When I compiled my survey of recordings of 
The Dream 
    of Gerontius in 2007 I was unable to give a welcome to the 2005 LSO Live 
    recording conducted by Sir Colin Davis. This was no reflection on the LSO 
    and its Chorus, still less on Sir Colin’s conducting; the problem was 
    a very disappointing trio of soloists. When I updated 
the 
    survey in 2014 I mentioned that I had heard a much finer performance by 
    Sir Colin, broadcast from Dresden on Palm Sunday 2010 in which he had the 
    benefit of superior soloists. I said “Recordings of a number of Sir 
    Colin’s Dresden concerts have been issued on the Profil label and this 
    
Gerontius would be a prime candidate for issue by that label…. 
    Unfortunately, this performance will probably never see the light of day because 
    it’s marred by some irresponsible idiot in the audience who, unbelievably, 
    briefly breaks into loud applause as Groves finishes the ‘Sanctus fortis’. 
    That’s a great shame as I think this performance better serves Sir Colin’s 
    reputation as an interpreter of 
Gerontius.” Well, I’m 
    delighted to say that here is that very performance and no one need fear the 
    intrusion of that attention-seeking member of the audience. His ignorant contribution 
    has been excised; I can only assume that the dress rehearsal was taped also 
    as a precaution.
    
    This CD set has been issued as a specific tribute to Sir Colin by the Staatskapelle 
    Dresden. He had a long and fruitful association with them, going back as far 
    as 1983. In 1990 the orchestra conferred the title Conductor Laureate on Davis. 
    This was the first – and, to date, the only - time that the orchestra 
    has made such an appointment in its long and illustrious history. This surely 
    indicates the respect in which this conductor was held by the musicians, who 
    came to refer to him as ‘Der Sir’. This tribute is handsome indeed. 
    Not only is the performance one of great stature but the booklet contains 
    eloquent tributes to Davis and a host of photographs taken during the performance. 
    Incidentally, Davis was in his eighty-third year when this performance took 
    place and died just three years later yet the photographs – to say nothing 
    of the performance itself – indicate no lessening of vitality or vigour 
    on his part.
    
    Though I made an off-air recording of the broadcast performance it’s 
    a while since I listened to it and, to be honest, I’d rather forgotten 
    just how good it is. For one thing, the orchestral playing is marvellous. 
    Beginning with a lustrous and richly detailed account of the Prelude, the 
    Staatskapelle Dresden offers wonderful playing throughout the work. They are 
    fully responsive to the way Davis shapes the music. I don’t know how 
    much Elgar this orchestra has played but the playing sounds completely idiomatic 
    to me. One detail is worth mentioning. In the Prelude there are two places 
    where Elgar dramatically cuts off the music when the brass are in full cry. 
    This occurs 8 bars after cue 9 and a further 8 bars after that - about 5 minutes 
    into this performance. On his recording Benjamin Britten, with the insight 
    of a fellow-composer, inserted rolls on the bass drum at these two points 
    and Davis – on both this recording and the LSO Live recording – 
    is the only conductor I’ve heard who follows this example. It’s 
    totally unauthorised but, though I normally dislike additions to what a composer 
    has written, I think this particular example works very well. Indeed, I have 
    a sneaking suspicion that had he heard this done Elgar might have approved, 
    rather as he approved of the extended trumpet note in the Second Symphony 
    which has now become established performance practice. For me that typifies 
    the depth of thought that Davis brings to the score; time and again throughout 
    the performance I relished little nuances that he brings out in the orchestral 
    writing to heighten the expressive effect.
    
    He’s pretty well served by his choir also. The Staatsopernchor Dresden 
    is, I presume, a fully professional ensemble and it shows in the quality of 
    their singing. One notices that this isn’t an Anglophone chorus – 
    in the Angelicals section leading up to ‘Praise to the Holiest’, 
    for example – but the accented English isn’t a problem as far 
    as I’m concerned. I’m much more interested in the quality of the 
    singing 
per se and that’s very high. Mind you, I don’t 
    think that the Dresdeners put in the shade several of the amateur British 
    choirs who have recorded this work. I’m thinking of such groups as the 
    Hallé Choir for Elder (
review); 
    the CBSO Chorus for Oramo (
review); 
    the BBC Symphony Chorus for Sir Andrew Davis (
review); 
    and the LSO Chorus on Sir Colin’s other recording. And I noted that 
    in ‘Praise to the Holiest’ the Dresden singers, while pretty attentive 
    to the dynamics, are not as scrupulously observant as were the LSO Chorus 
    in a live performance conducted by Evgeny Svetlanov that I 
reviewed 
    recently. Nonetheless, this is an impressive showing by the German choir. 
    Their soft singing is admirable and while they may not be the nastiest-sounding 
    Demons one has heard they still come over strongly in that part of the score. 
    No one who listens to this set is likely to be disappointed by the choral 
    contribution.
    
