DOWNLOAD NEWS 2013/7 
       Brian Wilson 
         
        Im delighted to welcome David Barker, who does 
        most of the work in getting MusicWeb International reviews online, as 
        a regular contributor to Download News. With his participation and that 
        of Dan Morgan, together with occasional input from Geoff Molyneux, the 
        tone is raised far higher than from my own modest thoughts. 
         
        Previous editions: 
         
         2013/6  here 
         2013/5  here 
         Archive of earlier editions  here 
         
        Ceremony and Devotion: Music for the Tudors 
        Plainchant, Sarum use, Veni, Creator Spiritus [4:08]  
        William BYRD (c.1540-1623) Laudibus in sanctis [5:16] 
        John SHEPPARD (d.1559?) Sacris solemniis iuncta sint gaudia 
        [8:05]  
        Thomas TALLIS (c.1505-1585) Jesu Salvator sæculi, Verbum 
        Patris [4:56]  
        John SHEPPARD Media vita in morte sumus [24:31]  
        Thomas TALLIS Miserere nostri [2:47]  
        William BYRD Domine, præstolamur [6:17]  
        Thomas TALLIS Iam Christus astra ascenderat [4:53]  
        William BYRD Hæc dies [2:27]; Infelix ego [12:24] 
        The Sixteen/Harry Christophers  rec. October 2009. DDD 
        Pdf booklet with texts and translations included 
        CORO COR16077 [75:48]  from thesixteendigital.com 
        (mp3 and lossless) 
         
         This 
        is music to die for. All the works here are available in other very fine 
        performances, often in programmes of music by single composers, such as 
        The Tallis Scholars recordings of their namesake and Byrd or the 
        Cardinalls Musick in Byrd, a series begun with ASV and completed 
        by Hyperion. That said, however, this would make an excellent introduction 
        to Tudor polyphony from a group who have the music thoroughly under their 
        collective belt; it would be equally attractive to seasoned collectors. 
        The downloaded sound is excellent in lossless flac and the notes are helpful 
        and informative.  
         
        By chance or design the programme allows the listener to move on to The 
        Tallis Scholars highly recommendable two 2-CD sets of the music 
        of this period with very minimal overlap (the two Sheppard works which, 
        surprisingly, the Scholars take at a slightly faster pace  the reverse 
        is usually true as between these two groups): 
         
         CDGIM209 from gimell.com 
        (mp3) 
         CDGIM210 from gimell.com 
        (mp3) 
         
        These were my joint Bargain of the Month  see review. 
         
        If this repertory appeals, you will be interested in The Sixteens 
        latest recording, An Immortal Legacy, Coro COR16111 [67:04] 
        from thesixteendigital.com 
        in mp3 and lossless  music by Tallis (including his short English 
        settings for Archbishop Parkers Psalter), Byrd, Morley, Gibbons, 
        Britten (Choral dances from Gloriana), Tippett (Spirituals from 
        A Child of our Time), Chilcott and Macmillan, due for release on 
        29 April, but available for download in advance. My first impressions 
        are that this varied programme could be a Recording of the Month  
        watch this space. 
         
        Contrasts in Wind 
        Andrea GABRIELI (1533-1585) Aria della Battaglia [14:27] 
        Giovanni GABRIELI (1557-1612) 
        Sonata octavi toni (trans. Ghedini) [5:15] 
        Sonata piane forte [5:24] 
        Canzon duodecimi toni [5:33] 
        Canzon noni toni [5:26] 
        Canzon septimi toni No.1 [4:41] 
        Canzon quarti toni [5:02] 
        Percy GRAINGER (1882-1961) 
        Lincolnshire Posy: 1. Lisbon (Sailors Song) [1:24]; 2. Horkstow 
        Grange (The Miser and his Man  A Local Tragedy) [2:46]; 3. Rufford 
        Park Poachers (Poaching Song) [3:38]; 4. The Brisk Young Sailor (Returned 
        to Wed his True Love) [1:35]; 5. Lord Melbourne (War Song) [2:51]; 6. 
        The Lost Lady Found (Dance Song) [2:14] 
        Hill Song No. 2 [5:44] 
        Eastman Wind Ensemble/Frederick Fennell  rec. 1958-1960. ADD/Stereo 
        BEULAH 5PD82 [66:00]  from iTunes 
        or amazon.co.uk 
        (mp3) 
         
         More 
        goodies from the treasure trove of recordings which Frederick Fennell 
        and the Eastman Wind Ensemble made for Mercury in the late 1950s and early 
        1960s. These versions of Lincolnshire Posy and Hill Song 
        No.2 are available on an Australian Decca Eloquence recording which Rob 
        Barnett and I recommended some time ago  review 
         review 
        (480 2089) but the recordings of music by the Gabrielis are not 
        available in the UK even on the 55-CD compendium of Mercury recordings. 
         
        The opening Aria della battaglia starts surprisingly softly  
        could this be a rare dud from these performers?  but when the music 
        becomes dramatic they certainly deliver the goods with interest. The other 
        items, by the younger Gabrieli, also justify the description of the original 
        LP (AMS16119) as in every way worthy of the music. These performances 
        have hardly dated and the recorded sound is full. 
         
        To the music of the Gabrielis Beulah have added half of another LP (MMA11034) 
        originally coupling the Grainger with music by Darius Milhaud, Bernard 
        Rogers  his Japanese Dances, included on the Eloquence CD 
         and Richard Strauss. I see no reason to modify the warm welcome 
        that I gave to the Grainger works on the Eloquence CD other than to remind 
        readers of the availability of Lincolnshire Posy on a wonderful 
        bargain Introduction to Percy Grainger on Chandos (CHAN2029  
        an introduction to their complete Richard Hickox Grainger series: Bargain 
        of the Month  review 
         download from theclassicalshop.net 
        in mp3 and lossless, though by an odd paradox of pricing, at £7.99, 
        the latter costs £0.99 more than the CD). 
         
        My Arcam Solo gave up the ghost just before I listened to this recording 
        and Im trying a Denon DM-39DAB as a replacement. Despite its having 
        been chosen as Product of the Year in a respected hi-fi magazine, I could 
        hardly believe that anything so small and so inexpensive  less than 
        a quarter of the price of the Arcam replacement  could drive my 
        floor-standing Monitor Audio speakers, but it delivered the goods most 
        creditably. Even though its not yet properly run in, between it 
        and the Beulah transfer Im amazed at how well these recordings sound 
        more than half a century on. I couldnt lay my hands on the Eloquence 
        CD for comparison but memory suggests that the Beulah transfer of this 
        colourful folk-based music is little, if at all, inferior. 
         
        Reissue of the Month 
         
         Praise 
        from Kings 
        Orlando GIBBONS (1583-1625) This is the Record of John* [4:46] 
        Drop, drop, slow tears [1:36] 
        William BYRD (1643-1623) Ave Verum Corpus [4:31] 
        Thomas TALLIS (c.1505-1585) Glory to Thee My God, this Night [2:51] 
        Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750) O Jesu so meek, O Jesu so mild, 
        BWV493 [2:53]; Christmas Oratorio: Break forth O beauteous Heavenly Light, 
        BWV248 [1:40] 
        Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809) Mass No.11 in d minor, H.XXII.11 (Nelson 
        Mass)** [39:57] 
        * Jacobean Consort of Viols 
        ** Sylvia Stahlmann (soprano) 
        ** Helen Watts (contralto) 
        ** Wilfred Brown (tenor) 
        ** Tom Krause (baritone) 
        ** London Symphony Orchestra 
        Simon Preston (organ) 
        Choir of Kings College, Cambridge/David Willcocks  rec. 1958-62. 
        ADD/stereo 
        BEULAH 1PD70 [58:15]  from iTunes 
        or amazon.co.uk 
        (both mp3) 
         
         Several 
        very valuable classic recordings are here gathered together. Beulah have 
        already given us some worthwhile single releases from Kings, including 
        the Byrd (3BX20), Gibbons (2BX20) and Bach (4BX20) 
        recordings included on this album (April 2011/1 DL 
        Roundup for reviews) but even if you purchased those on my recommendation 
        its worth following up with the new album for the sake of the Nelson 
        Mass alone. 
         
        Let me get one piece of scholarship out of the way first: the music has 
        nothing to do with Lord Nelson and his victory at Aboukir Bay  it 
        was composed in the same year, 1798, but before Haydn would have heard 
        of the event, so its hard to explain how the name stuck. The nickname 
        helps explain the prime position which this work has held among Haydns 
        wonderful series of masses; though I think there are other candidates 
        for that ranking, it doesnt mean that the music is other than wonderful. 
        This was the first recorded version that I got to know and, though there 
        have been several very good rivals, I still listen with enjoyment to my 
        copy of the Decca Ovation CD. 
         
        The recordings of Bach and the earlier composers here are musical fossils 
         they dont sing the music like that anymore  but fossils 
        can be fascinating and these are very good exemplars of their kind. For 
        all the progress that has been made in the performance of the music of 
        the pre-classical period, I can still listen to Kings under Willcocks 
        direction in this repertoire with pleasure. 
         
        The Haydn remains available from Decca (2 CDs with other Haydn Masses 
        or on a single CD with Handel and Vivaldi) and from Alto, but the Beulah 
        coupling is unique on a single album and the transfer is good  comparable 
        in quality with my CD of the Haydn. In the Gibbons the top line sounds 
        just a fraction glassy but nowhere near as fragile as Kings recordings 
        used to sound on LP even with a top-line Shure ME95ED cartridge. Despite 
        the availability of other very fine recordings of all these works, often 
        coupled with other music by the same composer, the Kings recordings 
        have stood the test of time. 
         
         If 
        youre looking for a recent recording of the Nelson Mass performed 
        by a collegiate choir you may be interested in the latest offering from 
        New College Oxford and Edward Higginbottom on their own Novum label 
        (NCR1385, with the Offertory Insanæ et vanæ curæ 
        inserted in its appropriate place between the Credo and Sanctus.) 
        At 48:23 the recording is very short value but the download from eclassical.com 
        (mp3 and lossless) compensates, in line with the sites per-second 
        charging policy  at $8.77. The soloists are drawn from the choirs 
        own ranks and they make a very good fist of their parts indeed. With good 
        recording in the lossless version, albeit 16-bit only, and at the price 
        this merits a strong recommendation. Stream from Naxos Music Library. 
        Theres no booklet from either source but the text of the Latin Mass 
        is enough easily obtained and that of the motet is here. 
         
        For a recording of the Nelson Mass with mixed professional soloists, 
        youll have to look hard to beat Trevor Pinnocks recording 
        with the Te Deum in C, DG 423 0972, which I made Download 
        of the Month in the April 2009 DL 
        Roundup. Ignore the passionate.com link: mp3 from 7digital.com; 
        CD, mp3 or lossless from deutschegrammophon.com. 
        Alternatively, John Eliot Gardiners recording of the Nelson Mass 
        and Theresienmesse on a 2-CD Philips set, 470 2862: 
        mp3 and flac from deutschegrammophon.com. 
        For a single-CD recording at budget price, I was very pleasantly surprised 
        by the quality of the J Owen Burdick-directed recording coupled with the 
        Nikolaimesse on Naxos 8.572123: Bargain of the Month 
         review. 
        Download in mp3 from classicsonline.com 
        or stream from Naxos Music Library. 
         
