REINHOLD GLIERE (1875-1956)
	  Taras Bulba ballet suite (1952)
	  YEVHEN STANKOVICH (b.1942)
	  Rasputin ballet suite (1990)
	  
 Odessa PO/Hobart Earle
	  rec Odessa, June 1996
	  
 ASV CD DCA 988
	  [56.27]
	  
	  
	  
	  
	  
	  ASV's list of recordings has shown pioneering spirit and risk-taking from
	  its earliest years. Its Soviet and Slav catalogue breaks much new ground
	  and does so with flair using local orchestras and conductors.
	  
	  Gliere's Bulba ballet suite, running some 34 minutes, is old-fashioned
	  for 1952. Borodin, Tchaikovsky and Glazunov all serve as models. The music
	  is never less than pleasing. Taras Awaits his Sons is specially affecting
	  as also is the heat-hazed sway of the baking steppe in The Boundless Ukrainian
	  Steppe. Gopak has that whirligig quality we know so well - how
	  easy to visualise the Bolshoi dancers. The suite ends in a wildly abandoned
	  dance for the Zaporozhi.
	  
	   This was the last of Gliere's ballets. The earlier, more famous
	  counterparts were The Bronze Horseman and The Sheep's Spring. Taras was never
	  performed.
	  
	  The Stankovych ballet suite is in four movements. The grand adagio is of
	  awesome amplitude and breeds an heroic horn theme. The absurdist Galop takes
	  us back to Satie's machine age 1920s - raucous and rambunctious in line with
	  Parade and Love of Three Oranges. The Solo for Orchestra suggests
	  a great lake with strings of a radiant luminosity paralleling Valentin
	  Silvestrov's fifth symphony. Altogether a most striking series of pictures
	  and a more approachable introduction to Stankovich than the Marco Polo set
	  of symphonies.
	  
	  A safely recommendable collection, if short on time, Recorded with resonance
	  and impact.
	  
	  Rob Barnett