This set contains all of the orchestral music that Britten published during 
      his own lifetime, as well as some pieces that were posthumously published. 
      It does not include all of these later discoveries – we do not have the 
      Double Concerto or the Two portraits, nor any of the works 
      that required editorial work to put them in a performable condition. Otherwise 
      it is totally comprehensive, including orchestral sections from Peter 
      Grimes and Gloriana which Britten himself extracted for concert 
      performance. In fact it is an exact reissue of the first eight discs from 
      the CD box of Britten (The 
      Collector’s Edition) that EMI issued a couple of years ago, shorn of 
      the vocal works and operatic selections that were contained in that collection.
       
      During his lifetime Britten set down many of these pieces - by no means 
      all of them - in recordings for Decca which he himself regarded as benchmarks 
      by which later performances could be judged. All the readings here date 
      from after the composer’s death but many of them bear the clear signs of 
      the influence of Britten’s own readings – which is a good thing, after all.
       
      The recording of the Sinfonia da Requiem gets this collection off 
      to a rousing start. Libor Pešek is slower than Britten in the two outer 
      movements with their air of lamentation, but he really lets rip in the central 
      Dies irae, scorching along at a tremendous pace and ensuring that 
      the deceleration at the end as the movement links into the final Requiem 
      aeternam does not simply sound like the music running out of momentum 
      - as it can. Pešek is equally convincing in the Sea interludes, 
      where he includes the Passacaglia as an integral movement before 
      the cracking final Storm, a procedure which works well. He is a 
      match for Britten himself in his reading of the Young person’s guide 
      to the orchestra, producing a sizzling account of the final fugue and 
      milking the slow viola variation for all it is worth. The recording is rather 
      less spotlit than Decca provided for Britten, but all the individual instruments 
      come through clearly.
       
      On the second disc - and at other points thereafter - EMI call on Sir Simon 
      Rattle and his City of Birmingham forces, who deliver a whole raft of 
      works which Britten didn’t record himself. These include the Scottish 
      Ballad and Young Apollo with Peter Donohoe as an excellent 
      soloist joined by Philip Fowke in the former, the haunting late suite on 
      English folksongs A time there was …, and other rarities such as 
      Canadian Carnival, An American Overture, Occasional 
      Overture, Russian Funeral and The building of the house. 
      Britten himself recorded the Diversions for piano (left hand) and 
      orchestra with Julius Katchen, but Peter Donohoe is every bit a match for 
      that performance even if he is less effervescent than Victoria Postnikova 
      was in a 1978 Proms performance with Gennady Rozhdestvensky, which was briefly 
      once available on a BBC Classics CD but has long vanished from the catalogues.
       
      Leif Ove Andsnes is a rather unexpected choice as soloist in the Piano 
      Concerto but he acquits himself well in the music, even if he pales 
      beside Sviatoslav Richter in Britten’s own recording. On the other hand 
      Ida Haendel in the Violin Concerto quite eclipses Mark Lubotsky 
      in Britten’s performance, possessing all the incredible amount of technical 
      bravura required to cope with some impossibly difficult writing – and then 
      some more to spare. We are not given here any of the later concerto movements 
      which Britten wrote in his younger years – the Double Concerto 
      for violin and viola already mentioned, or the Clarinet Concerto 
      commissioned by Benny Goodman but never completed – but then Britten himself 
      would not have regarded them as suitable candidates for inclusion in a collected 
      edition of his orchestral music. The final movement of the Clarinet 
      Concerto as edited by Colin Matthews is a real ‘find’.
       
      The disc of music for string orchestra conducted by Iona Brown with the 
      Norwegian Chamber Orchestra is an absolute stunner. Her reading of the Simple 
      Symphony lacks the sheer visceral punch of Britten’s own recording, 
      which was assisted by the resonant acoustic of the Snape Maltings, but it 
      yields nothing to the composer’s interpretation in terms of sheer panache 
      and her Bridge Variations are similarly inspired. She cannot do 
      much with the rather mechanical Prelude and Fugue, but she brings 
      out all the heartache of the underestimated Lachrymae with Lars 
      Anders Tomter a heartfelt soloist.
       
      Takuo Yuasa is less convincing in the suite which Britten extracted from 
      his opera Gloriana when it appeared that the work was unlikely 
      to find favour or indeed further performances following its disastrous première. 
      The main problem arises in the Lute song, given here with the original 
      tenor part assigned to Jonathan Small on oboe - as suggested by the composer. 
      I recently heard a broadcast of a performance that Britten himself gave 
      of the suite on German radio in the 1950s, where he recruited Peter Pears 
      (inevitably) to sing the song, as setting of some pretty dismal words by 
      the historical Earl of Essex. In the performance here the music is allowed 
      little time to breathe, and there is no sense of the flexibility that a 
      voice can bring to the beautiful melodic line. Elsewhere Yuasa is fine, 
      and brings out all the originality of Britten’s scoring in The tournament 
      and Gloriana moritur.
       
      Steven Isserlis and Richard Hickox give a splendid account of the Cello 
      Symphony, although they lack the sheer panache that Rostropovich brought 
      to his recording with Britten; but the quality of the recorded sound is 
      vastly superior to the Decca, which now begins to sound a bit pallid by 
      comparison. This disc is rounded out by another rarity, Men of Goodwill, 
      a set of variations on a Christmas carol dispatched in sparkling form by 
      Sir Neville Marriner with his Minnesota players.
       
      The Sinfonietta is also given a sparkling performance by Daniel 
      Harding conducting the Britten Sinfonia. The work was originally scored 
      for a small group of ten chamber players, but it sounds to me as though 
      Harding uses multiple strings at various points in the score – the booklet 
      notes are silent on this point – and this expansion of the scoring - if 
      such it is - works well. The Rossini suites Matinées musicales 
      and Soirées musicales are given boisterous readings under Sir Alexander 
      Gibson, but the inclusion on this disc of the original version of the latter 
      under the title Rossini Suite seems a dubious addition to the set; 
      it is really a work for a chamber ensemble of amere five players with choral 
      contributions and not an orchestral piece at all. In fact it is one of the 
      series of film scores which Britten wrote in the 1930s and the work is marginally 
      better known under the title of the film it was intended to accompany, The 
      Tocher.
       
      The final two discs in this collection enshrine Knussen’s The Prince 
      of the Pagodas, and this is a real winner. Britten’s own recording 
      was quite heavily abridged to fit onto four LP sides, with over forty cuts 
      including several complete numbers. There has subsequently been a DVD release 
      of the ballet in a performance from Covent Garden, but Knussen’s recording 
      remains the only complete version of the score available on CD. As such 
      it is an inevitable constituent of any collection of Britten’s music, and 
      would remain so – superbly played and recorded – even if there were any 
      competition. It is not perhaps Britten’s greatest score, but it prefigures 
      many of the ideas that were to find fruit in his music of the 1960s (not 
      least the church parables) and it certainly deserves to be heard complete.
       
      As a whole this collection this is a valuable asset in its own right, containing 
      as it does readings of many pieces that are otherwise unobtainable. And 
      there are no duds and some real winners among these performances, which 
      bid fair to rival Britten’s own survey for Decca. The booklet notes by Paul 
      Kildea appear to be new - the original EMI Britten box contained no booklet 
      notes at all - but in less than four pages they clearly cannot say all that 
      needs to be said about this music. Britten aficionados who have 
      not already purchased the original boxed set will need to have this one.
       
      Paul Corfield Godfrey
       
      A valuable asset - no duds and some real winners here.
    
       
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