        Recording of the Month 
         
         Johann 
        Sebastian BACH (1685-1750) Double and triple concertos 
        Concerto for Two Violins in d minor, BWV1043 [12:14] 
        Concerto for Flute, Violin and Harpsichord in a minor, BWV1044 [15:35] 
        Concerto for Oboe, Violin and Strings BWV1060R [9:24] 
        Concerto for 3 violins, strings and continuo in D (reconstruction), BWV 
        1064R [13:30] 
        Bojan Čičić (violin II, BWV1043) 
        Katy Bircher (flute, BWV1044) 
        Alexandra Bellamy (oboe, BWV1060R) 
        Johannes Pramsohler, Anna Nowak-Pokrzywinska (violins II and III, BWV1064R) 
        Brecon Baroque/Rachel Podger (violin)  rec. October 2012. DDD/DSD. 
        Pdf booklet included 
        CHANNEL CLASSICS CCSSA34113 [65:22]  from channelclassics.com 
        (SACD, mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless and DSD.) 
         
        [Due for release on 13 May 2013 but available in advance to download] 
         
         Since 
        I reviewed the Teldec Complete Bach Edition on USB  review 
         Ive been looking around for alternative or additional recommendations 
        of some individual works. The Teldec Edition is so inexpensive in that 
        form that its feasible to supplement it. In the case of the violin 
        concertos, the offering in the USB edition, from the Harnoncourts, is 
        not one of the strongest constituents and I recommended as an alternative 
        a new Harmonia Mundi recording of the two solo concertos, BWV1041 and 
        1042, with the Double Concerto, BWV1043 and the Triple Violin Concerto, 
        BWV1064R (HMC902145  download from eclassical.com: 
        reviewed in DL 
        News 2013/6  Recording of the Month). 
         
        The new recording from Channel Classics deserves an equally strong recommendation 
        for those who already have versions of the solo concertos which they like 
        but who would like to add the double and triple concertos. In addition 
        to BWV1041 and 1064R, that includes the concerto for flute, violin and 
        harpsichord, BWV1044, and a reconstruction of the violin and oboe concerto, 
        BWV1060R. I wouldnt like to have to choose between the Harmonia 
        Mundi and Channel Classics recordings, so Im happy to leave you 
        to choose on the basis of couplings. 
         
        There are certain performers with whom I find I cant go wrong  
        the likes of Thomas Beecham, Pierre Monteux, Janet Baker and Dietrich 
        Fischer-Dieskau  and Im beginning to think that Rachel Podger 
        can safely be numbered among them. With very good recording  I downloaded 
        the 24/96 but audiophiles can choose even better quality, with 24/192 
        and DSD  and an informative booklet, the only small reservation 
        that I might express is that I recently recommended another Channel Classics 
        recording of BWV1044, with Florilegium, coupled with Cantata No.209 and 
        a concerto by Telemann (CCSSA27208  DL 
        News 2013/4) and, as between this, the new recording and the Harmonia 
        Mundi, Im hard pressed to choose. 
         
        Dont forget Rachel Podgers recording of the solo violin concerto 
        in E, BWV1042, on The Music I Love (SEL6212, 2 CDs at a 
        special price, with more Bach and works by Vivaldi, Mozart, Rameau and 
        Haydn: Bargain of the Month  see DL 
        News 2012/24). That recording is taken from an all-Bach album, the 
        two solo concertos, BWV1041 and 1042 plus BWV1055 and 1056 on CCSSA30910 
        [51:18]  see November 2011/1 DL 
        Roundup. My request then for a performance by these artists of BWV1043 
        has now been fulfilled. 
         
        George Frideric HANDEL (1685-1759) 
        Alceste, HWV45  
        Incidental music to the play by Tobias Smollett (1721-1771)  
        Music texts probably by Thomas Morell (1703-1784) 
        Lucy Crowe (soprano), Elizabeth Weisberg (soprano), Sian Menna (mezzo-soprano) 
        Benjamin Hulett (tenor), Andrew Foster-Williams (bass-baritone) 
        Early Opera Company/Christian Curnyn  rec. November 2011. DDD 
        Pdf booklet with texts included. 
        CHANDOS CHACONNE CHAN0788 [63:16]  from theclassicalshop.net 
        (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless) 
         
         I 
        missed this when it was released last year, despite favourable reviews 
        by Robert Hugill  review 
         and Ralph Moore  review. 
        Its since been chosen as Operatic Recording of the Year by BBC Music 
        Magazine. Perhaps I thought that it could hardly equal, let alone surpass, 
        the Oiseau-Lyre recording made by Christopher Hogwood with Emma Kirkby 
        among the soloists, though that has hardly been the most frequent visitor 
        to my CD player. (Now on a 2-CD Decca Duo, 458 0722, with the Utrecht 
        Te Deum and Jubilate and the Ode for Queen Annes Birthday). 
         
        The Decca set remains desirable because the Alceste music is there 
        in the company of some of other fine works, notably the Ode for Queen 
        Anne, in fine performances and at budget price (download from 7digital.com 
        for £7.49, though youll have to make allowances for the fact 
        that theyve given it the wrong cover shot). Lucy Crowe may not have 
        quite the bell-like clarity of Emma Kirkby but her performance and that 
        of all concerned makes the new Chandos a very attractive alternative in 
        more recent sound and available as a very fine 24-bit download. It comes 
        with the booklet of notes and words, not available with the Decca download. 
         
        Recording of the Month 
         
         Carl 
        Philipp Emanuel BACH (1714-88) Keyboard Concertos Volume 19 
        Concerto in G, Wq43/5 (H 475) [12:27] 
        Concerto in C, Wq43/6 (H 476) [19:01] 
        Concerto in G, Wq44 (H 477) [15:04] 
        Concerto in D, Wq45 (H 478) [17:19] 
        Concerto Armonico Budapest (leader Márta Ábrahám)/Miklós 
        Spányi (copy of 1745 harpsichord) [Wq43/5-6; Wq 45]; (1798 Broadwood 
        fortepiano) [Wq44] 
        Cadenzas: Wq43/5 and 43/6: original, from first print; Wq44 (second movement): 
        composed by Miklós Spányi; Wq45: original 
        Pdf booklet included 
        BIS BIS-CD-1957 [64:59]  from eclassical.com 
        (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless) 
         
         Miklós 
        Spányi and BIS are now on the penultimate volume of this cycle, 
        with concertos completed in 1771/2 and 1778. The three concertos from 
        Wq43 complete the set commenced on Volume 17 (March 2011/1 
        DL Roundup) and, as there, Spányi gives good reasons for performing 
        the solo parts on the harpsichord, which he also employs in the sole concerto 
        Wq45. Those who have been collecting the series will need no urging from 
        me to add this volume to their collections. 
         
        The orchestral accompaniment is again in the capable hands of Concerto 
        Armonico Budapest, as on Volume 18 (BIS-CD-1787  August 2012/1 
        DL 
        Roundup), whose leader is credited with a share in the artistic direction 
        with Spányi himself. 
         
        My Recording of the Month accolade is for the whole series 
        now that its nearing completion. Eclassical.com  the best 
        place to find BIS recordings  dont make it easy to find the 
        earlier volumes in this series; youll find earlier volumes by following 
        these links: 
         
         Volume 16 (BIS-CD-1587) here 
        (my review of the CD here) 
         Volume 17 (BIS-CD-1687) here 
         Volume 18 (BIS-CD-1787) here 
         
        The Trio Sonata in 18th-century Germany 
        Johann Gottlieb GOLDBERG(1727-56) Trio sonata in C for two violins 
        and continuo [10:46] 
        Johann Friedrich FASCH (1688-1758) Trio Sonata in c minor for two 
        violins and continuo, FWV N:c2 [9:48] 
        Johann Christoph Friedrich BACH (1732-95) Trio sonata in F for 
        two violins and continuo, W. VII/3 [9:30] 
        Johann Gottlieb GRAUN (1702-71) Trio in B flat for violin, viola 
        and continuo [13:22] 
        from Musikalisches Vielerley, Hamburg 1770 
        Georg Philipp TELEMANN (1681-1767) Trio in G for violin, gamba 
        and continuo, TWV 42:G10 [8:49] 
        Carl Philipp Emanuel BACH (1714-88) Trio sonata in B flat for two 
        violins and b.c, Wq158 (H 584), from Musikalisches Mancherley, 
        1763 [13:12] 
        London Baroque (Ingrid Seifert (violin); Richard Gwilt (violin/ viola 
        [Graun]); Charles Medlam (cello/ viola da gamba [Telemann]); Steven Devine 
        (harpsichord)) 
        Pdf booklet included. 
        BIS-CD-1995 [67:00]  from eclassical.com 
        (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library 
          
        Having been led by BIS into believing that we had recently seen the last 
        recording in London Baroques series of the 18th-century Trio Sonata, 
        heres a pleasant surprise indeed, though the sting in the tail is 
        that this time it really is the end of the series. 
         
        Those who have been collecting some or all of the earlier volumes will 
        need no urging from me to add this final volume but there is no reason 
        why beginners should not begin here  theres no sense in which 
        these are left-over works. 
         
         
        Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809) Keyboard Concerto No.11 in D major, HobXVIII:11 
        [20:03] 
        Keyboard Concerto No.3 in F major with French horns and strings, Hob.XVIII:3 
        [20:18] 
        Keyboard Concerto No.4 in G major, Hob.XVIII:4 [21:22] 
        (cadenzas by Wanda Landowska (No.11); Marc-André Hamelin (Nos.3 
        and 4) 
        Marc-André Hamelin (piano) 
        Les Violons du Roy/Bernard Labadie  rec. October 2012. DDD 
        Pdf booklet included 
        HYPERION CDA67925 [61:43]  from hyperion-records.co.uk 
        (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless) 
         
         With 
        so many excellent Mozart piano concertos and such wonderful performances 
        available of them, its not surprising that Haydns compositions 
        in this genre get overlooked, but it is a shame, as the present recording 
        amply demonstrates. No.11 especially deserves to be more widely known. 
         
        Having given us some highly praised recordings of the Haydn piano sonatas, 
        Marc-André Hamelin now turns his attention to an equally distinguished 
        recording of the concertos, an enterprise in which he is ably supported 
        by a French Canadian group whom I dont recall having encountered 
        before, though they have recorded for a variety of labels. This has excellent 
        sound  undemonstratively natural in 24/96 form  and Hyperions 
        usual high-quality booklet. 
         
        Its just a shame that Hyperion chose to record the same three concertos 
        that are already available on EMI from Leif Ove Andsnes and the Norwegian 
        Chamber Orchestra  download from classicsonline.com 
        or stream from Naxos Music Library. For period-instrument devotees theres 
        a Harmonia Mundi recording of Nos. 4 and 11 by Andreas Staier and the 
        Freiburg Baroque Orchestra conducted by Gottfried von der Golz, who is 
        also solo violinist in Concerto No.6 for keyboard and violin  review. 
        Pace David Billinges heading, I believe that Staier plays a copy 
        of a Walter fortepiano (1785), not a pianoforte. 
         
        Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809) Symphonies  Volume 18 
        Symphony No.89 in F, Hob.I:89 [24:11] 
        Symphony No.102 in B-flat, Hob. I:102 [23:28] 
        Sinfonia Concertante in B-flat, Hob. I:105 [20:35] 
        Woitek Garbowski (violin) 
        Pirkko Langer (cello) 
        Andrius Puskunigis (oboe) 
        Michael Kaulartz (bassoon) 
        Heidelberg Symphony Orchestra/Thomas Fey  rec. May 2012. DDD. 
        Pdf booklet included 
        HÄNSSLER 98.582 [68:14]  from eclassical.com 
        (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library 
         
        Symphonies Volume 19 
        Symphony No.26 in d minor, Hob.I:26, Lamentatione [18:37] 
        Symphony No.27 in G, Hob.I:27 [13:16] 
        Symphony No.42 in D, Hob.I:42 [34:40] 
        Heidelberg Symphony Orchestra/Thomas Fey  rec. July 2012. DDD. 
        Pdf booklet included 
        HÄNSSLER 98.005 [66:33]  from eclassical.com 
        (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library 
         
          Thomas 
        Feys Haydn symphony series, now past the half-way mark if my maths 
        is correct, has received some very variable responses and the two latest 
        volumes are no exception. Ive enjoyed many of the earlier releases 
        and the three symphonies from the Sturm und Drang period on Volume 
        19 are generally very successful, in performances that capture the extremes 
        of emotion and drama characteristic of the works of that era; even though 
        some aspects of Feys direction have come in for criticism, I enjoyed 
        this album. 
         
        Volume 18 is another matter  two very good performances, of the 
        under-rated Symphony No.89  better than Simon Rattles big-band 
        performance with the BPO  and the Sinfonia Concertante, here 
        billed as No.105, together with a controversial account of No.102  
        often jerkily staccato in the fast section of the first movement and the 
        third movement and with some noticeable gear changes of tempo. I almost 
        forgave the aberrations for the sake of the lively finale, but Beecham 
        (EMI) and Davis (Decca), both on inexpensive pairs of twofers, are still 
        the safest bets for the London symphonies. Beecham plays tricks with the 
        music sometimes but his tricks are more endearing than Feys. If 
        its just No. 102 that you want, its coupled with No.104 in 
        a recommendable performance from the ECO and Jeffrey Tate on EMI Encore 
         review 
         £2.99 from classicsonline.com, 
        or Classics for Pleasure (Nos. 100-104, £4.99 from classicsonline.com). 
        Download only in both cases; the CD equivalents appear to have been deleted. 
         
        Both Hänssler recordings sound very well in their lossless guise. 
        Both volumes are available for sampling from the Naxos Music Library. 
         
        Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-91) 
        Quartet in F for oboe, violin, viola and cello, K370 (1781) [14:01]  
        Concerto in C for oboe and orchestra, K314 (1777) [19:48] 
        Sonata for Violin and Piano in B flat K378 (1779-80) (arranged for oboe 
        and piano by L. Slavinsky) [20:58] 
        Alexei Ogrintchouk (oboe and direction) 
        Boris Brovtsyn (violin), Maxim Rysanov (viola), Kristina Blaumane (cello) 
        Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra  rec. 2011 and 2012. DDD/DSD 
        Pdf booklet included 
        BIS BIS-SACD-2007 [55:52]  from eclassical.com 
        (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless) 
         
        Symphony No.39 in E-flat, K543 [30:53] 
        Symphony No.41 in C, Jupiter, K551 [35:56] 
        English Baroque Soloists/Sir John Eliot Gardiner  rec. live, 2006. 
        DDD 
        SOLI DEO GLORIA SDG711 [66:49]  from 
        eclassical.com (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library 
         
         
        [The performances 
 are spirited and refined and I enjoyed 
        them very much. There may have been a few slight instances of imprecision 
        in the playing that would have been ironed out under studio conditions 
        but I cant say I heard any glaring inaccuracies and certainly nothing 
        that impeded my enjoyment of the music-making. See review 
        by John Quinn.] 
         
        In Memoriam Sir Colin Davis 
        Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-91) 
        Concerto in C for oboe and orchestra, K314 [20:26] 
        Symphony No.29 in A, K201 [23:23] 
        Symphony No.34 in C, K338 [19:46] 
        Symphony No.39 in E-flat, K453 [28:44] 
        Leon Goossens (oboe) 
        Sinfonia of London/Colin Davis  rec. 1959/1960. ADD/stereo 
        BEULAH 3PD44 [43:49 + 48:40]  from iTunes (mp3) 
         
        Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827) 
        Piano Concerto No.1 in C, Op.15 [37:01] 
        Piano Concerto No.2 in B-flat, Op.19 [29:59] 
        Stephen Kovacevich (piano) 
        London Symphony Orchestra/Sir Colin Davis  
        DECCA VIRTUOSO 478 4225 [67:00]  from 7digital.com 
        (mp3) 
         
          There 
        were plenty of obvious candidates in my mind by which to commemorate Colin 
        Davis, not least his recording of Berliozs Les Troyens, a 
        work which I first heard when he conducted in it Oxford with the Chelsea 
        Opera Group in the early 1960s  see below for the Berlioz Edition 
         but I go just as far back with his recordings of the Mozart 
        Oboe Concerto and Symphony No.34, purchased on World Record Club T59 
        for the princely sum of 23/9 (£1.18). In fact, its only a 
        few weeks since I was asking for the reissue of these recordings  
        DL News 2013/5  unaware that Beulah had a release planned 
        for later this year, a release now brought forward by the sad news of 
        Sir Colins death. Until now they have been available only in dubious 
        download versions or trapped in a 6-CD EMI Icon box set. Now they make 
        an excellent way to mark his passing. 
         
         The 
        performance of the Oboe Concerto sounds old-fashioned by comparison with 
        the new BIS version, with a predominance of slow tempi facilitating 
        Leon Goossens caressing of the solo line. Theres more than 
        room for both kinds of interpretation; I shall certainly be returning 
        to the BIS, not least for the Oboe Quartet, also a Goossens speciality 
        in the day  his version of the concerto led me to purchase his much 
        earlier recording of the Quartet with the Léner Quartet on an EMI 
        EP. which was released at about the same time. The tempi on BIS are noticeably 
        brisker, though not to the extent of sounding hurried or perfunctory, 
        but its not just nostalgia that will bring me back to the Goossens/Davis 
        version. 
         
        The BIS recording of the transcribed Violin Sonata is also stylish, a 
        welcome bonus; you are hardly likely to buy the recording for this alone, 
        but you may also like to note the CD of reconstructed Bach oboe concertos 
        which Alexei Ogrintchouk made earlier for BIS (BIS-SACD-1769  
        review: 
        download from eclassical.com 
        in mp3 or 16 or 24-bit lossless). 
         
        The ex-WRC recording of the concerto was judged only satisfactory in 1961 
        and the sound is a little boxed-in, but not to the extent that you need 
        be put off buying this timely reissue  Ive actually requested 
        its reappearance twice recently. Of course, half a century on you wouldnt 
        expect it to challenge the new BIS recording in that respect, but Beulah 
        have done their usual very fine job with all four recordings. The other 
        two works, Symphonies 29 and 39, with Leon Goossens in a less glamorous 
        role as principal oboe, came out a year earlier, again from World Record 
        Club, but I missed these and came to Daviss No.39 only much later 
        via his later LSO recording for Philips, coupled with No.40, when it was 
        reissued at mid price. 
         
        Beulah had already given us recordings of Symphonies Nos. 29 and 39 (1BX129 
        and 2BX129 respectively) but their reappearance here is no less 
        welcome. No.29 is coupled with the Oboe Concerto and No.39 with No.34 
        on CD2. Again the performances are very well worth rescuing, especially 
        as that Philips remake of No.39 with the LSO is not currently available. 
        (No.40 is due to appear in a Philips box set in May 2013.) Though the 
        young Colin Davis has a reputation for being livelier than his later self, 
        both performances are a trifle sedate but I enjoyed hearing them  
        and its certainly not nostalgia this time, as I hadnt come 
        across them when first issued. If anything the sound is a little brighter 
        here, too. 
         
         My 
        principal benchmark for No.39 is the Linn recording with Sir Charles Mackerras 
        (Linn CKD308, 2 CDs, with 38 and 40-41  Recording of 
        the Month  review 
        and February 2009 Roundup. 
        Download in mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless from linnrecords.com). 
        I hadnt heard Sir John Eliot Gardiners live version 
        from 2006 and his 70th birthday seemed a good time to do so. Dubbed onto 
        CD during the second half of a live concert and given to the audience 
        at the end, it has subsequently been tidied up a little. Its certainly 
        very competitive, but Im a little less enthusiastic than John Quinn 
        was when he reviewed the CD: I think the music comes to life just a little 
        more for Mackerras, even though his performance is with modern instruments, 
        and his recording is more resplendent. Did I mention that the Linn comes 
        on two CDs or downloads for the price of one? 
         
        Of all his many treasurable recordings Colin Daviss Beethoven 
        Piano Concertos with Stephen Bishop, as he then was, have stayed as 
        a consistent benchmark for all new versions; my copies of the CD on the 
        defunct Philips Concert Classics label receive regular playings. The 7digital.com 
        download of Nos. 1 and 2 comes in 320kb/s mp3 and costs a very reasonable 
        £4.99; dont pay more for transfers of older releases. 
         
        Concerto No.3 is on 478 4027 with the Violin Concerto (Arthur Grumiaux) 
         I cant find any download source, even from deutschegrammophon.com, 
        the home base for all Universal downloads  and Nos. 4 and 5 are 
        available from 7digital.com, 
        again for £4.99 (mp3). 
         
        Nos. 2 and 4 are also available re-mastered in SACD on Pentatone PTC5186101. 
        Australian Eloquence have the complete set of all 5 concertos on 480 
        5946 (4 CDs with the Violin Concerto, Romances 1 and 2 and the Triple 
        Concerto, with Haitink and Inbal). 
         
        If youre still looking for Mozart orchestra recordings by which 
        to remember Colin Davis, theres a 2-CD set from Australian Eloquence 
        of Symphonies 28, 33, 36 and 38 and Divertimentos 10 and 11 (442 8149 
         review). 
        His recordings of the Mozart Violin Concertos and Sinfonia Concertante 
        with Arthur Grumiaux enjoy well-deserved classic status: they are 
        available inexpensively on Decca Duo 438 3232 (with Adagio 
        and Rondo  from 7digital.com) 
        or Philips 464 7222 (with Violin Sonatas  from 7digital.com). 
         
        Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)  
        Matthias Goerne  Schubert Edition  Volume 7 
        Im Abendrot D799 [4:15]  
        Der Wanderer D493 [5:22]  
        Nachtviolen D752 [3:34]  
        Im Walde D834 [5:18]  
        Normanns Gesang D846 [3:06]  
        Der Geistertanz D116 [2:01]  
        Schatzgräbers Begehr D761 [3:25]  
        An den Mond D259 [3:15]  
        Erlkönig D328 [3:43]  
        Am See D746 [2:21]  
        Alinde D904 [5:10]  
        Widerschein D949 [4:33]  
        Die Forelle D550 [1:54]  
        Der Fluss D693 [5:15]  
        Abendröte D690 [3:51]  
        Klage D415 [3:08]  
        Der Strom D565 [1:29]  
        Fischerweise D881 [2:57]  
        Auf der Bruck D853 [3:05]  
        Matthias Goerne (baritone)  
        Andreas Haefliger (piano)  rec. January 2012, Teldex Studio Berlin. 
        DDD/DSD 
        Pdf booklet with texts and translations included. 
        HARMONIA MUNDI HMC902141 (31959810) [67:54]  from eclassical.com 
        (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless) 
         
        [Matthias Goernes selective  and brilliant  Schubert 
        cycle continues with the present volume. This time he joins forces with 
        Andreas Haefliger and its a partnership that really works. 
        See review 
        by Simon Thompson.] 
         
