Swiss-born Silvio 
                  Varviso has had positions in several important opera houses. 
                  He also recorded extensively, mainly during the sixties and 
                  seventies. To record collectors he is mostly known in Italian 
                  repertoire but he conducted at Bayreuth. There is a Philips 
                  recording of his Die Meistersinger and during his period 
                  as chief conductor at the Royal Opera in Stockholm he led several 
                  Wagner performances. I remember a great Lohengrin, which 
                  I recorded from the radio. It had Nicolai Gedda in his only 
                  Wagnerian role and in the early 70s I saw impressive performances 
                  from Varviso of his Der Ring des Nibelungen. So his German 
                  credentials are in order. Here he is at the helm of a noted 
                  Wagner orchestra and with the excellent Leipzig Radio Chorus, 
                  fresh-voiced and with the punch needed for some of the more 
                  pompous choruses. He conducts mostly lively, rhythmically alert 
                  and well nuanced versions of some eternal favourites. Most readers 
                  will undoubtedly have these choruses, probably in more than 
                  one version, but with excellent sound, very wide dynamics and 
                  infectious freshness this collection can be confidently recommended.
                The wide dynamic 
                  range can sometimes be a problem for domestic listening. The 
                  Moon Chorus from Die lustigen Weiber starts so softly 
                  that one has to turn up the volume well above the average setting 
                  to hear anything at all of the magical orchestral introduction 
                  and in the Prisoners’ chorus from Fidelio it’s the same 
                  story. When the fortissimo outbreaks come one has to run for 
                  shelter. Whether it’s the recording or Varviso’s decisions that 
                  affect the chorus from Die Zauberflöte is hard to know: 
                  Mozart clearly distinguishes between p and f but 
                  here it’s rather pp versus ff. Anyway the result 
                  is thrilling and in a larger listening room than mine it would 
                  probably be less of a problem.
                The big Wagner choruses 
                  are of course impressive, especially the Wach auf from 
                  the third act of Die Meistersinger, here linked with 
                  the final chorus from the opera to make it a suitable piece 
                  for concert purposes. This chorus has a special place in my 
                  heart, since it was the first opera chorus I had in my record 
                  collection, on an ancient Telefunken single, coupled with the 
                  Prisoners’ chorus from Nabucco. The Verdi chorus I knew 
                  from the radio but I was fascinated by the visionary greatness 
                  of the Wagner and played it over and over again on my quite 
                  simple equipment. Of course it never sounded anything like this 
                  Leipzig/Dresden version, where one can bask in the glorious 
                  sound produced in the justly famous acoustics of Lukaskirche.
                The guests in the 
                  second act of Tannhäuser make their entrance in Wartburg 
                  with a spring in the step that makes one feel that there is 
                  also a troupe of dancers pirouetting around the noble guests. 
                  The Pilgrims’ chorus, on the other hand, approach in complete 
                  stillness, until the orchestra joins in, creating a sense of 
                  the joy they feel on their return from Rome.
                The whole recital 
                  gave me a lot of pleasure and with some twiddling of the knobs 
                  I was able to tame the wide dynamics. Carl Rosman gives valuable 
                  information about the operas and the function of the choruses 
                  but we’ll have to do without the sung texts.
                Göran Forsling