
                  4 in comparison with the Hyperion recording (above); the Chandos 
                  coupling is No.19 in F, K459 and thats equally recommendable, 
                  apart from the slightly mean playing time. (CHAN9256 
                  [51:45]).
                  
                  Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) 
                  Symphonies Vol. 9 (1778 -1780)
                  Symphony in D, No. 31, K297, Paris [15:07]
                  Symphony in B-Flat, No. 33, K319 [21:11]
                  Symphony in C, No. 34, K338 [19:57]
                  Symphony in D, No. 31, K297, Paris
                  Alternative 2nd movement from 1st edition: Andante [3:33]
                  The Danish National Chamber Orchestra/ Adam Fischer 
                   rec. October 2010 and February 2011. DDD.
                  DACAPO 6.220544 [60:08]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library (with 
                  booklet)
                  
                  
The 
                  characteristics of this Ninth Volume are much as before  
                  modern instruments but directed with a sense of period style 
                  and just an occasional, totally forgivable quirk; overall very 
                  satisfying  and were getting into the hinterland 
                  of the mature symphonies here, which makes this even more recommendable 
                  than earlier volumes. There is, however, some formidable competition 
                  for No.31 in the recording which Sir Charles Mackerras made 
                  for Linn at the close of his career and I have to give that 
                  the preference if its the Paris symphony specifically 
                  that you are looking for (Nos. 29, 31, 32, 35 and 36, CKD350 
                  two CDs for the price on one on SACD and in mp3 and lossless 
                  versions up to 24/192 Download of the Month  
                  see April 2010 Roundup).
                  
                  The DaCapo recording sounds very well in the lossless flac version. 
                  My only grumble about the eclassical.com download concerns the 
                  lack of the pdf booklet  I had to get that from the Naxos 
                  Music Library.
                  
                  Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827) 
                  The Symphonies
                  Symphony No.1 in C, Op.21 (1800) [27:44]
                  Symphony No.3, Eroica, Op.55 (1804) [51:47]
                  Symphony No.2 in D, Op.36 (1802) [35:20]
                  Symphony No.4 in B-flat, Op.60 (1806) [33:32]
                  Symphony No.6 in F, Op.68 (1806-8) [42:49]
                  Symphony No.5 in c, Op.67 (1808) [32:58]
                  Symphony No.8 in F, Op.93 (1812) [26:28]
                  Symphony No.7 in A, Op.92 (1812) [42:19]
                  Symphony No.9 in d, Op.125 (1824)* [65:06]
                  * Rebecca Nash (soprano); Wilke te Brummelstroete (contralto); 
                  Marcel Beekman (tenor); Michael Tews (bass)
                  * Laurens Collegium; Laurens Cantorij
                  Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century/Frans Brüggen  
                  rec. live, 2011. DDD
                  Pdf booklet included with text and translation of finale of 
                  Symphony No.9.
                  GLOSSA GCDSA92116 [5 CDs: 79:31 + 68:50 + 75:49 + 68:44: 
                  65:06]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library.
                  
                  
You 
                  would expect the earlier symphonies, Nos. 1, 2 and 4, to benefit 
                  from the lighter treatment with a period orchestra of fairly 
                  modest proportions, and you would mainly be right, but the treatment 
                  benefits the bigger-boned Third, Fifth and Ninth, too. In fact, 
                  Im not at all sure that No.1 isn�t underplayed; though 
                  its obviously Haydn- and Mozart-influenced, its 
                  also thoroughly Beethovenian and neither its power nor the brio 
                  which forms part of the main tempo marking is immediately evident 
                  from this gentle performance.
                  
                  The obvious comparison is with Emmanuel Krivine on Naïve 
                  (V5258, 5 CDs, July 2011/2 Download Roundup), 
                  who takes 8:31 for the first movement of No.1 as against Frans 
                  Brüggens very leisurely 10:21, slower even than Otto 
                  Klemperer (9:55), whose complete Beethoven symphonies and overtures, 
                  including both the mono and stereo Third and Fifth, have just 
                  been reissued at a very favourable price by EMI. (Around £23 
                  on CD; download from amazon.co.uk 
                  for £10.99.) I surprised myself, and probably you, too, 
                  by preferring Klemperer in this movement. (See below for Beulah 
                  reissue)
                  
                  Another exponent of period practice, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, though 
                  performing on this occasion with the modern-instrument Chamber 
                  Orchestra of Europe (Warner Classics) clocks in at 9:28, coincidentally 
                  exactly the same as Daniel Barenboim on his recent Beethoven 
                  for All set of the symphonies (Decca  September 2012/1 
                  Roundup) 
                  which sounds about right to me for this movement; he certainly 
                  achieves the brio while allowing the music time to breathe and 
                  achieving the same neat phrasing as Brüggen. Herbert von 
                  Karajan (DG, 1987, March 2010 Roundup) 
                  on the other hand is a little too brisk at 7:48.
                  
                  Best of all, however, in this movement and throughout the symphony, 
                  is Sir Charles Mackerras, recorded with the Scottish Chamber 
                  Orchestra at the Edinburgh Festival  a modern-instrument 
                  orchestra but of modest size and with period-inspired direction. 
                  If Harnoncourt and Barneboim sound about right, Mackerras at 
                  8:44 is just right. (Hyperion CDS44301/5: Recording 
                  of the Month  review 
                   review 
                  and March 2010 Roundup).
                  
