These performances are re-issues of LPs dating from 
          1975 and 1980, and are part of a projected review of Zubin Mehta's Decca 
          recordings, entitled "Zubin Mehta - The Decca Years". This disc is an 
          Australian Universal issue and can be purchased via www.buywell.com. 
        
 
        
Both items on this disc are well known as orchestral 
          showpieces, and so they are presented. The sound is of good 1970-80s 
          quality, and has been well re-mastered by the Universal engineers. I 
          have not heard the original LPs, but cannot imagine they were much different 
          in their day, and were considered approaching demonstration standard. 
          The coupling is a justly popular and sensible one, and the booklet, 
          for super-budget standards, is quite reasonable with some background 
          information on the works. The only problem here is that both works are 
          very well-known and much recorded 
        
 
        
Sheherazade is given a very sumptuous, forward 
          sound which almost seems to be making the utmost effort to capture the 
          voluptuousness of the score; in fact in doing so, the ambience and natural 
          surround is lost, and I suspect the engineers have had some say in some 
          of the quieter passages by lessening the volume (particularly in the 
          closing of the Story of the Kalendar Prince. Certainly, I had to exercise 
          a bass cut to obtain a reasonable balance, and even then at times the 
          brass, and others the woodwind, were more prominent than one would have 
          expected. I found that the issues used for comparison (LPO/Haitink; 
          RPO/Beecham) gave a much better all round satisfaction with clear cut 
          solos and well recorded orchestral timbre. However at super-budget price, 
          one would not quibble too much, if it were not for the performance. 
          The LAPO with all respects, cannot really compete with the RPO, LPO, 
          BPO (Karajan) or Concertgebouw (Kondrashin) in this music, and when 
          Mehta, as he does, pulls the music around so much, some raggedness and 
          roughness in the playing emerges. Mehta takes speeds at the extremes 
          of those indicated and in comparison with other interpreters is very 
          wayward. To give but two instances, in the Young Prince and the Young 
          Princess Mehta takes 12:04 minutes, compared with Beecham at 10:43 (the 
          next slowest) and Kondrashin at 9:36 (the fastest). Mehta's performance 
          drags dreadfully, Beecham's is beautifully romantic. In the final movement, 
          The Festival at Baghdad, Mehta takes 12:02 minutes, in comparison to 
          Karajan's 12:57, and as a result sounds rushed and untidy. Sydney Harth 
          (presumably the leader of the LAPO) does his best, but is never given 
          enough time to settle into the seductiveness which should be typical 
          of the story-teller. There are some lush moments, particularly with 
          the 'cellos at the opening of the third movement, but these are lingered 
          upon in such a way as to make them over-sugared. 
        
 
        
In the Capriccio Espagnol, the Israel Philharmonic 
          are a notch or two above the LAPO in technique, and the Decca team have 
          given them a much more natural balance and sound. From thereon, I am 
          afraid the previous doubts about the performance and timings re-surface. 
          The marvellous horn quartet in the second section is positively painful, 
          it is so slow, and the finale is so fast you can almost hear the orchestra 
          panting at the end. Despite this belated catch-up, Mehta takes 16:07 
          minutes, whereas Maazel with the BPO takes only 13:28, but never sounds 
          in the slightest rushed, and his performance simply sizzles with energy, 
          something Mehta does not exhibit at all. 
        
 
        
In conclusion, a disappointment, and even at super-budget 
          price, I would not contemplate a purchase. Beecham is now at mid-price, 
          and Karajan with Sheherazade and Maazel with Capriccio Espagnol are 
          available with a lot of other excellent Rimsky-Korsakov music on an 
          admirable double-disc Panorama issue. Kondrashin has rather dated sound 
          now, but again is available at mid-price, but Haitink, alas, is no longer 
          issued - may we hope for this omission to be rectified ere long? 
        
 
         
        
John Portwood 
        
 
         
        
 
        
 
        
AVAILABILITY
        
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