         These 
        Lieder are forever Fischer-Dieskau territory but Matthias Goerne comes 
        as close as anyone that Ive ever heard to challenging that hegemony. 
        By all means continue listening to F-D*, as I shall, though avoiding that 
        dreadful relic of past glories in his late performance of Die schöne 
        Müllerin with Andras Schiff which I reviewed 
        on DVD, but put his Erlkönig and Die Forelle in particular 
        out of your mind when enjoying Goerne, here more than very ably partnered 
        by Andreas Haefliger and very well recorded. If you must compare, its 
        a matter of swings and roundabouts in Erlkönig; you pay for 
        Goernes heightened drama with diction thats marginally less 
        clear than F-Ds.  
         
        The 24-bit download is rather pricey at $18.30, though that still compares 
        with what youd pay for the CD; if youre happy with 16-bit 
        or mp3, eclassical.coms $12.20 is comparable with what others are 
        asking for mp3 alone. £7.49 for mp3/m4a, without texts, from 7digital.com; 
        earlier volumes also available for the same price. 
         
        * Two good, inexpensive, places to start are his recitals on EMI Encore 
        with Gerald Moore  June 2012/1 Roundup 
         and with Jörg Demus on DG Originals  January 2010 Roundup, 
        but ignore the passionato.com link for the DG recording  they are 
        no longer in the download business  go to 7digital.com 
        for the mp3 (£4.99) or to deutschegrammophon.com 
        for lossless (£8.99). The EMI Encore is available for £2.99 
        from sainsburysentertainment.co.uk 
         marginally less expensive than the hmvdigital.com link which 
        I gave but beware  they also have the same collection for £6.99. 
         
        Another excellent budget-price starter CD comes from hyperion-records.co.uk 
         the sampler for the Hyperion Complete Schubert Edition, with highlights 
        from the first 27 releases in that series (A Voyage of Discovery: 
         
        HYP200). 
         
        Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)  
        Die Winterreise, D911 [71:35] 
        Matthew Rose (bass); Gary Matthewman (piano)  rec. 
        No texts. CD version contains score, which is not available with download. 
        STONE RECORDS 5060192780222 [71:35]  from classicsonline.com 
        (mp3) or prestoclassical.co.uk 
        (mp3 and lossless) or stream from Naxos Music Library 
         
         I 
        may have been successful in putting Fischer-Dieskau out of mind for the 
        duration of the Harmonia Mundi recording (above) but memories of the Meister 
        intruded from the very start of this recording of Winterreise. 
        Its a dark work and F-D brings out the darkness and bleakness so 
        well that the resigned despair of the final song, Der Leiermann, 
        seems inevitable, but he also puts in some lighter touches along the way. 
        From Matthew Rose, not only is the voice deeper and darker, but the despair 
        is there right from the start with little relief, even when he remembers 
        his beloved and the love and marriage that might have been with the words 
        Das Mädchen sprach von Liebe/Die Mutter gar von Eh. 
        As in Die schöne Müllerin the mood of Winterreise is 
        bitter sweet; though the bitterness comes earlier in the cycle and permeates 
        the music more thoroughly, we need the hint of sweetness to offset and 
        heighten the bitterness. Even the sweet memory of Der Lindenbaum seems 
        more remote than usual in this interpretation, though the two moods are 
        well contrasted in Frühlingstraum. If thats how you view the 
        music, this could be your ideal version  its already been 
        made Editors Choice by one magazine  and I may well return 
        to it in certain moods. The final song, Der Leiermann, is as heart-rending 
        as any version that Ive heard, but this is certainly not my first 
        choice overall. 
         
        There are no texts or notes with the download and you miss out on the 
        full score which comes with the physical CD. One to try first, I think 
         in full from Naxos Music Library if you can. 
         
        Peter Harvey, sensitively accompanied by Gary Cooper on fortepiano (Linn 
        CKD371  March 2011/1 Roundup) 
        also stresses the darker side of this music but I found his version more 
        to my liking than the new Stone recording. Otherwise F-Ds many recordings 
        remain available; the least expensive is that made with Jörg Demus 
        on DG Originals (download from 7digital.com 
        for £4.99). They also have the 3-CD set of Winterreise, Müllerin 
        and Schwanengesang with Gerald Moore, my own library choice (477 
        7956)  here 
         for £15.99, but thats more expensive at the time of 
        writing than ordering the CDs from deutschegrammophon.com 
        and from some other online sites. The recording with Daniel Barenboim, 
        another favourite of mine, has recently returned, inexpensively, on DG 
        Virtuoso 478 5186. 
         
        Mathias Goerne and Graham Johnson in the Hyperion Schubert Lieder series 
        are also well worth considering: CDA33030 or CDA30021  
        see October 2010 DL Roundup. 
         
        Bargain of the Month 
         
         Hector 
        BERLIOZ (1803-1869) Édition du bicentenaire: Bicentennial 
        Edition 
        Soloists (see below); London Symphony Chorus and Orchestra/Sir Colin Davis 
        LSO LIVE LSO0046 [12 CDs: 10:52:10]  from classicsonline.com 
        (mp3) or stream individual works from Naxos Music Library 
         
         As 
        with the Teldec Complete Bach on USB which I reviewed recently, Ive 
        had time only to dip into this set, but I already knew many of the components 
        from owning them on CD. The individual recordings which are here gathered 
        together are available separately, but to buy them individually would 
        cost a great deal more than the cost of the complete edition: £25.99: 
         
         Les Troyens: Ben Heppner (Enée), Michelle DeYoung 
        (Didon), Petra Lang(Cassandre), Sara Mingardo (Anna), Peter Mattei (Chorèbe), 
        Stephen Milling (Narbal), Kenneth Tarver (Iopas), Toby Spence (Hylas), 
        Alan Ewing (Priam), Guang Yang (Hécube), Isabelle Cals (Ascagne), 
        Tigran Martirossian (Panthée), Bülent Bezdüz (Helenus), 
        Mark Stone (Un chef grec), Leigh Melrose (Un soldat troyen/Mercure), Orlin 
        Annastassov (LOmbre dHector), Andrew Greenan (Premier Sentinelle), 
        Roderick Earle (Deuxieme Sentinelle) 
         La Damnation de Faust, Op.24: Giuseppe Sabbatini (Faust 
        ), Enkelejda Shkosa (Marguerite), Michele Pertusi (Méphistophélès), 
        David Wilson-Johnson (Brander) 
         Béatrice et Bénédict: Enkelejda Shkosa 
        (Béatrice), Kenneth Tarver (Bénédict), Susan Gritton 
        (Héro), Sara Mingardo (Ursule), Laurent Naouri (Claudio), David 
        Wilson-Johnson (Somarone), Dean Robinson (Don Pedro) 
         Roméo et Juliette, Op.17: Daniela Barcellona (mezzo), 
        Kenneth Tarver (tenor), Orliin Anastassov (bass) 
         Harold en Italie, Op.16: Tabea Zimmermann (viola) 
         Symphonie fantastique, Op.14 
         
        Not only is the complete set a notable bargain  the CD equivalent 
        costs about twice as much and classicsonline.coms own download of 
        Les Troyens alone costs £31.96  it also makes a superb 
        tribute to Sir Colin Davis. All the component parts have consistently 
        been rated at or near the top of the tree, even in preference to Daviss 
        earlier recordings for Philips or EMI, and I see no reason not to praise 
        the set wholeheartedly, especially as Ive already endorsed some 
        of its components. Dont forget, however, the recording of the Symphonie 
        Fantastique with the Concertgebouw Orchestra, as rendered in 24-bit sound 
        on Linn UNI006: Download of the Month  April 
        2012/1 DL 
        Roundup. 
         
        A few annoying clicks on one track of les Troyens are not ruinous. 
        I marginally prefer this transcription of Faust to the CD set which 
        I own, where the music has been transferred at a low level and loses some 
        of its power, even with the volume turned up. The only problem is that 
        there is no booklet, so no texts or translations. 
         
        Frédéric CHOPIN (1810-1849) 
        Polonaise No. 2 in e flat minor, Op.26/2 [8:59] 
        Waltz No.14 in e minor, Op. post., KKIVa:15, B 56 [3:05] 
        Waltz No.3 in a minor (Grande Valse Brillante), Op.34/2 [6:25] 
        Waltz No.8 in A flat, Op.64/3 [3:09] 
        Ballade No.2 in F, Op.38 [6:55] 
        Prelude Op.28/10 in c sharp minor [0:29] 
        Prelude Op.28/11 in B [0:43] 
        Prelude Op.28/13 in F sharp [3:48] 
        Fantasia in f minor, Op.49 [12:35] 
        Nocturne No.16 in E flat, Op.55/2 [6:20] 
        Mazurka No.5 in B flat, Op.7/1 [2:37] 
        Mazurka No.50 in a minor (Notre Temps) [3:52] 
        Mazurka No.32 in c sharp minor, Op.50/3 [5:35] 
        Scherzo No.2 in b flat minor, Op.31 [10:46] 
        Janina Fialkowska (piano) 
        ATMA ACD2266 [75:18]  from eclassical.com 
        (mp3 and lossless) or stream from naxos Music Library 
         
         I 
        missed this attractively varied and generously filled recording when it 
        appeared last year and we dont seem to have reviewed it here on 
        MusicWeb International; it was only when it won one of the BBC Music Awards 
        that I spotted it. Its success seems to have caught the UK distributors 
        by surprise, with one on-line supplier reporting that its out of 
        stock and may take 6 weeks to order, which makes downloading more attractive 
        than usual. With excellent playing, from a pianist had to relearn all 
        this music after fighting back from a serious operation on her arm and 
        with very good recording (16-bit) this would make a very good introduction 
        to Chopin. 
         
        Verdi Centenary Bargain 
         
         Giuseppe 
        VERDI (1813-1901) La Traviata  
        Violetta Valery  Anna Moffo (soprano) 
        Alfredo Germont  Richard Tucker (tenor) 
        Giorgio Germont  Robert Merrill (baritone) 
        Flora Bervoix  Anna Reynolds (mezzo) 
        Chorus and Orchestra of the Rome Opera House/Fernando Previtali 
        PAST CLASSICS [3 CDs: 28:51 + 56:20 + 27:37]  from emusic.com 
        (mp3) 
         
         On 
        just three tracks  one per act  and costing £1.26 or 
        less, this is a splendid bargain, when the original release on three LPs 
        cost over £6 in the UK (at least £150 now), and especially 
        as the recording, from the early 1960s, is more recent than most Past 
        Classics offerings and the transfers have been well made. With some fine 
        singing from the principals, notably from Anna Moffo, and idiomatic support 
        from Fernando Previtali, this is still competitive with more recent recordings 
        and the download is all the more welcome because the RCA Living Stereo 
        CDs seem no longer to be generally available in the UK. Be aware that 
        Robert J Farr in his review 
        of that set liked some of the performances a good deal less than I do, 
        but it wont cost you a fortune to try the recording for yourself. 
        Non-members can purchase for £2.67 from amazon.co.uk. 
         