                  In the other movements timings are much closer, with Krivine 
                  and Harnoncourt just a little faster than Brüggen each 
                  time, except for Harnoncourts third movement, but the 
                  lack of forward movement from Brüggen at the start seriously 
                  compromised his performance for me to the extent that I was 
                  surprised to see that one reviewer  not on MusicWeb International 
                   had made this his Recording of the Year.
                  
                  The second Symphony receives a forthright performance  
                  thoroughly unobjectionable, though not offering any really fresh 
                  insights. Is it reasonable to expect insights from a performance 
                  of a Beethoven symphony at this late date? I think it is  
                  there are, indeed, several in Brüggens Pastoral.
                  
                  Somewhat disappointed by the First and not wholly reassured 
                  by the Second, I turned to the Seventh, the symphony that has 
                  practically become my test-piece for judging Beethoven recordings. 
                  Despite the comparative neglect of this work over the years, 
                  there are several very fine recordings, not least Carlos Kleiber 
                  with the Fifth (DG). With nine first violins and the other desks 
                  in proportion, the orchestra is by no means undernourished; 
                  theres plenty of power and energy in Brüggens 
                  performance of the first movement and he takes the second at 
                  a nice allegretto. I wanted to get out and push at times in 
                  the third movement, but thats better than taking it at 
                  breakneck speed and Brüggen contrives to maintain the spirit 
                  of the dance even at his chosen tempo though the clock indicates 
                  that he is noticeably slower than Kleiber.
                  
                  Some performances of the finale do threaten to come off the 
                  rails  the New York Phil just about keep up with Bruno 
                  Walter on his mono LP recording but the Columbia Symphony don�t 
                  quite manage it on his stereo remake. Given that the tempo adopted 
                  here by Kleiber and by the Manchester Camerata and Douglas Boyd 
                  (Avie  review 
                  and March 2010 Roundup) 
                  is about right, as I think it is, Brüggen looks too slow 
                  on paper  who said that period performances always had 
                  to be fast?  but theres no lack of energy. So Brüggen 
                  doesn�t displace Kleiber or Boyd or, for that matter, Colin 
                  Davis whose early recording with the RPO for EMI has recently 
                  been reissued as a download by Beulah (February 2012/1 Roundup), 
                  but his Seventh certainly does enough to keep the set in the 
                  running.
                  
                  I should add that when I reviewed Osmo Vänskäs 
                  BIS recording of Symphonies Nos. 2 and 7 in the March 2010 Roundup 
                  I was listening to mp3 downloads; that recording is now available 
                  in much better sound. (BIS-SACD-1816 download in mp3 
                  or 16 or 24-bit format from eclassical.com.)
                  
                  Another period-instrument recording of No.7 came my way just 
                  as I was closing this Download News: on Soli Deo Gloria SDG717 
                  [73:19] John Eliot Gardiner with the Orchestre Révolutionnaire 
                  et Romantique live at Carnegie Hall challenges the classic Carlos 
                  Kleiber coupling of Nos. 5 and 7 (DG). Download in mp3 from 
                  classicsonline.com 
                  or stream from Naxos Music Library  I�ve had time only 
                  to do the latter. The first movement of No.7 takes a while to 
                  warm up but all is well when things get going. After that start 
                  Gardiner is a little faster than Brüggen and that helps 
                  to give his recording an edge, as it does also in the third 
                  movement, though I liked both. In the finale Gardiner is faster 
                  than Brüggen but never comes off the rails  though 
                  the track details on NML say 9:14, he actually takes 8:34. If 
                  the whole symphony is the apotheosis of the dance, the finale 
                  sometimes sounds as if its being danced by the participants 
                  in one of those outbreaks of St Vitus fever which happened 
                  in the later middle ages, but thats not a danger with 
                  any of the performances that I�ve mentioned. For Gardiner, Krivine 
                  and Brüggen the assistance of a period orchestra makes 
                  a positive contribution to overall success.
                  
                  The opening movement of Gardiners Fifth is pretty brisk 
                  but thats much better than the ponderousness that sometimes 
                  passes for expressiveness here, though thats not a fault 
                  with Brüggen, Krivine or Kleiber, who each take almost 
                  a minute longer. If anything Brüggen sounds a little too 
                  lightweight in this movement, partly offset if you turn up the 
                  volume a couple of notches for impact. If you hadn�t thought 
                  of this famous movement as dance-like, Brüggen will give 
                  you a pleasant surprise.
                  
                  In the second movement, too, Gardiner interprets Andante 
                  to mean something noticeably faster than Brüggen and Kleiber; 
                  his basic tempo is arguably closer to walking pace than his 
                  rivals, though I can live happily with all three or, indeed 
                  with Krivine. At the risk of sounding like a cliché, 
                  all four blow the cobwebs off this music; more to the point, 
                  I�ve heard the work so many times that it sometimes seems like 
                  a chore to listen to it again  but not so with any of 
                  these versions.
                  
