A highly varied and 
                entertaining compilation, this, of Rattle 
                recordings from over the past seventeen 
                years or so. They reflect his love of 
                the various facets of American music. 
                There are three classics of ‘symphonic 
                jazz’ here: the celebrated Rhapsody 
                in Blue, Bernstein’s early Prelude, 
                Fugue and Riffs, and part of Stravinsky’s 
                Ebony Concerto, included quite 
                legitimately as it was composed for 
                the great jazz clarinettist Woody Herman. 
                The disc concludes with John Adams’ 
                ill-fated (in the UK at any rate) Short 
                Ride in a Fast Machine. 
              
 
              
Rattle has always had 
                a great empathy for jazz and show music, 
                as evidenced by Summertime, 
                Makin’ Whoopee and several others 
                interspersed amongst the more substantial 
                pieces. There is a particularly good 
                version of Take the ‘A’ Train, with 
                the CBSO fronted by some fine jazz soloists, 
                to give it a taste of authenticity. 
                I very much enjoyed Regina Carter’s 
                feisty violin, with cheeky hints of 
                English Country Garden sneaked 
                in. 
              
 
              
I’m not so totally 
                convinced by this version of Rhapsody 
                in Blue, which first appeared in 
                an issue called The Jazz Album. It 
                uses the Grofé orchestration, 
                which is much less sumptuous than the 
                versions commonly heard today, and the 
                dry studio acoustic emphasises the more 
                athletic qualities of the music. Donohoe 
                plays up to this too, and it all makes 
                a very interesting ‘alternative’ reading, 
                if you like. Not sure it comes off, 
                though; there’s a lack of affection 
                in the way the performers approach the 
                piece. 
              
 
              
On the other hand, 
                Prelude, Fugue and Riffs, which 
                is a more cerebral work altogether, 
                receives a tremendous work-out, with 
                Michael Collins revelling in the technical 
                demands of the clarinet part. I’m always 
                pleased with the staccato chord for 
                sax quartet at 2:21, which is so very 
                much not together! How easy it 
                would have been to drop an immaculate 
                chord in when editing this, and I’m 
                so glad they resisted the temptation. 
              
 
              
The standard of the 
                performers, as you’d expect from a Rattle 
                issue, is consistently high, though 
                some may find Harvey and the Wallbangers 
                a bit camp! Perhaps a CD not to listen 
                to too closely, but certainly 
                highly entertaining. 
              
Gwyn Parry-Jones