Anne Ozorio has already 
                reviewed 
                these discs with great enthusiasm and 
                I should make it clear straightaway 
                that my reactions are similar. This 
                was a recording of the month in November 
                and it is now too late to consider it 
                for the 2006 recordings of the year. 
                So there seem to be no more accolades 
                to offer though I have made a mental 
                note to put it on the shortlist for 
                2007. Although it is appropriate that 
                this was issued in the composer’s centenary 
                year it seems amazing that this is the 
                first complete recording of such a major 
                work. Most of the music was entirely 
                new to me although I am familiar with 
                a recording of the short suite made 
                by Bernard Haitink around 1980 – I think 
                that was originally issued in conjunction 
                with the Dutch conductor’s recording 
                of the First Symphony. Interestingly, 
                on that disc it was apparently entitled 
                The Age of Gold, which implies 
                something rather different to me. Knowing 
                not a word of Russian, I can’t comment 
                on translation issues but The Golden 
                Age surely makes more sense.
              
              As Anne’s review implies, 
                after the composer, much of the credit 
                for the success of the disc must go 
                to the Royal Scottish National Orchestra 
                players and particularly conductor José 
                Serebrier. Heretofore I have tended 
                to regard him as a bit of a peripheral 
                figure (possibly a "this side of 
                the pond" bias) but no longer. 
                There is an interesting article by him 
                on the Naxos 
                website reproduced from a recent 
                issue of the International Record 
                Review. Of humble origins in Uruguay 
                his big break came through Leopold Stokowski. 
                He is also a composer although I can’t 
                recall having heard any of his music. 
                What is apparent listening to the discs 
                is that their making must have been 
                a labour of love for orchestra and conductor 
                alike – there is a real buzz that is 
                maintained for the best part of two 
                and a half hours. The recording is splendidly 
                lucid and presentation excellent with 
                good notes and a space-saving single-size 
                jewel case.
              
              The recording is based 
                on the version given at the 1930 première 
                in Leningrad (as it then was) and therefore 
                includes Shostakovich’s transcription 
                of Vincent Youman’s song Tea for 
                Two as an Entr’acte between Acts 
                II and III. The story is based on Dynamiada 
                by Alexander Ivanovsky. A Soviet football 
                team is visiting a Western town at the 
                time of an industrial exhibition. After 
                a brief but jaunty prelude, Act I is 
                set at the exhibition and politics is 
                the main theme. After numbers entitled 
                General confusion, the embarrassment 
                of the Fascists and A rare case 
                of mass hysteria, the concluding 
                catchy foxtrot offers some relief but 
                still has dark undertones. Act II has 
                scenes in the street and then in the 
                stadium. The match itself comes right 
                at the end of the first disc and is 
                one of the more serious numbers. I am 
                not clear who won but have my suspicions! 
                Some of the most delightful music comes 
                in the Music Hall scene in Act III which 
                includes the memorable Polka with prominent 
                xylophone part which Shostakovich included 
                in the suite, a slinky Tango and a riotous 
                Can-can. The final scene is set in a 
                prison. Prisoners are freed, the bourgeoisie 
                are in panic and there is a Final 
                dance of solidarity.
              
              This music is Shostakovich 
                at his most inimitable. It is alternately 
                serious and full of humorous twists, 
                and invariably wonderfully orchestrated. 
                One wonders just what the youthful composer 
                was really poking fun at. I have no 
                idea how well this works as a staged 
                ballet but the music stands alone as 
                fine entertainment. I was going to say 
                that it will surely now take its place 
                in the line of great Russian ballet 
                music after Tchaikovsky and then Prokofiev’s 
                Romeo and Juliet. But, hang on 
                a minute, this was written several years 
                before Prokofiev’s masterpiece! A potentially 
                perfect surprise present for any music 
                lover, make sure you pick up a copy 
                for yourself as well. Perhaps there 
                is another accolade I can suggest – 
                Bargain of the Century. 
              Patrick C Waller
                 
               see also Review 
                by Anne Ozorio Recording 
                of the Month - November