                  For me theres one major benchmark for the Eroica 
                  and thats Klemperers mono LP version, still sounding 
                  reasonably well in recent CD re-masterings; though slightly 
                  veiled by comparison with modern recordings, the ear soon adjusts. 
                  Would it be a mistake to play that first and expect Brüggen 
                  to shape up to it? Apart from the opening movement, where Brüggens 
                  greater generosity with repeats increases the time, on paper 
                  the two look very similar  both are slightly slower than 
                  Krivine but faster than Klemperers stereo remake. Brüggens 
                  opening movement has, if anything, even greater life than Klemperers 
                  so that, although he takes almost 20 minutes about it, it doesn�t 
                  seem too long. As with the Fifth, theres no sense of listening 
                  to this Eroica as a chore, not least for the lilting 
                  account of the Prometheus ballet theme in the finale.
                  
                  In the Pastoral Symphony a less than violent storm and 
                  a slightly slow basic tempo for the rejoicing  at 9:44 
                  thats slower than Klemperer (9:12)  is more than 
                  offset by the sound of birdsong, present in this recording more 
                  than any that I know. I don�t recall hearing those little piano 
                  flutterings in the wind instruments in the opening bars so clearly 
                  before and the whole performance is refreshing.
                  
                  And so to the Ninth. To compare just the two period-instrument 
                  versions, Brüggen and Krivine adopt much the same tempo 
                  for the opening movement, but Brüggen is rather slower 
                  in the second and third, though not hugely so and not so that 
                  I ever thought the music was allowed to drag. For some reason 
                  Glossa have decided to split Brüggens choral finale 
                  over six tracks, which could cause a problem with awkward track 
                  joins from certain players if you listen to the mp3 version. 
                  Here, too, Brüggen is slightly slower than Krivine, almost 
                  as slow as Klemperers 1957 recording  the mono version 
                  of which, incidentally, is available for a mere £1.99 
                  from Naxos Classical Archives at classicsonline.com, 
                  as well as in the new complete symphony edition.
                  
                  With live recording theres no opportunity for re-takes 
                  and I think that the soloists might have liked to have reprised 
                  their roles  they sound adequate but no more and, though 
                  the choral singing compensates, their contributions must rank 
                  as one of my reservations about a generally recommendable performance 
                  of the Ninth and, indeed, of the whole cycle.
                  
                  Brüggens audience is quiet throughout and the recording 
                  is good  I tried both the mp3 and lossless; you can have 
                  either or both for the same price. I recommend turning up the 
                  volume slightly from your normal listening level. At $63.80, 
                  youll find complete cycles for less, but considering the 
                  quality of performance and recording and the fact that the booklet 
                  of notes comes with the deal, the price is not unreasonable. 
                  Though the Krivine set is in mp3 only, that sounds well, too, 
                  as do the mp3 versions of Kleiber and Gardiner in Nos. 5 and 
                  7.
                  
                  Both Krivine and Brüggen come complete with booklet  
                  that from Naïve runs to 52 pages and although much of the 
                  size is taken up by being written in four languages, the notes 
                  are very interesting. On the whole I�d go for Krivine, but you 
                  may well wish to try both from Naxos Music Library if possible, 
                  or from Spotify if you can�t.
                  
                  Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827) 
                  
                  Symphony No.1 in C, Op.21 (1800) [28:17]
                  Philharmonia Orchestra/Otto Klemperer  rec. 1957. ADD 
                  stereo.
                  BEULAH EXTRA 6-9BX114 [28:17]  from eavb.co.uk.
                  
                  By coincidence, I had no sooner finished writing about my preference 
                  for Klemperers recording of Beethovens First Symphony 
                  over Frans Brüggens new recording with the Orchestra 
                  of the Age of Enlightenment than I found it among this months 
                  Beulah Extra reissues. If you don�t intend to invest in the 
                  very modestly priced EMI box set of Klemperers Beethoven 
                  (see above), this recording of the First is well worth having. 
                  The recording has come up well in this transfer.
                  
                  Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828) Complete 
                  Symphonies
                  Les Musiciens du Louvre Grenoble/Marc Mikowski  rec. live 
                  by ÖRF, March 2012. DDD.
                  Pdf booklet included
                  NAÏVE V5299 [4 CDs: 76:15 + 56:17 + 57:21 + 54:34] 
                   from classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless flac) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  Symphony No.9 in C (Great) D944 [55:03]
                  Five German Dances D89 [14:38]
                  Budapest Festival Orchestra/Iván Fischer  rec. 
                  June 2010. DSD.
                  Pdf booklet included
                  CHANNEL CLASSICS CCSSA31111 [69:47]  from channelclassics.com 
                  (mp3, 24/44.1, 24/96, 24/192 and DSD).
                  
                  Symphony No.9 in C (Great) D944 [57:49]
                  Royal Flemish Philharmonic/Philippe Herreweghe  rec. July 
                  2010. DSD.
                  Pdf booklet included
                  PENTATONE PTC5186372 [57:49]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless)
                  
                  
Minkowski: 
                  This is very much by way of a first report, as I received the 
                  download only one day before closing this Download News. I enjoyed 
                  my first run through so much that Im pretty confident 
                  that I won�t change my mind after repeated hearing. These performances, 
                  recorded over a three-day period in Vienna, prove that the use 
                  of period instruments and placing violins left and right doesn�t 
                  take the fun out of the music; in No.3, for example, though 
                  Im not likely to ditch Beechams wonderful recording 
                  (with Nos. 5 and 6, EMI) theres plenty of lilt in Minkowskis 
                  version. 
                  
