Das Land Phantásien, an orchestral 
          fantasy on The Never Ending Story, is scored for narrator and 
          large orchestra. It may thus be considered as some sort of sequel to 
          the much better-known works by Poulenc (L’Histoire de Babar), 
          Prokofiev (Peter and the Wolf), Howard Blake (The 
          Snowman and Granpa) and the more rarely heard 
          Betje Trompet en de Reus by the Belgian composer Louis 
          De Meester, the latter work being a much neglected, though highly entertaining 
          piece of music. The layout of the piece is similar to that of most of 
          these pieces in that the narration is generally commented upon by the 
          music. There is indeed very little melodrama here. Matthus, as his predecessors, 
          managed to remain his own self throughout and he never writes down to 
          his younger audience. The music is obviously from the same pen as that 
          of the Cello Concerto and the symphony, reviewed elsewhere. It is of 
          course more fragmentary as incidental music often is, but the whole 
          is tied together by a few recurring themes. To some extent, Matthus’s 
          piece might be A Young Man’s Guide to Contemporary Music, and, 
          as such, might become as popular as its illustrious predecessors. 
        
 
        
In the present recording, the narration is of course 
          in German and, though the text is printed in the insert notes, there 
          is no English translation. Nevertheless, this little-known piece for 
          younger (and not so young) audiences is superbly done and should appeal 
          to wide audiences. For anecdote’s sake, let us mention that Matthus 
          came to write this piece at the instigation of Kurt Masur who once gave 
          him a copy of the book suggesting that Matthus should write an opera 
          based on this text. Matthus uses some material from that opera which 
          he is working on and another ballet score listed by his publisher, though 
          the ballet might be the same piece as the one recorded here. Very fine 
          and highly entertaining, and I hope that there might soon be a recording 
          with an English or French narration for I am fully convinced that Das 
          Land Phantásien should and could become a highly popular 
          work with younger audiences. 
        
 
        
        
Hubert Culot