What drew me principally to this disc was the presence 
    of the Canadian soprano, Erin Wall. The present performance of 
Vier letzte 
    Lieder was given in July 2014; a few months before that I’d heard 
    her sing the songs in Birmingham and I’d been impressed (
review). 
    A strong feature of that Birmingham performance was the clarity with which 
    Miss Wall enunciated the words and that clarity is evident here too. Her bright, 
    gleaming soprano suits these songs and her partnership with Davis and his 
    orchestra is an effective one; the accompaniment to ’September’, 
    for instance, is very nicely etched. In this song Erin Wall delivers the last 
    two lines particularly well, her lingering tone gradually easing us into the 
    golden horn postlude. In ‘Beim Schlafengehen’ the gorgeous violin 
    solo is beautifully played and immediately afterwards, at the words ‘Und 
    die Seele unbewacht/Will in freien Flügen schweben’, Miss Wall’s 
    voice soars rapturously, making the most of Strauss’s glorious phrases. 
    Sir Andrew unfolds the introduction to ‘Im Abendrot’ spaciously, 
    which I like. Erin Wall is very expressive and at the start of the final stanza, 
    ‘O weiter, stiller Friede!’ her singing is particularly beguiling. 
    Rightly she seems to have saved her best singing for this concluding song. 
    The orchestral postlude glows gently and satisfyingly.
    
    The catalogue is crammed with memorable versions of these magnificent songs 
    and everyone will have their own favourites – mine include the readings 
    by Lisa della Casa, Lucia Popp and Elisabeth Schwarzkopf. Erin Wall may not 
    quite match such exalted company – and some other leading versions – 
    but hers is a very good performance that gave me a lot of pleasure. Having 
    been delighted by her account of the songs in Birmingham I’m delighted 
    to have her interpretation available on disc.
    
    By a strange coincidence that Birmingham concert began with 
Don Juan 
    and Sir Andrew Davis opens this CD with the same work, though it was not recorded 
    at the same concerts at which the songs were performed. He achieves a good 
    adrenalin rush at the very start and thereafter one of the distinguishing 
    characteristics of the performance is an excellent and welcome clarity of 
    texture. Such a level of clarity is what one would expect in a studio recording 
    but to achieve it in concert is commendable, both as regards the orchestra 
    and the recording engineers. I remember seeing this orchestra in a televised 
    Prom in 2014. I recall that I was impressed. What I had forgotten, until I 
    looked up the Seen and Heard 
review 
    of that concert was that it too had begun with 
Don Juan. I read Robert 
    Beattie’s comments about the Prom after listening to this CD but I see 
    he enjoyed that London performance as much as I enjoyed this one, which is 
    edited from a series of performances given before the orchestra set off on 
    the European tour that included their Proms appearance.
    
    In this recording I liked very much the silken violin solo phrases before 
    the love music (from 1:50) and the love music itself is warmly played. Later 
    the languorous oboe solo is longingly played (6:46). When the unison horns 
    announce the new Don-related theme (10:00) they do so with authority though 
    I must say I’ve heard it ring out with more panache and swagger in other 
    performances; here it’s just a bit straight-faced. Davis manages the 
    demise of the Don very successfully and overall I enjoyed this performance.
    
    
Also sprach Zarathustra also goes well. The famous Introduction is 
    impressively sonorous and I admired the playing of the strings in the subsequent 
    section, ‘Von den Hinterweltlern’. Davis directs a surging account 
    of the following two sections and in ‘Der Genesende’ he manages 
    an exciting build-up to a powerful recapitulation of the opening Nature theme. 
    In ‘Das Tanzlied’ the waltz material is attractively done and 
    as the section unfold Davis ensures that the music sounds increasingly hedonistic 
    and impetuous in the lead-up to the passage where the bell tolls. He and the 
    Melbourne orchestra achieve a refined, hushed end to the piece. After this 
    performance – but not after the other two works – there’s 
    applause; actually, it’s quite a vociferous ovation. Usually I don’t 
    mind applause at the end of a live recording but here it rather jars and as 
    all three works on the disc end quietly I wonder why 
Also sprach 
    has been ‘singled out’ in this way by the producers of the recording. 
    I should say, however, that elsewhere there’s no extraneous noise to 
    betray the presence of an audience.
    
    The sound on all three recordings is fully satisfactory; as I’ve indicated 
    earlier, a pleasing amount of detail can be heard. The notes are by a variety 
    of authors – I suspect that these are the notes used in the original 
    concert programmes – and all are useful.
    
    The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra plays impressively for its chief conductor. 
    There are many fine versions of all three works in the catalogue and individually 
    these Melbourne accounts may not challenge the very best of the competition. 
    However, all three performances are very good and if the programme appeals 
    then I don’t think that anyone buying this disc will feel at all disappointed.
    
    
John 
    Quinn