                  Such comments as I�ve read mostly agree with my high opinion 
                  of these recordings. Just to show that theres always a 
                  flip side, however, theres a very unsympathetic review 
                  of the live performance of Nos. 1, 3 and 4  here. 
                  Perhaps its best that you listen first via the Naxos Music 
                  Library if you can, to see which of us you agree with. If its 
                  the period instruments that worry you, their use is certainly 
                  not obtrusive, but if you are totally allergic your best bet 
                  remains the wonderful COE/Claudio Abbado cycle on DG  
                  you even get the orchestral version of the Grand Duo and 
                  the Rosamunde Overture thrown in (5 CDs for £11.99 
                  from hmvdigital.com).
                  
                  If you wish to hear Brian Newbolds completion of the Unfinished, 
                  theres an excellent budget-price coupling of Nos. 7 and 
                  8 from Sir Charles Mackerras on Virgin Classics  see April 
                  2012/2 Roundup.
                  
                  This is the first lossless flac recording that I�ve been sent 
                  by the Classics Online team and its very good. The instrumental 
                  sections are located with accuracy of placement and the overall 
                  sound stage is very credible. There is one oddity, however, 
                  which I must mention, which I gather is common to all COL flac 
                  downloads  each disc comes as a single file so, for example, 
                  Symphonies Nos. 1-3 are lumped together on CD1, over 76 minutes 
                  on one file. That makes it difficult if you wanted to play, 
                  say, just Nos.1 and 2 and Im not sure what the logic behind 
                  it is  no-one else does it.
                  
                  Another illogical aspect of this release concerns the cost: 
                  £31:96 in mp3, £36:99 in flac, when the CD set can 
                  be had for around £28  its actually on special 
                  offer from one dealer as I write for £20.81 and from another 
                  for £22. Beware the tempting offer from amazon.co.uk Buy 
                  the mp3 album for £4.49  its not the 
                  new Minkowski recording.
                  
                  
Symphony 
                  No.9: Once upon a time the choice of recordings of any Schubert 
                  symphony other than the so-called Unfinished was pretty limited: 
                  for the Ninth when I wanted to choose an LP version in the 1960s 
                  it was Josef Krips in mono (Decca Ace of Clubs  recently 
                  reissued on Beulah Extra 2-5BX46  see September 
                  2011/2 Roundup) 
                  or his stereo remake (also Decca) or Karl Böhm on DG. Those 
                  recordings remain available and are still well worth considering 
                  but theres a wealth of more recent digital recordings, 
                  from which Iván Fischer and Philippe Herreweghe, 
                  recorded within a month of each other, emerge as strong contenders. 
                  There are, indeed, several similarities between them, not least 
                  the fact that both employ a degree of period-informed technique 
                  (natural horns, even, for Fischer) with modern orchestras and 
                  both are well recorded, though only the Channel Classics comes 
                  in 24-bit formats.
                  
                  Its good to have something extra on the Channel Classics 
                  recording; it would surely have been preferable to have placed 
                  the German Dances first  you can rearrange things yourself, 
                  of course..
                  
                  Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856)
                  Cello Concerto in a minor, Op.129 [25:35]
                  Mstislav Rostropovich (cello)
                  Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra/Gennady Rozhdestvensky  
                  rec.1961. ADD/stereo
                  BEULAH EXTRA 1BX230 [25:35]  from eavb.co.uk.
                  
                  
We 
                  already have Mstislav Rostropovich and Benjamin Britten playing 
                  the Schumann Cello Concerto at Aldeburgh (BBC Legends), coupled 
                  with the historic performance of the Dvoř�k Cello Concerto 
                  at the Proms on the day that the Soviet tanks rolled into Prague 
                  and this version with Rozhdestvensky at the helm remains available 
                  on DG Galleria (as an import in the UK), coupled with Martha 
                  Argerich in the Piano Concerto. Theres also a Rostropovich-Rozhdestvensky 
                  version with the USSR Symphony Orchestra, but thats available 
                  only on a 25-CD EMI box set, so theres a very good case 
                  for this Beulah release as an inexpensive single file for £1.50. 
                  Many listeners find the concerto episodic  I don�t  
                  but whether you are or not, you won�t find a more persuasive 
                  advocate than Rostropovich.
                  
                  The sound on the Galleria reissue was somewhat rough and the 
                  contrast with the 1978 Piano Concert coupling made it seem even 
                  more so, but not so bad as to make the CD hard to recommend. 
                  I can�t say that its been transmogrified for this Beulah 
                  release but it doesn�t sound at all bad, especially if played 
                  at a slightly lower volume than usual  its a little 
                  over-modulated in the loudest passages but overall its 
                  as good as the EMI Encore reissue of the Jacqueline du Pré 
                  recording (now available as a download only).
                  
