Les 
                    Misérables makes a welcome re-appearance 
                    on Naxos and represents a price dropped rebranding 
                    having first appeared over a decade ago on Marco Polo. The 
                    intervening period has dimmed neither the music’s adventurous 
                    sophistication nor conductor’s Adriano’s perspicacious and 
                    intelligent editorial work and revision. It still makes for 
                    a cornerstone recommendation and film music enthusiasts should 
                    lose no time acquainting themselves with this hour-long score. 
                  Adriano 
                    has used combinations of short cues and repetitions and also 
                    some instances of varied orchestration. The few deletions 
                    are more than compensated by reinstated music not used in 
                    the film. One of the most novel features of Honegger’s scoring 
                    is the lack of double basses. Each cue is full of powerful 
                    character, from the malign menace of trombone, brass and wind 
                    in Générique through the passing resembles to Finzi’s 
                    later Intimations of Immortality in the second cue 
                    Jean Valjean sur la route. One of the most impressive 
                    sections is the fifth, Fantine, which is an evocative 
                    mini tone poem suffused in its central panel with motion and 
                    colour. The intermezzo like Cosette et Marius has hints 
                    of Richard Strauss but the following cue has an authentic 
                    accordion (replacing the film’s piano and percussion).  
                  There’s 
                    much else besides; a waltz figure, the elysian and avian airiness 
                    of the gardens of Le Luxembourg or the Adriano orchestrated 
                    cue that follows (reconstructed from the soundtrack) and the 
                    old fashioned drama of Musique chez Gillenormand. There 
                    is, too, the funereal tread of the Death of Jean Valjean. 
                    
                  The 
                    fine notes from Adriano complete an idiomatically played and 
                    strongly recorded set – warmly welcomed back to the fold and 
                    at budget price as well. 
                  Jonathan 
                    Woolf