        Richard WAGNER (1813-1883)  
        Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg prelude [9:50] 
        Siegfried Idyll [17:38] 
        Götterdämmerung  Dawn and Siegfrieds Rhine 
        Journey [9:40]; Siegfrieds Funeral March [8:18]; Immolation scene 
        [18:34] 
        Petra Lang (soprano) 
        Budapest Festival Orchestra/Iván Fischer  rec. January 2012. 
        DDD/DSD 
        Pdf booklet included with texts and translations 
        CHANNEL CLASSICS CCSSA32713 [64:21]  from channelclassics.com 
        (SACD, mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless and DSD) 
         
        Der fliegende Holländer Overture: Original version (1841) 
        [8:37] 
        Wesendonck-Lieder: Five Poems by Mathilde Wesendonck for female 
        voice and piano, WWV91 (1857-58), orchestrated by Felix Mottl (1-4) and 
        Richard Wagner (5) [18:58] 
        Der fliegende Holländer Overture: Final version, WWV63 (1860) 
        [9:41] 
        Siegfried Idyll, WWV103 (1870) [16:56] 
        Träume (Wesendonck-Lieder No.5: version for violin 
        and orchestra by the composer) [3:57] 
        Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg prelude, WWV96 (1862) [8:24] 
        Nina Stemme (soprano); Katarina Andreasson (violin) 
        Swedish Chamber Orchestra, Örebro/Thomas Dausgaard  rec. May, 
        June and August, 2012. DDD/DSD 
        Pdf booklet included with texts and translations 
        BIS-SACD-2022 [68:04]  from eclassical.com 
        (SACD, mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless) 
         
        Benchmark (Wesendonck Lieder):  
         
        Decca Eloquence 480 1796 (2 CDs): Kirsten Flagstad; Vienna Philharmonic 
        Orchestra/Hans Knappertsbusch (with Mahler Kindertotenlieder, 
        Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen, plus excerpts from Die Walküre, 
        Lohengrin, Parsifal and Götterdämmerung) 
         review. 
        Also available as a single mp3 download from 7digital.com 
        without the Todesverkündigung (Walküre) and Immolation 
        Scene (Götterdämmerung) [79:30]. 
         
         Channel: 
        Wagner purists may sniff, but bleeding chunks of his music still have 
        their place: if it hadnt been for hearing Siegfrieds Journey 
        to the Rhine and Funeral Music  Beecham, on Philips ABL3039 
         I might never have listened to the Radio 3 broadcast of Die 
        Walküre from Bayreuth that served as my introduction to a complete 
        Wagner opera and had me rushing off the next working day to order the 
        Flagstad/Solti recording of the Todesverkündigung and Act 
        III which I still cherish on CD. I hope that the current album may serve 
        to launch someone else on the same path. 
         
        With these performances even we confirmed Wagnerians need not be snooty 
        about enjoying the programme. It begins with a fairly stately performance 
        of the Meistersinger prelude, somewhat slower and grander than on that 
        Beecham LP, now available on the EMI collection Sir Thomas Beecham: 
        The Later Tradition  March 2012/1 DL 
        Roundup  though not in neglect of its lively good humour. 
         
        Sensitivity is the keynote of this Siegfried Idyll, too, and the 
        performance captures the magic of that Christmas birthday morning. I was 
        about to write that Fischer takes the music slowly, till I checked and 
        found that hes actually a mite faster than Solti and a good deal 
        faster than Karajan, to name two top-ranking versions of this work. Impressions 
        of tempo can be deceptive. Dausgaard is faster still, but more of that 
        anon. 
         
        We hear Siegfried afar off at dawn at the beginning of the Rhine Journey, 
        as we are meant to do  too often hes upon us too early  
        and when the music comes to life, at around 3 minutes, the effect is dramatic 
        and effective. With first-rate recording  I downloaded the 24/96 
        version  the orchestral sound really blooms. Once underway, the 
        hero gets down the Rhine in fairly fast order if you measure him against 
        the clock  two minutes faster than on Tennstedts performance 
        with the LPO on their own label and almost three minutes faster than Butt 
        (Nimbus Alliance)  but I never felt that the music was being rushed. 
         
        The Funeral Music is dramatic and dignified, with the full blaze 
        of orchestral sound again well caught  I couldnt help joining 
        in with some waves of an air-baton  and the album climaxes with 
        the Immolation Scene, which follows seamlessly, as in the opera. 
        Reviewing Petra Lang live in the Wesendonck Lieder, Geoff Diggines thought 
        her voice large and generous but a little lacking in variety  review. 
        Here I thought the opposite true  at first she seemed a little too 
        small in tone and I wondered if she would be able to come anywhere near 
        to the likes of Birgit Nilsson, whose singing on the Solti recording inevitably 
        resonates in my unconscious, but by the climax  and what a climax 
         I was left speculating on what a fine complete Götterdämmerung 
        she and Fischer might produce, given the chance. I listened immediately 
        afterwards to the end of the Hallé recording of the complete opera 
         Bargain of the Month: review 
         and I really wouldnt like to choose between them. 
         
         In 
        the two items which appear on both of the new CDs, the Siegfried Idyll 
        and Meistersinger prelude, Thomas Dausgaard on the BIS 
        recording is faster than Iván Fischer but that doesnt mean 
        that his performance of the Idyll is at all insensitive  
        another case where it wasnt until I looked at the timings that I 
        was aware of the difference in tempo between the two. That he is able 
        to be a little faster without sounding rushed is probably the effect of 
        his directing smaller forces  hes recently been treating us 
        to smaller-scale versions of several major repertoire pieces, often producing 
        revelatory readings, though not always successful. 
         
        His Meistersinger Prelude, too, is lighter than Fischers, 
        which means that we miss some of the sense of ceremony  those swings 
        and roundabouts again. It was a good idea to record both versions of the 
        Flying Dutchman Overture though, truth to tell, the differences are 
        not huge. I also enjoyed hearing Wagners own arrangement of Träume 
        for violin and orchestra. 
         
        The main selling point of the BIS recording by which it must stand or 
        fall is, of course, the Wesendonck-lieder and here its impossible 
        to put out of mind the classic Kirsten Flagstad recording, with all its 
        virtues and shortcomings. When these recordings were reissued on Decca 
        Ace of Diamonds the sound quality was an additional handicap, but everything 
        has been nicely tidied up for the Decca Legends mp3 download. The voice, 
        of course, still shows signs of wear and tear and Knappertsbusch is slightly 
        slower than Dausgaard, though there are none of those great lingerings 
        for which his Wagner was noted and even past her prime Flagstad was superb. 
        Having made the acquaintance of this recording again, I wouldnt 
        wish to be without it  either the download or the 2-CD Eloquence 
        reissue, which also contains the wonderful recording of the Todesverkündigung 
        from Walküre which Flagstad made with Solti, would be a purchase 
        well worth making. You should find the Eloquence set on-line for not much 
        more than the £7.49 that you would pay for the 7digital.com download. 
         
        Nina Stemmes performance of the Wesendonck-lieder at the 
        Wigmore Hall in 2006 was praised by Anne Ozorio  review 
         and she recorded the original versions with piano accompaniment, 
        much to the approval of Hugh Culot, on the Phaedra label (92040 
         review). 
        It was almost inevitable that she would record the orchestral versions, 
        as she has since been active in Wagner operatic roles on record. 
         
        Though officially a soprano, her voice has mezzo-like qualities; indeed, 
        she sounds uncannily like a younger version of Kirsten Flagstad, with 
        none of the plumminess or slight wobble that her voice had developed at 
        60+. Its probably just nostalgia that made me think her slightly 
        lacking in the innigkeit which Flagstad brings to the music and the tendency 
        nowadays is to present these songs a little more coolly than used to be 
        the case. Put comparisons aside as I did second time around and enjoy 
        a fine set of performances, very well recorded and well presented. 
         
        Discovery of the Month 
         
         Wladyslaw 
        ŻELEŃSKI (1837-1921) 
        Piano Concerto in E flat, Op.60 (1903) [34:00]  
        Aleksander ZARZYCKI (1834-1895) 
        Piano Concerto in A flat, Op. 17 (1859-1860) [17:21] 
        Grande Polonaise in E flat major Op.7 [10:03] 
        Jonathan Plowright (piano) 
        BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra/Lukasz Borowicz 
        rec. June 2012, City Halls, Candleriggs, Glasgow, UK 
        Pdf booklet included 
        HYPERION CDA67958 [61:24]  from hyperion-records.co.uk 
        (mp3, 16/44.1 and 24/96 lossless) 
         
         Its 
        hard to believe that the Romantic Piano Concerto project  which 
        began as a lunch meeting between Hyperion and the BBC Scottish Symphony 
        Orchestra in 1990  has now reached No. 60. Its been a magnificent 
        traversal of often little known or frankly neglected works, featuring 
        a Whos Who of modern keyboard virtuosi. Among these is the 
        multi-award-winning pianist Jonathan Plowright who, I must confess, is 
        new to me. The Warsaw-born conductor Lukasz Borowicz is also unfamiliar, 
        but I see from his bio hes worked with conducting compatriots Antoni 
        Wit  well known for his recordings for Naxos  and Kazimierz 
        Kord, who conducted a fondly remembered Rachmaninov 2nd Piano Concerto 
        with Ilana Vered back in the 1970s (Decca). 
         
        The Polish composer and music educator Wladyslaw Żeleński’s 
        only piano concerto is an engaging work; unashamedly Romantic in idiom 
        it also has a focus and rigour that for all its 19th-century echoes  
        the Grieg A minor concerto in particular  makes for a most distinctive 
        and individual piece. The dancing, native rhythms of the third movement 
        are especially appealing, and Borowicz elicits some lovely, spontaneous 
        playing from the BBCSSO. Most impressive though is the understated yet 
        eloquent advocacy of Plowright, who brings much effervescence and charm 
        to the proceedings. The high-res recording is a little on the bright side, 
        but theres enough oomph in those tasteful tuttis to make amends. 
         
        Aleksander Zarzyckis two-movement concerto  dedicated to Nikolai 
        Rubinstein  may well have been prefaced with an opening Allegro, 
        but as Adrian Thomas points out in his admirably succinct liner-notes 
        the Paris premiere only featured the Andante and Allegro non 
        troppo recorded here. From the moody opening bars its clear 
        this is a much more refulgent work, whose rising, rhapsodic character 
        is superbly realised by this fine pianist. True, the orchestration is 
        conventional and more than a little diffuse at times, but theres 
        more than enough incident  and, in the Andante, moments of 
        ear-pricking introspection  to sustain ones interest to the 
        end. 
         
        Balances are very believable throughout, although I dont find the 
        overall sound quite as appealing as that captured on Hyperions class-leading 
        solo piano recordings. That said, theres detail and warmth aplenty 
        in this high-res download, so thats a minor quibble only. The Grande 
        Polonaise  an overt homage to Chopin and nationalist sentiment 
         is certainly animated, if perhaps a little too rhetorical for my 
        tastes, and Plowright makes the most of its restless, roaming elements. 
        Borowicz brings out the works dance rhythms well enough, and it 
        makes for a most entertaining filler. 
         