                  Anton BRUCKNER (1824-1896)
                  Symphony No. 7 in E major (1881-1883) (1885, ed. Haas) [60:02]
                  BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra/Donald Runnicles
                  rec. 8-9 May 2012, City Halls, Candleriggs, Glasgow, UK
                  Pdf booklet included
                  HYPERION CDA67916 [60:02]  from hyperion-records.co.uk 
                  (16/44.1 & 24/96 lossless)
                  
                  
When 
                  Hyperion first flagged this release I was pretty sure it was 
                  going to be special. I have fond memories of Donald Runnicles� 
                  rapturous Gurre-Lieder at the Proms some years ago, and 
                  I made a mental note then that I wanted to hear his Bruckner. 
                  The only problem is that I recently watched a Blu-ray of Sergiu 
                  Celibidache conducting the Berliner Philharmoniker in the Seventh, 
                  which reminded of just how wonderfully he and illuminates this 
                  great score (review). 
                  Granted, what I regard as heavenly lengths may seem hellish 
                  to others � Celi clocks in at around 90 minutes after all � 
                  but I�ve not heard anyone build and project this music more 
                  persuasively than he does.
                  
                  That recording is my benchmark for this symphony; not far behind 
                  is G�nter Wand�s 1999 performance with the same orchestra. All 
                  three use the Haas edition, but only Celibidache and Runnicles 
                  opt for the cymbals, timps and triangle in the Adagio. First 
                  impressions of the Runnicles performance are favourable; the 
                  Allegro moderato is sensibly paced, the opening �dream� sounds 
                  gorgeous and the orchestra � who I�m told hadn�t played the 
                  piece since 1975 � have all the amplitude one could wish for. 
                  Hyperion�s spacious, naturally balanced recording � I listened 
                  to the 24/96 download � is good too. As for the noble peroration 
                  at movement�s end � a key moment in this work � it�s magnificently 
                  done, the horns suitably radiant throughout.
                  
                  This is shaping up to be a memorable Seventh which, although 
                  clear-eyed, loses none of its radiance or simple beauty. Runnicles 
                  coaxes wonderful sonorities from his band in the Adagio, where 
                  phrases are elegantly shaped and neatly dovetailed. And that�s 
                  why the all-important sense of a long, unbroken span is never 
                  lost; true, the strings may not have the corporate sheen of 
                  the Berliners, but their firm, clear sound is just as thrilling. 
                  The well-blended brass are a joy too, adding their burnished 
                  voices to that gloriously terraced, echt-Brucknerian 
                  landscape. And despite that sophistication the Adagio still 
                  has an unmistakable bucolic lilt, not to mention moments of 
                  reflection and repose. 
                  
                  In short, Runnicles delivers at all the symphony�s nodal points; 
                  indeed, when the great climax in the Adagio arrives it does 
                  so with extraordinary naturalness and compelling logic, the 
                  serene close as deeply felt as I�ve ever heard it. If only I 
                  could be as positive about the rest. The Scherzo isn�t as buoyant 
                  as it is in Celi�s Berlin account and the tuttis aren�t as polished 
                  either; still, that matters less when the BBCSSO bring such 
                  mobility and strength to this music. After that cantering Scherzo 
                  Bruckner dons seven league boots for a vaulting Finale. Runnicles 
                  finds plenty of muscularity and purpose here, although I do 
                  miss Celi�s carefully built and blended tuttis.
                  
                  There�s much to enjoy in Runnicles� Seventh; indeed, the Allegro 
                  and Adagio are as poised and affecting as you�ll hear anywhere. 
                  It�s only in the Scherzo and Finale that this performance becomes 
                  a tad incoherent; sonorities aren�t so impressive and the music 
                  isn�t as intuitively shaped. In Celi�s hands there�s a real 
                  sense of apotheosis here, of a victory worthy of the winning, 
                  And as good as the BBCSSO are, they�re no match for the refinement 
                  and reach of the Berliners. As for the 24/96 download it�s excellent, 
                  although it�s not nearly as thrilling or as immediate as the 
                  lower resolution Mena/Bergen Turangal�la that made it 
                  to my list of picks for 2012 (review).
                  
                  Good start, disappointing finish; still worth hearing, though.
                  
                  Dan Morgan
                  http://twitter.com/mahlerei
                  
                  Johannes BRAHMS (1833-1897)
                  Symphony No.1 in c minor, Op.68 [41:18]
                  Concertgebouw Orchestra/ Eduard van Beinum  rec.1951. 
                  ADD/mono
                  BEULAH EXTRA 26-29BX37 [41:18]  from eavb.co.uk.
                  
                  
In 
                  the early 1960s the choice for Brahms First Symphony if 
                  you could afford full-price stereo was between Otto Klemperer 
                  and Carlo Maria Giulini. For the impecunious, however, there 
                  were a fair number of van Beinums mono recordings from 
                  the previous decade, still sounding pretty well on modest equipment. 
                  Later still this Brahms First was recycled again, in bogus stereo 
                  which did it few favours, on the Eclipse label.
                  
