This celebration of Lutoslawski’s centennial is a mixture of new recordings, 
          the recently taped 
Fanfare for Los Angeles Philharmonic and 
          
Symphony No. 1 joining classic versions of the 
Symphonies 
          3 and 4 (see 
review), 
          and the previously released 
Symphony No. 2 which came coupled 
          with the 
Piano Concerto and other works.
           
          The 
Fanfare is a joyously riotous affair which acts as a perfect 
          opener for Lutoslawski’s lively 
Allegro giusto opening to the 
          
Symphony No. 1. This new recording is a vibrantly captured 
          event, which just so happens to have appeared at the same time as Edward 
          Gardner’s Chandos disc CHSA 5108, a volume of his excellent Polish music 
          series. Both performances come in with almost exactly identical total 
          timings, though Gardner is more expansive in the 
Poco adagio 
          second movement, gaining back the extra minute or so with a more compact 
          finale. Salonen is more exciting in the first movement, though the microscopic 
          sense of detail is also a treat in the Chandos SACD recording. Gardner 
          gets a bit more of that Bartók atmosphere in opening of the slow movement 
          with more convincing string colour. I find his greater spaciousness 
          more moving, but Salonen gets impassioned playing from his Los Angeles 
          forces and doesn’t disappoint. I like his sensitivity to the Stravinsky 
          brushstrokes in the 
Allegretto misterioso. The final movement 
          is a real roller-coaster ride of spectacular orchestration and rhythmic 
          drive.
           
          In the end, if it’s a toss-up between two versions of the 
Symphony 
          No. 1 I would probably take Gardner, but the decision is a close-run 
          thing, and if you want all of the Lutoslawski symphonies in one place 
          this new Sony two-disc set is a handy place to be.
           
          With the other symphonies here being re-releases you might want to check 
          your shelves to make sure you are not duplicating, but these are all 
          great performances and well worth having. The 
Symphony No. 2 
          is a little more distant sounding than the First Symphony, not dissimilar 
          in effect to Antoni Wit’s highly effective recording on Naxos 8.553169. 
          With its more experimental textures this is a piece that thrives on 
          atmosphere and sonority, and while still very good indeed Salonen doesn’t 
          quite achieve the luminosity and sense of close-up physical drama and 
          contrast that we have in some later recordings, Edward Gardner included 
          (see 
review).
           
          Both of these versions of the 
Symphony No. 3 and 
Symphony 
          No. 4 have been around for a while now, and while in their time 
          they were a leading reference for these works they now sound a little 
          dry and muffled when compared to some more recent recordings. What we 
          do have here are performances which we know had the approval of the 
          composer, and Esa-Pekka Salonen’s warm relationship with Lutoslawski 
          is evidenced by ‘that’ handshake photo in the booklet.
           
          Having a listen to another disc with both symphonies, that with Miroslaw 
          Jacek Blaszczyk conducting on the DUX label, DUX 0506, shows how the 
          
Symphony No. 3 has firmed up its muscles and acquired a greater 
          sense of direction in more recent years. Salonen’s still very good recording 
          does now sound relatively static and episodic by comparison. The more 
          compact span and greater immediacy of music logic in the 
Symphony 
          No. 4 is less problematic, and Salonen’s sense of shape and atmosphere 
          are refined and timeless. The playing in all of these works is largely 
          excellent, though the wind and brass solos stand out as particularly 
          strong in this last piece.
           
          I can understand Sony wanting to keep the neatness of a ‘complete symphonies’ 
          set, but it’s a shame disc 2 leaves out 
Les Espacesdu sommeil 
          as it had on the original, giving us less rather than more. Looking 
          at disc timings we could have had some further additions from Sony’s 
          archive on CD 1, and if they wanted to compete with EMI’s compilation 
          with the composer conducting (see 
review) 
          it might have been more fun to have a 3 CD set with a wider range of 
          works. Not entirely unscathed by the passing of time, these recordings 
          are however a worthy celebration of Lutoslawski’s centennial year, now 
          representing a superb budget introduction to the complete symphonies 
          of one of the 20
th century’s great names. All critical remarks 
          are those of small degree, with only the knowledge of more recent recordings 
          taking away some of the competitive edge of Salonen’s performances as 
          market leaders. I would still favour these recordings in their own right, 
          and hope that in this form they will introduce more listeners to some 
          remarkable music.
           
          
Dominy Clements