        In a long-running series such as this  and especially one whose 
        raison dêtre is to ferret out the arcane and obscure 
         theres a real risk of duds from time to time. Ive not 
        heard all 60 discs but of those I have encountered musical interest has 
        triumphed on every occasion. Thats certainly true of this new instalment, 
        although Żeleński’s is by far the most memorable and original 
        work here. As for Plowright, hes a welcome addition to Hyperions 
        roster of top-notch pianists, and I look forward to reviewing his other 
        recordings soon. 
         
        Even the weaker pieces get a persuasive outing; another good un 
        from Hyperion. 
         
        Dan Morgan 
        http://twitter.com/mahlerei 
         
        Theres nothing much to add except that Ive awarded the Discovery 
        of the Month heading for obvious reasons. BW 
         
        Richard STRAUSS (1864-1949)  
        Don Quixote, Op. 35. Fantastic Variations on a theme of knightly 
        character* [40:11]  
        Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche, Op. 28 [14:59]  
        *Alban Gerhardt (cello); *Lawrence Power (viola)  
        Gürzenich-Orchester Köln/Markus Stenz  rec. 6-9 January 
        2012. DDD. 
        Pdf booklet included 
        HYPERION CDA67960 [55:11]  from hyperion-records.co.uk 
        (mp3, 16 and 24-bit lossless). [Excerpt included on free April 
        2013 Sampler (below).] 
         
        [Despite the rather short playing time theres a great deal 
        to commend this disc. As the icing on the cake, as well as top class playing 
        and sound, theres the booklet note by Michael Kennedy. See 
        review 
        by John Quinn.] 
         
        Benchmark recordings (coupled as above): 
         
        REGIS RRC1371: Paul Tortelier; Berlin PO/Rudolf Kempe (with Don 
        Juan, BPO/Fritz Lehman)  see April 2012/1 DL Roundup 
         
        Don Quixote: 
        DG/Linn UNI017 Pierre Fournier; BPO/Karajan (with Horn Concerto 
        2)  see May 2012/2 DL Roundup (also available at budget price as 
        DG Originals E457 7252 in mp3 from 7digital.com.) 
         
         With 
        two old favourite recordings so recently refurbished and, in the case 
        of the Tortelier/Kempe, available so inexpensively, did we need another 
        Don Quixote? Could the new recording possibly be good enough to 
        warrant having been chosen not just as the orchestral choice of the month 
        in one magazine but as overall top dog? Im not sure that Id 
        go quite as far as that  Ive resisted making this a Recording 
        of the Month  but this is certainly one of the recordings to which 
        I shall return in future when I want to listen to the music. If anything, 
        the rumbustious performance of Till is even more impressive. 
         
        Performances are first rate and the recording outshines even the Linn 
        Studio Master refurbishment of the DG, excellent as that is considering 
        its age. The notes in the booklet, too, offer a clear insight into the 
        programme of the music and the Klimt painting on the cover sets the whole 
        thing off very nicely. 
         
        John Quinns mild complaint about the playing time is taken care 
        of by the fact that the download is available at somewhat less than Hyperions 
        usual premium price: £5.99 for mp3 or 16-bit flac and £6.75 
        for 24-bit. That brings the download into the budget category and offers 
        another reason to buy the new recording even if you already have one of 
        my other recommendations. Try the excerpt on the sampler (see below) and 
        I think youll want it. 
         
        Carl NIELSEN (1865-1931)  
        Symphony No. 2 The Four Temperaments, Op.16 (1901-2) [31:54] 
        Symphony No. 3 Sinfonia Espansiva, Op.27 (1910-11) [34:41] 
        Lucy Hall (soprano); Marcus Farnsworth (baritone)  
        London Symphony Orchestra/Sir Colin Davis  rec. live December 2011. 
        DDD 
        Pdf booklet included. 
        LSO LIVE LSO0722 [66:35]  from classicsonline.com 
        (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library 
         
         With 
        distinguished recordings of Sibelius behind him  Philips, now on 
        two Decca Duo sets, RCA and LSO Live  it might have been expected 
        that Colin Davis would have come to Nielsen much earlier. As it is, he 
        just managed to complete his set of the symphonies for LSO Live with this 
        final release. Unfortunately hes up against strong competition in 
        these two works, notably and recently from Alan Gilbert and the NYPO in 
        a knockout recording on DaCapo 6.220623 and that remains the version to 
        go for  see Recording of the Month review, 
        DL 
        News 21012/20 and review 
         it, too, is available as a download from classicsonline.com in 
        mp3 and lossless. (Dan Morgans link to eclassical.com no longer 
        seems to work). By comparison I was surprised to find that Daviss 
        recording sounds little more than a good routine run-through. 
         
        I should add that Ive since read two reviews; one reviewer was even 
        more disappointed than me with the performance and another thought it 
        more energetic than Gilbert, so you may wish to check both recordings, 
        via Naxos Music Library if possible, to make up your own mind. 
         
        Dont be confused by the fact that your download comes in an album 
        labelled Symphonies Nos. 2 and 4; the contents are as stated above. 
         
        Cyril SCOTT (1879-1970) 
        Piano Quartet (1903) [21:40] 
        Piano Quintet (1925) [39:19] 
        London Piano Quartet (Nona Liddell, violin; Elizabeth Turnbull, viola, 
        David Kennedy, cello; Philip Fowke, piano) with Marilyn Taylor (violin) 
         rec June 2001. DDD. 
        DUTTON EPOCH CDLX7116 [61:13]  from emusic.com 
        (mp3) 
         
        [World-class playing from the London Piano Quartet 
 and Ms 
        Taylor makes this amongst the choicest Dutton Epoch releases. Dont 
        miss it. See review 
        by Rob Barnett.] 
         
         I 
        downloaded and listened to this on a quiet Sunday morning, which turns 
        out to have been the ideal time and mood for me, as it would be for Elgars 
        chamber music. Rob Barnetts mention of Fauré is also very 
        apt. The music is not demonstrative, more reflective and less impassioned 
        than Elgar, though not bland; it is very attractive and the performances 
        are excellent. The emusic.com bit-rate is not ideal  around 220kb/s 
         but I cant find any alternative downloads and I have no serious 
        complaints about the sound quality. 
         
        Youll find more downloads of Cyril Scotts music: 
         
         Piano Concertos 1 and 2; Early One Morning: LYRITA SRCD.251 
         July 2009 DL 
        Roundup 
         Cello Concerto; Symphony No.1: CHANDOS CHAN10452  
        April 2010 DL 
        Roundup 
         Piano Trio No.1; Clarinet Trio: CHANDOS CHAN10575  
        April 2010 DL 
        Roundup 
         
        Scotts Aubade for treble recorder and piano (1952) is included 
        on a BIS recording from 2009: Songs of Yesterday, with music by 
        York Bowen, Edmund Rubbra, Lennox Berkeley, Herbert Murrill and 
        Walter Leigh (BIS-CD-1785: from eclassical.com 
        (mp3 and lossless)  full 
        details and review). Listen first via Naxos Music Library and any 
        preconceptions about a programme featuring the recorder will disappear. 
         
        Freebie of the Month 
         
        The Symphonic Eric COATES (1886-1957) 
         Cinderella 
        [14:58] 
        The Selfish Giant [9:51] 
        The Three Bears [9:31] 
        Miniature Suite [12:11] 
        London Suite (London Everyday) [14:46] 
        Joyous Youth [13:26] 
        The Dam Busters [4:05] 
        BBC Philharmonic/Rumon Gamba  rec.2001. DDD. 
        Pdf booklet available 
        CHANDOS CHAN9869 [79:27]  from theclassicalshop.net 
        (mp3 and lossless) 
         
         The 
        mp3 version of this recording was Chandoss most recent free gift 
        to subscribers to their e-newsletter  another reminder that its 
        well worth signing up for it. Please see 4-star recommendation from Ian 
        Lacey  review, 
        also review 
        by John France and July 2011/1 Roundup. 
         
        Once bitten by the Coates bug youll want to explore further, which, 
        inevitably, will bring some duplication, though not necessarily at any 
        great expense. The best way to move on is via the 2-CD budget-price Classics 
        for Pleasure set with performances directed mainly by Sir Charles Groves 
        (3523562  download in 320kb/s mp3 for £4.99 from sainsburysentertainment.co.uk.) 
         
        Sergei PROKOFIEV (1891-1953) 
        Symphony No. 6 in e flat minor, Op. 111 (1945-1947) [42:18] 
        Lieutenant Kijé  Suite symphonique, Op. 60* (1933) 
        [19:40] 
        The Love for Three Oranges  Symphonic Suite, Op. 33b (1921) 
        [16:03] 
        *Andrei Bondarenko (baritone); Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra/Andrew Litton 
        rec. January 2012, Grieghallen, Bergen, Norway 
        Pdf booklet included. Sung texts in Cyrillic/English 
        BIS-SACD-1994 [79:10]  from eclassical.com 
        (mp3, 16/44.1 and 24/96 lossless) 
         
         Im 
        not at all persuaded by Littons Stravinsky recordings for BIS which, 
        although they also feature this fine Norwegian band, strike me as musically 
        and sonically rather dull. In other hands  and on other labels  
        the Bergen Philharmonic shine in a way they just dont for BIS; Juanjo 
        Menas impressive reading of Messiaens Turangalîla 
        for Hyperion (review) 
        and Sir Andrew Daviss set of Berlioz overtures for Chandos (review) 
        are ample proof of that. 
         
        There are a number of good recordings of the Prokofiev Sixth, from Walter 
        Weller and the LSO now on Brilliant Classics, Neeme Järvi and the 
        RSNO on Chandos and Dmitri Kitaienko on Phoenix. True, the first and last 
        may not be available as downloads, but as most listeners libraries 
        probably include a mix of downloads and physical discs its easy 
        enough to seek out that special performance. The Weller and Järvi 
        recordings of the Sixth are characterful and compelling, even if the sonics 
        arent as enticing now as they seemed back then. The Kitaienko/Gürzenich 
        partnership is another matter entirely; their complete Shostakovich symphony 
        cycle for Capriccio and their continuing Tchaikovsky one for Oehms are 
        hugely satisfying, as performances and as recordings. 
         
        Littons Sixth starts well enough, but theres none of the sheer 
        immediacy, weight or amplitude of, say, Kitaienko. As with so many BIS 
        recordings I have to crank up the volume in order to achieve a decent, 
        well-defined sound and sense of presence. I find this irksome, although 
        I know some listeners dont mind such ear-assaulting sound levels. 
        Trouble is, if I dont want to be blown out of my chair Im 
        left with distant, soft-edged sound thats not at all appealing. 
        Hyperion and Chandos have no such difficulties in this space; indeed, 
        the balance in that Turangalîla  one of my picks for 
        2012  is ideal, so that dynamic extremes are easily encompassed 
        without resorting to incessant knob twiddling. 
         
        What of Littons performance? Its frankly unmemorable, primarily 
        because it lacks the weight, equivocation and bipolarity that others find 
        here. That said, the spectral elements of the score  in the Largo, 
        especially  are quite telling, and Litton builds climaxes very well 
        indeed. What a pity that, at sensible levels, the shiversome bass drum 
         utterly terrifying in the Kitaienko recording  sounds just 
        too much like the firemans funeral cortège that Mahler enshrined 
        in his Tenth Symphony. Litton does make amends with a rhythmically alert 
        finale, but really this bloodless, hopelessly under-characterised Sixth 
         devoid of that urgent, throat-grabbing narrative  doesnt 
        come close to the sheer crunch and shuddering scale of Kitaienkos 
        unforgettable account. As a recording the latter is without peer, too. 
         