                  This recording was briefly available on CD on the Philips Legendary 
                  Classics label, coupled with the Alto Rhapsody, but that 
                  release is available only second-hand now, so the Beulah reissue 
                  is very welcome. The performance is of the straight-down-the-middle 
                  kind which I associate with Beinum  ideal tempi, nothing 
                  outrageous, though nothing especially enlightening either. Its 
                  a very satisfying account overall and well worthy of reissue, 
                  with the anticipatory build-up to the big tune in 
                  the finale especially well handled. The sound is rather veiled 
                  by modern standards, though generally truthful, and better without 
                  the treble enhancement to which the Decca engineers habitually 
                  subjected earlier recordings on reissue.
                  
                  Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) 
                  Complete Symphonies (including Manfred)
                  Symphony No. 1 in g minor, Op.13 Winter Daydreams 
                  [43:54]
                  Symphony No. 2 in c minor, Op.17 Little Russian 
                  (rev. 1879 version) [34:15]
                  Symphony No. 3 in D, Op.29 [45:10]
                  Symphony No. 4 in f minor, Op.36 [41:34]
                  Capriccio italien, Op.45 [14:26]
                  Manfred Symphony, Op.58 [53:43]
                  Symphony No. 5 in e minor, Op.64 [43:24]
                  Symphony No. 6 in b minor, Op.74 Pathétique 
                  [43:53]
                  Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra/Mariss Jansons  rec. 1984-86. 
                  DDD.
                  Pdf booklet included
                  CHANDOS CHAN10392 (6) [6 CDs 318:19]  from 
                  theclassicalshop.net (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless)
                  
                  Symphony No.7 in E-flat (completed Semyon Bogatryrev) 
                  [40:49]
                  Piano Concerto No.3 in E-flat [16:21]
                  Geoffrey Tozer (piano)
                  London Philharmonic Orchestra/Neeme Järvi  rec. June 
                  1991. DDD
                  Pdf booklet included
                  CHANDOS CHAN9130 [57:19]  from theclassicalshop.net 
                  (mp3 and lossless)
                  
                  
So 
                  far I�ve made recommendations for downloads of individual symphonies, 
                  especially for the DG 2-CD Mravinsky set of Nos.4-6, the recommendation 
                  if you want only the last three symphonies, but if youre 
                  looking for the complete set, including Manfred, you 
                  could do much worse than to invest in this Chandos set. Its 
                  much better value as a whole than by buying the individual discs, 
                  especially as some of the constituent CDs and the earlier 7-CD 
                  incarnation of this box (CHAN8672) offer poor value with 
                  times of little more than 40 minutes.
                  
                  The performances have stood the test of time extremely well, 
                  with no significant weaknesses, as is the case with Andrew Littons 
                  set on Virgin Classics  the under-powered opening movement 
                  of No.5 is the Achilles heel there. Even though I recommend 
                  supplementing the set with the Mravinsky recording of the last 
                  three symphonies, nothing here is likely to leave you feeling 
                  disappointed.
                  
                  Though recorded as long ago as the mid-1980s  even the 
                  24-bit is only at 44.1kHz  the sound is still excellent. 
                  It benefits from a slight increase in volume  from 36 
                  to 39 on my Arcam Solo. Go for the 24-bit version if possible 
                   its still less expensive than the CD set, which 
                  is itself good value.
                  
                  Tchaikovsky never completed his proposed Symphony of Life, 
                  if, indeed, it was even his final intention to do so; instead 
                  he reused some of the material for the Third Piano Concerto. 
                  Neeme Järvis recording gives us the chance to compare 
                  the two, with Geoffrey Tozer making an equally strong case for 
                  the solo part of the concerto. Bogatryrevs completion 
                  of the work in symphonic form is less essential than the reconstructions 
                  of Mahlers Tenth, Elgars Third or the finale of 
                  Bruckners Ninth, but still well worth hearing (see also 
                  Skripkas version: review 
                  review). 
                  The opening of the first movement sounds oddly ragged  
                  Im not sure whether to blame the music or the performance, 
                  but I don�t recall the Ormandy recording on CBS sounding so 
                  ragged. On the other hand the rest of the performance is good.
                  
                  Try this from the Naxos Music Library first if youre unsure. 
                  Classicsonline.com also have the mp3 version but its better 
                  to go for the lossless version from Chandos themselves at theclassicalshop.net.
                  
                  Alternative single recordings to consider:
                  
                  Symphony No. 1 in g minor, Op.13 Winter Daydreams 
                  [39:30]
                  The Snow Maiden: Suite (1873) [16:21]
                  Romeo and Juliet: Fantasy Overture [19:29]
                  Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra/Neeme Järvi  rec. June 
                  and December 2002 and August 2003. DSD
                  Pdf booklet included
                  BIS-SACD-1398 [77:10]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless)
                  
                  
Some 
                  have thought this the weak spot in Järvis complete 
                  set of recordings of the Tchaikovsky symphonies but, if that 
                  is the case, its a comparative weak spot in a very distinguished 
                  cycle. In fact, of all the recordings that I�ve heard of this 
                  work Järvi has come closest to persuading me that the First 
                  is almost the equal of its successors. I�ve always thought that 
                  a noticeable qualitative change took place with the composition 
                  of the Second Symphony; now Im not too sure. John Philips 
                   review 
                   was similarly impressed with the performance of the symphony 
                  and of the two fillers. The recording is very good  as 
                  always with eclassical.com, mp3 and 16-bit lossless come for 
                  the same price; you can download the flac and then return for 
                  the mp3 for your personal player if you wish.
                  
