The sheer size of the output of the members of the Strauss 
        family never ceases to amaze me. One has to remember, however, that a 
        high proportion of that output and particularly that of the brothers Johan 
        II, Josef and Edward, had a very short life in public esteem. This was 
        often a matter of weeks or at most a few months, before a piece was superseded 
        in the Strauss orchestra’s repertoire by something newer. Even if a dance 
        movement was published for piano, as often happened, the sheet music was 
        played in Viennese drawing-rooms for a short period before being consigned 
        to the depths of the piano stool. A few popular titles remained, and remain, 
        in the public view. 
         
        
Only in our own day, with its passion for completeness, 
          have many of these dances been exhumed for series like this Marco Polo 
          one, which has now reached Volume 22 in its presumably complete survey 
          of the music of Josef, reckoned, in melody, harmony and sheer craftsmanship, 
          the finest of his generation of the Strausses. This disc has eleven 
          tracks: a march, four waltzes, four polkas (embracing both "schnell" 
          and "mazurka" types) and two quadrilles. 
        
 
        
To the best of my recollection, all were new to me 
          and I enjoyed listening to them, though none displaces in my affections. 
          Josef’s better known waltzes and polkas. But then so often the best 
          known in any composer’s output is indeed the best. The Einzugs 
          march marked the return home of the Austrian army in 1864, after it 
          had, in conjunction with the Prussian army, overcome the might of Denmark 
          (no contest, surely?). Of the four waltzes, Veterans is a tribute 
          to Radetzky’s soldiers of 1848 while the Eccentrics is not at 
          all eccentric as to its music, which is rather conventional; most attractive 
          is the charming Flinserin. The polkas are enjoyably rhythmic 
          and certainly do not outstay their welcome. One of them remembers the 
          prima donna Adelina Patti; another (Polka of the Elves) is deliciously 
          witty. Both quadrilles are, as quadrilles often have a habit of being, 
          spirited music. 
        
 
        
The performances, by the Slovak State Philharmonic 
          of Kosice under the experienced Karl Albert Geyer are thoroughly acceptable 
          and they have many previous Strauss issues to their credit. The recording 
          is also very acceptable, and generally speaking, the CD is recommendable 
          to devotees of the Strauss legacy. Others might have preferred this 
          disc and the whole series to have been issued at Naxos price. Is there 
          a chance that the earlier volumes can now start to be reissued on the 
          Naxos label? 
        
 
        
        
Philip L Scowcroft