        Now for the fillers. Littons Kijé lacks the sparkle 
        and drive one hears in, say, Claudio Abbados vivid and punchy DG 
        account (sans the vocals). The Bergen bass drum is certainly thrilling, 
        but why is the BIS sound so airless? In fact, one might be forgiven for 
        thinking Kijé was recorded in an entirely different acoustic. In 
        any event, Littons baritone strikes me as a tad lachrymose and ultimately 
        rather weak. As for the piquant brass and crowning cymbals they dont 
        have the usual impact either and that, coupled with an unpardonably sluggish 
        reading, makes for a very dull Kijé indeed. 
         
        These two rollicking suites really do need to be played with verve, and 
        they demand an expansive acoustic in which to breathe. This Kijé 
        doesnt get either, which is a shame as the Bergen orchestra acquit 
        themselves well, especially in the charm and point of the Love for 
        Three Oranges. Oddly, the balance in the latter seems much more natural 
        and the sound has the elusive sense of presence signally lacking in the 
        other pieces here. Now this is much more like it; the brass is suitably 
        visceral, the percussion is terrifically tinglesome and the music has 
        a sophistication and swagger thats just perfect. What an incisive 
        March, and a truly mercurial Scherzo too. 
         
        This really is a most perplexing and divisive issue, although Im 
        happy to welcome Littons fine reading  and BISs sane 
        recording  of the second suite. It never ceases to amaze me that 
        several recordings made more or less concurrently and in the same hall 
        can sound so different. I would draw a veil over the symphony and Kijé 
        if there werent already one in place and urge listeners to at least 
        download the final suite; it really is rather good. 
         
        Dan Morgan 
        http://twitter.com/mahlerei 
         
        I was disappointed to read Dans reaction to two of the three items 
        here because I like the BIS recording of the Prokofiev Piano Concertos 
        with these forces and Freddy Kempf (BIS-SACD-1820) and Ive 
        been looking for some time for a modern replacement for the Leinsdorf 
        recording of Symphony No.6 on RCA  a fiery reading, but not presented 
        in the best of sound on the original Dynagroove LP. Having listened via 
        the Naxos Music Library, this is not it, Im afraid. For too much 
        of the time it just doesnt pack enough of a punch, though there 
        are plenty of odd moments when it comes to life  which leaves me 
        with the Chandos recording directed by Neeme Järvi, on a single CD 
        with excerpts from the Waltz Suite (CHAN8359) or in the Complete Symphonies 
        box set (CHAN10500  from theclassicalshop.net, 
        mp3 or lossless: see Bargain of the Month review 
        and DL 
        News 2012/20). Dont download the earlier Chandos set on CHAN8931 
         not only is it almost twice the price, its more expensive 
        as a download than the CDs. Try both Järvi and Litton from Naxos 
        Music Library and I think you will hear the difference for yourself. 
         
        With my usual impartiality I should add that the new BIS has been awarded 
        10/10 elsewhere. 
         
        Bargain of the Month 
         
        Quincy PORTER (1897-1966) Viola Concerto (1948)* [20:12] 
         Norman 
        dello JOIO (1913-2008) Serenade (from ballet score Diversion 
        of Angels)** (1953) [18:11] 
        *Paul Angerer (viola); Vienna Orchestra/Max Schönherr 
        **Vienna Orchestra/Hans Swarowsky 
        NAXOS CLASSICAL ARCHIVES 9.81060 [38:23]  from emusic.com 
        (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library. Not available in the USA 
        and several other countries. 
         
         Two 
        rarities in thin but decent mid-1950s recordings for just £0.84, 
        or, for a better bit-rate (320kb/s) £1.99 from classicsonline.com. 
        I didnt know either work, and neither is over-represented in the 
        catalogue. Theres one other recording currently available of the 
        Porter, with Eliesha Nelson as soloist on Dorian DSL90911 but theres 
        no current version of the dello Joio in the current catalogue. As you 
        might expect, especially with Max Schönherr better known for recordings 
        of the Strauss family, at the helm in the Porter concerto, neither work 
        is particularly challenging but both are pleasant. 
         
        I havent been able to discover much about the provenance of the 
        recordings but I assume that they were made for Vox. 
         
        Sir Lennox BERKELEY (1903-1989) and Michael BERKELEY (b.1948) 
         
        Complete Organ Works 
        Lennox BERKELEY Impromptu (1941) * [3:11] 
        Three Pieces for Organ, Op.72/1: Aubade [2:53]; Aria [3:04]; Toccata 
        [4:48] 
        Michael BERKELEY Sonata (1979) * [13:49] 
        Lennox BERKELEY Andantino, Op.21/2b (arr. Jennifer Bate, 
        from Festival Anthem, Op.21/2) [3:19] 
        Fantasia, Op.92 [9:08] 
        Michael BERKELEY Wild Bells (1986) [5:47] 
        Tom Winpenny (Harrison and Harrison organ of St Albans Abbey)  
        rec. July 2012. DDD. 
        * world premiere recording 
        Pdf booklet includes organ specification 
        RESONUS RES10119 [46:07] No CD; download only from resonusclassics.com 
        (aac, mp3 and 16-bit lossless). Available from 1 May 2013. 
         
         Another 
        very welcome catalogue-gap-filler from Resonus, with Tom Winpenny, already 
        a distinguished contributor to the label, offering the collected organ 
        works of the Berkeleys, père et fils. Organ music is not 
        a genre that I associate with either composer, though Lennoxs Op.72/1 
        figures on a Naxos recording of his Sacred Music and Michaels Organ 
        Concerto has been recorded by Chandos (CHAN10167) but these performances 
        make a strong case for the works and the recording is excellent in 24/96 
        format. 
         
        Resonus recordings are available from resonusclassics.com in aac, mp3 
        and 16-bit lossless and additionally in 24-bit flac, as per my review 
        copy, from eclassical.com. The rather short playing time is taken into 
        account in fixing the price below that usual for Resonus at £6.99 
        or £8.99. When it becomes available from eclassical.com, the price 
        will also reflect the playing time, as with all downloads from that source. 
         
        Organ enthusiasts will be delighted to note that Resonus, who havent 
        yet produced a loser in 19 releases, will be issuing Bachs Orgelbüchlein 
        from Stephen J Farr in July 2013 (RES10120). 
         
        Bargain of the Month 
         
         William 
        SCHUMAN (1910-1992) 
        Judith (ballet for Martha Graham, 1949)* [21:21] 
        Undertow (ballet, 1945)** [24:55] 
        Louisville Orchestra/Robert Whitney*; William Schuman**  rec. 1951. 
        ADD/mono 
        NAXOS CLASSICAL ARCHIVES 9.80183 [46:16]  from emusic.com 
        (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library. Not available in the USA and 
        several other countries. 
         
         This 
        is another £0.84 bargain from emusic.com or £1.99 from classicsonline.com. 
        Again, too, its likely to be a discovery for you; theres little 
        competition of any vintage  just a Naxos recording from the Seattle 
        Orchestra and Gerard Schwarz on a single CD or a 5-CD set  review 
         or on a Milken Archive recording coupled with Bernsteins 
        Chichester Psalms (download only) for Judith and a Guido 
        Cantelli recording from 1950 on Testament for Undertow. Be aware 
        that Schumans music is less amenable, more angular than Porters 
        or dello Joios, but if you enjoy his best-known work, the Violin 
        Concerto, these two ballets are well worth exploring and it wont 
        cost a fortune to do so. 
         
        Again, the 1951 sound is thin  not helped by emusic.coms parsimonious 
        bit-rate  but acceptable and the music is well worth hearing. 
         
        Recording of the Month 
         
         Frederic 
        RZEWSKI (b. 1938) 
        The People United Will Never Be Defeated!  36 Variations 
        on ¡El Pueblo Unido Jamás Será Vencido! (1975) 
        [57:17] 
        North American Ballads (1979) 
        No. 3 Down by the Riverside [5:43] 
        No. 4 Winneboro Cotton Mill Blues [10:27] 
        Marc-André Hamelin (piano) 
        rec. August 1998, Henry Wood Hall, London, UK 
        Pdf booklet included 
        HYPERION CDA67077 [72:59]  from hyperion-records.co.uk 
        (mp3, 16/44.1 and 24/44.1 lossless) 
         
        [see also Steve Arloffs review of principal work on Bridge 9392 
         here.] 
         
         Having 
        had the pleasure of comparing several versions of this piece for the main 
        site, I was curious to hear the upgraded 24/44.1 Hamelin version 
        on offer here. Regular readers will know that Im a great fan of 
        this French-Canadian pianist, just one of several thoroughbreds in the 
        Hyperion stable. This Alkan (review) 
        and, most recently, his own 12 Études (review) 
        are musically and sonically superb; happily, this Andrew Keener/Tony Faulkner 
        recording of The People United, from 1998, is no exception.  
         
        The Chilean song on which this work is based is rooted in the Socialist-Allende 
        years of the early 1970s; after the Pinochet coup in September 1973 it 
        became something of a rallying cry for those opposed to the new regime. 
        Remarkably, its since resonated with revolutionaries and exiles 
        the world over. In this Rzewski version we have a set of 36 variations, 
        whose range of rhythm, colour and dynamics makes for a daunting piece, 
        suitable for only the most fearless keyboard virtuosi. Among the latter 
        are the works dedicatee Ursula Oppens  whose premiere recording, 
        now on Piano Classics, has some technical drawbacks  and the Dutch 
        pianist Ralph van Raat. My colleague Dominy Clements thought very highly 
        of the latters version, a view that Im happy to endorse (review). 
         
        From the stentorian opening chords of the Thema its clear 
        Hamelins is going to be a weighty, propulsive affair; its 
        all very different from Oppens whip-cracking account although, to 
        be fair, the ultra-fine detail and timbral sophistication of this Hyperion 
        upgrade are as much a part of ones enjoyment of the 
        piece as Hamelins mercurial playing. Subtle touch, great rhythmic 
        control and a strong narrative sense are all part of this pianists 
        technical armoury, and the scores more reflective/lyrical moments 
        are as tellingly executed as its bravura ones. 
         
        Van Raat may be slightly less communicative  hes not so forensically 
        recorded, either  but his remains a highly competitive reading of 
        this extraordinary work. If anything, he brings out the fractured/fractious 
        elements of the piece rather more than most. With Hamelin its a 
        gripping ride, packed with startling asides and memorable incidents; in 
        short, his is the surest and most compelling traversal of all. That said, 
        I recently reviewed a Bridge recording of The People United by 
        the Danish pianist Ole Kiilerich, and although its not likely to 
        be available as a download [its available from amazon.co.uk  
        here: BW] its certainly worth a listen. 
         