                  Symphony No. 2 in C minor, Op. 17, Little Russian 
                  (1879 version) [32:42]
                  Overture in F (1866 version) [11:47]
                  Festive Overture on the Danish National Anthem in D, Op. 15 
                  (1892 version) [12:09]
                  The Storm (Groza), Overture to the drama by Alexander 
                  Ostrovsky, Op. 76 (1864) [14:37]
                  Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra/Neeme Järvi  rec. August 
                  and November 2004. DSD.
                  Pdf booklet included
                  BIS BIS-SACD-1418 [72:27]  from eclassical.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless)
                  
                  
The 
                  performance of the symphony is very good  as Brian Burt 
                  wrote in his review  here 
                   everything is executed at the highest level. Theres 
                  very little to choose between Järvi and Jansons  
                  both give strong performances without wallowing in the music 
                   but Im not too sure that I want to listen to the 
                  other shorter works too often, with the exception of the Storm 
                  Overture (not to be confused with the Tempest Overture). 
                  Though in 16-bit only, the recording is very good  in 
                  some respects its preferable to the Chandos.
                  
                  Symphony No. 3 in D, Op.29 [43:06] 
                  Entracte and Dances of the Chambermaids (from the opera 
                  The Voyevoda, Op. 3) [10:01]
                  Dmitri the Pretender and Vassily Shuisky, incidental 
                  music (Introduction to Act I; Mazurka) [6:51]
                  Serenade for Nikolai Rubinsteins name-day [3:22]
                  Entracte and Waltz and Polonaise (from Eugene Onegin, 
                  Op. 24) [7:56 + 5:35]
                  Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra/Neeme Järvi
                  BIS-SACD-1468 [76:49]  from classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
Most 
                  surprisingly, I couldn�t find this on the eclassical.com site 
                   the home of BIS recordings. If its 
                  just the symphony that you want, emusic.com can oblige for £2.10 
                   the bit-rate is pretty low, around 180kb/s, but it sounds 
                  much better than that bit-rate would suggest. 
                  
                  You will have gathered by now that these Järvi performances 
                  present a strong challenge to Jansons. If you don�t mind mp3 
                  only  and its the full 320kb/s anyway  hmvdigital.com 
                  are offering the whole set, with all the fillers, on 6 CDs 
                  for an unbelievably inexpensive £7.99. (See review 
                  by Nick Barnard.)
                  
                  The 1960 Leningrad PO/Evgeny Mravinsky recording of Symphonies 
                  Nos. 4-6 (DG Originals 477 5911, 2 CDs  April 2010 
                  Download Roundup) 
                  stands so supreme that unless youre averse to the sound 
                  of Russian brass playing  and its by no means at 
                  its most extreme here  youll find it impossible 
                  to resist, even alongside more modern recordings. Some would 
                  prefer his earlier (1956) mono recordings, of which Nos. 5 and 
                  6 are available on Naxos Historical Archives (9.80069 
                  and 9.80070 
                  respectively  both from classicsonline.com in 
                  mp3).
                  
                  In No.5 I still greatly enjoy hearing George Szell and 
                  the Cleveland Orchestra; the CBS Odyssey CD in my collection 
                  is no longer available in the UK, but theres a 320kb/s 
                  download from hmvdigital.com 
                  for £3.96.
                  
                  Maurice RAVEL (1875-1937)
                  Tzigane [0:40]
                  Ruggiero Ricci (violin)
                  Orchestre de la Suisse Romande/Ernest Ansermet  rec.1959. 
                  ADD/stereo
                  BEULAH EXTRA 9BX68 [0:40]  from eavb.co.uk.
                  
                  Ma Mère lOye (Mother Goose): Suite [22:14]
                  Orchestre de la Suisse Romande/Ernest Ansermet  rec.1957. 
                  ADD/stereo
                  BEULAH EXTRA 10BX68 [22:14]  from eavb.co.uk.
                  
                  
I 
                  played these two recordings immediately after the van Beinum 
                  Brahms (above) and the different between Deccas early-1950s 
                  mono and late-1950s stereo is amazing; even though the Ravel 
                  Suite is mostly less upfront as music than Brahms, the veil 
                  had to all intents and purposes gone.
                  
                  Australian Decca Eloquence have reissued Ansermets early-1950s 
                  mono recording of Ma mère loye (442 8301) 
                  but not, as far as Im aware, this stereo remake. Theres 
                  all the magic and mystery that you could want in this performance 
                  and the playing of the OSR, though hardly the worlds greatest, 
                  is well up to the task of presenting Ansermets interpretation. 
                  This is captivating music which deserves to be as well known 
                  as Daphnis et Chloë and this account is about as 
                  good as it gets.
                  
                  Preface the ballet suite with Tzigane  Ruggiero 
                  Ricci at his virtuosic best  and you have a very satisfying 
                  pair of performances.
                  