    Two of the three soloists have recorded their respective roles commercially. 
    The one who hasn’t, so far as I’m aware, is John Relyea so it’s 
    good to have his interpretations preserved. The two roles of The Priest and 
    The Angel of the Agony are very different and, ideally, require different 
    singers. Not all basses or baritones are equally successful in both parts 
    but I think Relyea does both solos very well. He’s a dignified and firm-toned 
    Priest, commending the soul of Gerontius with authority and no trace of sanctimoniousness. 
    To the role of The Angel of the Agony he brings an imposing presence. I admire 
    the way he sings the opening and closing stretches of that solo powerfully 
    yet in the lyrical central section (from ‘Jesu, spare these souls who 
    are so dear to Thee…’) he’s very expressive.
    
    Paul Groves is the Gerontius on Sir Mark Elder’s extremely fine recording 
    (
review). 
    He’s equally impressive here. His success in the role comes chiefly, 
    I think, as a result of his ability to encompass equally well the physically 
    and emotionally taxing passages such as ‘Sanctus fortis’ and, 
    at the other extreme, the many episodes that require a lyrical and much more 
    intimate approach. For Davis he is, if anything, even more expressive than 
    he is on the Elder set. I remember thinking when I reviewed that studio recording 
    that Groves was, perhaps, a bit more spontaneous in his 2005 Proms performance 
    with Elder and I think that here, too, there’s a greater degree of spontaneity. 
    That’s not in any way to diminish the achievement of his recording with 
    Elder but the adrenalin of a one-off performance is perhaps beneficial here. 
    I’m glad to have both performances in my collection.
    
    That’s true of Sarah Connolly’s performance also. I made a point 
    of recording the live broadcast of this concert chiefly because at that time 
    there was no commercial recording of Miss Connolly as the Angel. Happily, 
    Chandos plugged that gaping hole in the catalogue last year by engaging her 
    for the excellent recording conducted by Sir Andrew Davis (
review). 
    As with Groves I wouldn’t wish to express a preference for her studio 
    recording over this live performance – indeed, I can’t. However, 
    I do have a sense that she, too, was even more spontaneous in the concert 
    hall than she was in the studio. Her singing in Dresden was marvellous and 
    Miss Connolly brings out so many expressive nuances in the score, not least 
    in the extended dialogue with the Soul of Gerontius at the start of Part II.
    
    Sir Colin conducts with great understanding and also with a fine dramatic 
    sense. Some of his tempi are a little more urgent than we hear from many conductors. 
    ‘Be merciful’ in Part I is an example and he also selects quite 
    a flowing tempo for the short Prelude to Part II. Also in Part II he’s 
    one of the swifter conductors I’ve heard in much of the Soul’s 
    solo before the first appearance of the Angel. Yet I found his tempo selection 
    and, indeed, every aspect of his management of the score completely convincing. 
    Listen to the vitality and energy that he brings to such passages as the Demon’s 
    Chorus; you’d scarcely think this is the work of a conductor in his 
    eighties. His recordings of the Elgar symphonies on LSO Live were evidence 
    of his impressive credentials as an Elgar conductor and this performance offers 
    further proof.
    
    Inevitably, I went back to the earlier Davis recording on LSO Live. That recording 
    is from performances given nearly five years earlier, in December 2005. Perhaps 
    unsurprisingly I don’t think there are any significant interpretative 
    differences. Sir Colin is equally well served by both the LSO and the Staatskapelle 
    Dresden and the choral participation is very good on both recordings though 
    the music seems to come more naturally to the LSO Chorus. I suspect many listeners 
    will prefer the Profil sound; the LSO Live recording was made in the Barbican 
    and, by comparison, is rather close. The main difference lies in the soloists. 
    I prefer John Relyea to Alistair Miles, who sings on the LSO Live performance. 
    I now think I may have been a little harsh on Anne Sophie von Otter, who sang 
    for Davis in 2005. Re-hearing her now she doesn’t come across as being 
    cool, which is the view I previously had. But whereas, for example, her singing 
    of the Farewell has more expressive involvement than I had remembered she 
    doesn’t match the compassion or the tonal lustre of Sarah Connolly. 
    I think the bottom line is that she’s not as naturally inside the music 
    as Connolly, who is probably far more experienced in the role. As for David 
    Rendall, I’m afraid his vibrato-rich singing still gives me no pleasure 
    at all and he doesn’t begin to match the expressiveness nor, frankly, 
    the imagination and subtlety that Paul Groves brings to the part of Gerontius.
    
    So for me the choice is crystal clear. This Profil performance supersedes 
    the LSO Live recording. If you want Sir Colin Davis in this work then this 
    is the version to have. And if you have either the Elder or Andrew Davis recordings 
    I’d argue that this performance complements the respective recordings 
    by Paul Groves and Sarah Connolly so it’s well worth investing in this 
    alternative set too.
    
    The recorded sound is very good and the booklet, in German and English offers 
    good documentation not only on the work but also on the relationship between 
    Sir Colin Davis and the Staatskapelle Dresden.
    
    This is a handsome tribute by the Dresden orchestra to ‘Der Sir’. 
    More than that, however, it’s a significant addition to the discography 
    of 
The Dream of Gerontius. Profil have done a signal service in making 
    this performance available.
    
    
John 
    Quinn