        Hamelins two North American Ballads  Down by the 
        Riverside and Winneboro Cotton Mill Blues  are no less 
        exciting and/or illuminating; goodness, is there nothing this pianist 
        cant do? The lovely, freewheeling inner detail of the first has 
        seldom been so well delivered or so naturally recorded, but as good as 
        Hamelin is in the second its van Raat who best conveys the works 
        hypnotic, thrashing rhythms. However, Hamelin does manage to eke out some 
        more colour and interest from those repeated notes, and the sheer presence 
        of his recording is astonishing. 
         
        This top-notch download is a reminder, if it were needed, of Hamelins 
        formidable skills  where technique is always in tandem with insight 
         and Hyperions reputation for class-leading piano recordings. 
        Good liner-notes by Jed Distler complete this most desirable package. 
         
        Bravura pianism and top-quality sonics; Hamelin and Rzewski fans need 
        not hesitate. 
         
        Dan Morgan 
        http://twitter.com/mahlerei 
         
        EMI and Virgin Classics EP Sampler 2013 
         
        This free sampler from emiclassics.com 
        contains tracks from new and forthcoming recordings of: 
         
         Rossini Petite Messe Solenelle (Antonio Pappano) 
         Schumann Five Pieces in Popular Style (Martha Argerich and 
        Gautier Capuçon) 
         Handel Giove in Argo (Complesso Barocco) (This CD 
        set is in my review in-tray) 
         Mozart Marriage of Figaro (Carlo Maria Giulini) (My 
        top recommendation, about to be reissued again on 7359592) 
         Massenet Thaïs Méditation (Renaud Capuçon) 
         Suk Fairy Tale (Libor Pesek) 
         Mahler das Lied von der Erde (Fritz Wunderlich/Otto 
        Klemperer) (another classic due for reissue) 
         Schubert Gretchen am Spinnrade (Janet Baker/Geoffrey 
        Parsons) (due for reissue in June 2013) 
         
        With a set of such distinguished performances, I found this a most enjoyable 
        mini-concert. 
         
        Hyperion Free Sampler, April 2013 
         
        In case you had forgotten my highlighting these free monthly downloads 
        from Hyperion, heres a reminder of their April 2013 offering (HYP201304 
        [30:46]  from 
        hyperion-records.co.uk, mp3 or lossless). Another very enjoyable mini-concert 
        and the welcome news is that the Hyperion Download manager and Google 
        Chrome are now talking to each other again, provided that you have the 
        latest version of Chrome: 
         
         Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809) Piano Concerto in D Hob XVIII:11 
         Movement 3: Rondo allungarese: Allegro assai [4:12]: Marc-André 
        Hamelin (piano), Les Violons du Roy/Bernard Labadie (see above for review) 
         Richard STRAUSS (1864-1949) Don Quixote Op.35  
        Section 14 Finale, the Death of Don Quixote: Sehr ruhig [5:40]: Alban 
        Gerhardt (cello), Lawrence Power (viola), Gürzenich-Orchester Köln/Markus 
        Stenz (see above for review and link to review by John Quinn). 
         Wladyslaw ŻELEŃSKI (1837-1921) Piano Concerto 
        in E flat Op.60  Movement 3: Finale-Rondo: Allegro non troppo ma 
        con brio (abridged) [6:05]: Jonathan Plowright (piano), BBC Scottish Symphony 
        Orchestra/Lukasz Borowicz (see above for review) 
         Giovanni Pierluigi da PALESTRINA (1525/6-1594) Missa 
        ad coenam Agni  Agnus Dei [6:38]: The Brabant Ensemble/Stephen 
        Rice  from CDA67978: see 2013/6 Download News 
         Fanny MENDELSSOHN (1805-1847) Dämmrung senkte sich 
        von oben [2:24]: Susan Gritton (soprano), Eugene Asti (piano) 
         Aleksandr Tikhonovich GRECHANINOV (1864-1956) Piano Trio 
        No 2 in G major Op.128  Movement 1: Allegro [5:47]: The Moscow Rachmaninov 
        Trio 
        *** 
         
        A roundup within a roundup 
         
        Brian has kindly allowed me to add my thoughts on recent, and occasionally 
        not so recent, downloads to his invaluable surveys.  
         
        Latitude 37 
        Italian and Spanish Renaissance and 17th century works for ensemble 
        Julia Fredersdorff (baroque violin)  
        Laura Vaughan (viola da gamba and lirone) 
        Donald Nicolson (harpsichord and organ) 
        Guy du Blêt (percussion) 
        rec. Iwaki Auditorium and St Marks Fitzroy, Melbourne, 2010. 
        ABC CLASSICS 4764525 [72:05] 
        Available from iTunes (search your "local" store) 
         
         Recommendations 
        come from the most unexpected places. In this instance, it was the next-door 
        neighbour, who called out over the fence  type in Latitude 37 into 
        Youtube: I did and so can you here. 
         
        It is wonderfully evocative music of the early Baroque and beyond, played 
        with great style, joy and skill. There are some recognisable names among 
        the composer list  Palestrina and Frescobaldi  but they are 
        outnumbered by names probably only known to serious devotees of the early 
        Baroque  Marini and Castello anyone?  
         
        The presence of percussion in most of the pieces was initially disconcerting, 
        but my ear adapted quickly, and it certainly seemed appropriate.  
         
        Highlights? Not a particular work, but the glorious, golden tone of the 
        harpsichord.  
         
        Joaquín TURINA (1882-1949) 
        Danzas fantásticas  
        Poema en forma de canciones  
        Saeta en forma de salve a la Virgen de la Esperanza  
        Farruca from Triptico  
        Ritmos  
        Sinfonía sevillana  
        Clara Mouriz (mezzo) 
        BBC Philharmonic/Juanjo Mena 
        rec. MediaCity UK, Salford, England, 2011/12 
        CHANDOS CHAN10753 [71:27] 
        Download from The 
        Classical Shop in mp3 or lossless. 
         
         This 
        has already been accorded Recording of the Month status 
        by Nick 
        Barnard, and I certainly am not going to disagree with his assessment. 
        I had always considered the Naxos Turina disc (8.555955) that has 
        the same three orchestral works as a good one, but it simply cant 
        compete with the Chandos. There is real verve here, and such a gradation 
        of dynamics  Nick has also commented on the sound in his review. 
         
        The three vocal works, not normally a favourite genre of mine, are thoroughly 
        enjoyable. 
         
        Do you need this? If you dont have these works already, then the 
        answer is a resounding yes. If you do have some of them, the answer is 
        still the same. 
         
        Percy GRAINGER (1882-1961) 
        Works for Large Chorus and Orchestra 
        King Solomons Espousals  
        Danny Deever  
        Marching Song of Democracy  
        The Wraith of Odin  
        The Hunter in His Career  
        Sir Eglamore  
        The Lads of Wamphray  
        The Brides Tragedy  
        Tribute to Foster  
        Thanksgiving Song  
        Sydney Chamber Choir, Melbourne Symphony Orchestra and Chorus/Sir Andrew 
        Davis 
        rec. Hamer Hall, The Arts Centre, Melbourne, Australia; August, September, 
        2012. 
        CHANDOS CHSA5121 [72:39] 
        Download from The 
        Classical Shop in all formats up to Studio Surround. 
         
         I 
        was somewhat surprised at the appearance of this in the new Chandos releases 
        for April (available for download a month earlier). I presumed that the 
        much-lauded Grainger Edition under the direction of the much-missed Richard 
        Hickox had contained all of Graingers surviving works in all their 
        various arrangements; but no, this new release contains five first recordings, 
        and two others recorded in this format for the first time. 
         
        Only Danny Deever appeared on the Hickox edition in this version, 
        and thus provided the only point of comparison. The Hickox is a more convincing 
        portrayal of the Kipling story of the imminent hanging of the eponymous 
        murderer, the Davis being slower and less biting. This thought struck 
        me a few times while listening: has the "large chorus" of the 
        discs title led to Graingers characteristic rhythms becoming 
        somewhat blurred? 
         
        However, please dont let me give you the impression that I didnt 
        enjoy this. The Lads of Wamphray is a splendid swashbuckling Walter 
        Scott tale, given full voice by the choir, and the undoubted highlight 
        is the final and longest work, Thanksgiving Song. Planned as the 
        final movement of a major work, of which little remains of the first two, 
        it is a much more subtle work than the folksong and poetry-inspired works, 
        though still with the typical Grainger idiosyncrasies. 
         
        If you have some or all of the Hickox recordings, this is a necessary 
        addition, but if you are coming to Grainger for the first time, then as 
        the old joke has it, I wouldnt start here. 
         
        The art of instrumentation 
        Arrangements of keyboard works by Bach for string orchestra and 
        various soloists by Silvestrov, Pelecis, Kancheli, Vine, Desyatnikov, 
        Tickmayer and others 
        Gidon Kremer (violin and direction) 
        Andrei Pushkarev (vibraphone, percussion, marimba) 
        Kremerata Baltica 
        rec. February 2011, Latvian Radio Studios, Riga. 
        NONESUCH 528982 [57:23] 
        Download from Nonesuch 
        in mp3 or flac. 
         
         A 
        project that was born at the tenth anniversary of the Chamber Music Connects 
        the World festival in Kronberg, Germany and released to mark what would 
        have been Glenn Goulds 80th birthday. It features eleven contemporary 
        arrangements of works by Bach that were regularly played by Gould. 
         
        I dont know whether all the works were especially commissioned for 
        the festival, because Nonesuch chooses not supply the booklet with the 
        download  a deplorable practice that is becoming thankfully less 
        common. 
         
        The most ambitious work is Bridges to Bach by Giya Kancheli, which 
        is more original composition than arrangement, and features a degree of 
        this composers usual outbursts among quiet meanderings. There are 
        two arrangements of the Goldberg aria, and much to my surprise, it wasnt 
        the one by Georg Pelecis, a long-time collaborator with Gidon Kremer and 
        a personal favourite, which impressed me more. Rather it was the one by 
        Victor Kissine that is probably the best piece on the recording. 
         
        This was certainly a pleasant way to spend an hour, but it could have 
        been so much more  a missed opportunity perhaps. 
         
        CFE HORNEMAN (1840-1906) 
        String quartets 1 and 2 
        Asger HAMERIK (1843-1923) 
        Quartetto 
        Arild String Quartet  rec. Copenhagen, 2011 
        DA CAPO 8.226097 [52:55] - from classicsonline.com 
        (mp3) or stream from Naxos Music Library (both with booklet) 
         
         Ive 
        left the best to last  this is an absolute beauty. Three works written 
        within two years of each other (1859/1861) by two Danish composers, some 
        of whose orchestral works I had, without any expectation that lurking 
        in their catalogue were these gems.  
         
        Unfortunately, Hameriks contribution is only 6 minutes  the 
        quartetto makes me wish he had written much, much more. His Wikipedia 
        entry doesnt even list it, mentioning only a piano quintet and a 
        piece for cello and piano as his contribution to the chamber music genre. 
        Given the quite short run time  the discs only disappointment 
         it would have been very pleasing for one of these works to have 
        been squeezed in. 
         
        The two Horneman quartets are graceful, fleet of foot and harmonious  
        if they resemble any of the major composers, it is probably Mendelssohn. 
         
        Clearly, I will need to return to the orchestral works of these two composers, 
        for which they are much better known. If there is a better recording this 
        year, I look forward to hearing it. 
      [The COL downbload costs only £4.99 - reduced to 
        £3.99 at the time of compiling this DL News. BW] 
         
        David Barker 
        
 
   
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
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