                  John IRELAND (1879-1962) My 
                  Song is Love Unknown: Church Music
                  Te Deum in F [6:45]
                  Benedictus [4:54]
                  Communion Service in C [14:32]
                  My song is love unknown [2:56]
                  Elegiac Romance (organ solo) [8:27]
                  Evening Service in C [4:40]
                  Christ the Lord is risen today (Sampford) [2:05]
                  Four Unaccompanied Carols [8:27]
                  Greater love hath no man [5:29]
                  I am trusting (Eastergate) [2:35]
                  Ex ore innocentium [3:24]
                  Capriccio (organ solo) [5:03]
                  Island Praise [1:53]
                  Evening Service in F [5:56]
                  Charles Harrison (Organ)
                  Lincoln Cathedral Choir/Aric Prentice  rec 6-7 and 27-29 
                  February, 2012. DDD.
                  Pdf booklet with texts included
                  NAXOS 8.573014 [77:05]  from classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3) or eclassical.com 
                  (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library
                  
                  
Naxos, 
                  having already done well by John Irelands orchestral and 
                  chamber music, now turn their attention to his church music 
                  to good effect. The music is a miracle of conciseness and the 
                  performances are very good  just a little ragged in places.
                  
                  Classicsonline.com offer the mp3 version for £4.99 but, 
                  although they have begun to offer many of their Naxos downloads 
                  in flac, for that youll have to turn in this case to eclassical.com; 
                  though, at $13.88, that is almost twice as much and more expensive 
                  even than the CD, you may think it worthwhile in order to download 
                  the lossless for your audio system and return for the mp3 for 
                  your mobile system. The flac recording certainly sounds preferable 
                  to the best-quality version from Naxos Music Library.
                  
                  You won�t get the booklet from eclassical.com but the texts 
                  are available online at www.naxos.com/libretti/573014.htm 
                  and the booklet is available to subscribers to Naxos Music Library.
                  
                  Béla BARTÓK (1881-1945) 
                  
                  A fabol faragott kiralyfi (The Wooden Prince): A Dancing 
                  Play in One Act, BB74 (1917) [53:38]
                  Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra/Marin Alsop  rec. May 2007. 
                  DDD
                  NAXOS 8.570534 [53:38]  from 
                  eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless  no booklet) or classicsonline.com 
                  (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library (both with booklet).
                  
                  [See reviews by Dan Morgan  here 
                   and Tony Haywood  here.]
                  
                  
If 
                  you have come to terms with Bartóks better-known 
                  works, the Concerto for Orchestra, Music for Strings, 
                  Percussion and Celesta, the three piano concertos, the two 
                  violin concertos, the viola concerto and, perhaps, the six string 
                  quartets, and youre thinking what to explore next, The 
                  Wooden Prince could well be your next acquisition. The music 
                  may not be so immediately appealing as the later masterpieces, 
                  but all the hallmarks of the mature Bartók are here in 
                  a score that rivals  without quite equalling  Stravinskys 
                  The Firebird in its evocation of mystery and magic.
                  
                  The performance is good, as is the lossless flac recording. 
                  Reservations? Well, the eclassical.com download, at $9.66, is 
                  about the same price the CD and it doesn�t come with the booklet, 
                  which youll need to understand the plot, though you can 
                  remedy that if you subscribe to the Naxos Music Library. The 
                  classicsonline.com version is much less expensive, at £4.99, 
                  and comes with the booklet, but in mp3 only.
                  
                  For Bartóks two masterpieces on one disc at budget 
                  price, look at what I wrote about Marin Alsops recording 
                  of the Concerto for Orchestra and Music for Strings 
                  Percussion and Celesta in the June 2012/1 Download Roundup.
                  
                  Sir Michael TIPPETT (1905-1998)
                  Symphony No. 1 [37:16]
                  Symphony No. 2 [36:13]
                  Symphony No. 3* [57:11]
                  Symphony No. 4 [33:35]
                  New Year Suite ** [28:59]
                  Faye Robinson soprano*
                  Timothy Holmes, Kyle Horch, Melanie Bush (saxophones); Steven 
                  Smith, Alan Taylor (electric guitars)**
                  Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra/Richard Hickox
                  CHANDOS CHAN10330 [3 CDs: 73:11 + 57:11 + 62:47]  
                  from theclassicalshop.net 
                  (mp3 and lossless)
                  
                  
Though 
                  Sir Michael Tippett was a major force in British music in the 
                  late 20th century, his important symphonic output has never 
                  been well represented on record; at present these Chandos recordings, 
                  separately or as a box set, are all that we have. Two important 
                  2-CD sets on EMI and Decca ignore his symphonic output completely 
                  in favour of more immediately accessible music such as the Corelli 
                  Fantasia and the Double Concerto. Fear not, for these Hickox-directed 
                  performances are even more recommendable than those conducted 
                  by Sir Colin Davis, formerly available from Philips or Decca.
                  
                  The set comes at an attractive price  £10.00 (mp3) 
                  or £14.99 (lossless). Buying the box means forgoing the 
                  shorter works, the Handel and Corelli fantasias, the Præludium 
                  for brass bells and percussion, and the Piano Concerto, employed 
                  as couplings on the individual CDs, but these are gathered together 
                  on CHAN9934 
                  [73:54] and theres a very good alternative recording of 
                  the Piano Concerto on Hyperion CDA67461/2. 
                  The Hyperion comes on 2 CDs with the piano sonatas but if you 
                  don�t want these you can purchase the concerto as a download 
                  separately.