It’s very good to be 
                able to welcome the return to the catalogue 
                of this marvellous disc, which contains 
                most of Berlioz’s overtures (Rob 
                Roy is not included.) These are 
                all tremendously original pieces and 
                annotator Michael Steinberg is absolutely 
                right to lament that we so rarely hear 
                most of them in the concert hall. Here 
                they receive wonderful advocacy from 
                the great Dresden orchestra (on top 
                form) conducted by the man who is surely 
                the foremost Berlioz interpreter of 
                our day. 
              
 
              
From the start of the 
                very first track you sense that the 
                disc is going to be very special. Les 
                francs-juges is Berlioz at his most 
                Gothic. The portentous, sonorous brass 
                recitative (track 1, 1’30" – 3’11") 
                is superbly intoned. This passage always 
                puts me in mind of the Symphonie 
                funèbre et triomphale and 
                the way the Dresdeners deliver it reminds 
                me more than usual of the dark grandeur 
                of parts of that score. It’s a tribute 
                to Davis’s meticulous and understanding 
                direction that every strand of Berlioz’s 
                imaginative and highly original orchestration 
                registers perfectly but very naturally. 
                For example, later on (6’08" – 
                8’ 05") comes the extraordinary 
                passage where a long, troubled (and 
                troubling) wind melody is quietly and 
                distantly sounded, accompanied at first 
                by agitated strings underneath. Subsequently, 
                threatening percussion underpins the 
                melody. Davis balances all this perfectly 
                and as a result the atmosphere of chilling 
                menace is conveyed just as Berlioz surely 
                intended it. This is a dark, dramatic 
                account of a superb and unjustly neglected 
                overture. 
              
 
              
That performance is 
                an accurate harbinger of what is to 
                follow. Waverley is first class. 
                There’s great suspense in the lengthy 
                slow opening section and when the tempo 
                picks up the quicker music is deftly 
                done, with some especially delightful 
                wind solos (track 2, 5’40" – 6’06"). 
                Michael Steinberg aptly describes the 
                music of Le roi Lear as "powerfully 
                probing". That’s a description 
                that applies equally well to Davis’s 
                reading of the score. Like Waverley 
                this work has a spacious introduction, 
                which Davis shapes superbly. When the 
                music quickens he’s suitably urgent 
                and thrusting. He’s equally successful 
                in Le corsaire, which is strongly 
                projected and vividly characterised. 
                The dazzling overture to Béatrice 
                et Bénédict 
                fairly sparkles in Davis’s masterly 
                hands. 
              
 
              
The two best-known 
                works, Le carnaval romain and 
                Benvenuto Cellini are meat and 
                drink to Davis. In these Dresden performances 
                both are bursting with colour and vitality. 
                But though the music crackles when appropriate 
                the lyrical side is just as tellingly 
                done; for example the cor anglais solo 
                in Le carnaval romain is most 
                poetically played. 
              
 
              
But in the presence 
                of such fine music making further detailed 
                comment is rather superfluous. This 
                is an outstanding disc. Indeed, it’s 
                one that really should never be out 
                of the catalogue. The playing of the 
                Staatskapelle Dresden is magnificent 
                throughout. They are splendidly agile 
                on the many occasions that Berlioz demands 
                agility. Equally, time and again they 
                prove they can play with the utmost 
                sensitivity and refinement. There’s 
                power a-plenty when it’s needed but 
                my abiding memory of their playing is 
                its wonderful lustre. They are accorded 
                splendid sound by the BMG/RCA engineers. 
                I should also add that the notes, by 
                that doyen of annotators, Michael Steinberg 
                are as stylish and informative as one 
                would expect from that source. 
              
 
              
Guiding the whole enterprise 
                is the masterly hand of Sir Colin Davis. 
                I find him uniquely satisfying as a 
                Berlioz interpreter and this disc shows 
                him at his perceptive and committed 
                best. This CD is surely an essential 
                purchase for all those who love the 
                music of that wayward, original, exciting 
                genius, Hector Berlioz. 
              
 
              
Recommended urgently. 
              
John Quinn  
              
see also review 
                by Jonathan Woolf