I feared the worst 
                from the from the pairing of this conductor 
                with this repertoire. After all "gaiety" 
                Parisian or otherwise, didn't seem to 
                figure in the highly-strung Solti's 
                interpretative makeup. 
              
 
              
In fact, for better 
                and for worse, this lively rendering 
                of the Offenbach ballet is typical 
                of the conductor in 1960. The opening 
                flourishes presage a bracing, theatrical 
                performance. The tuttis are crisp 
                and brilliant with boldly drawn dramatic 
                contrasts that occasionally verge on 
                the portentous (e.g. tr. 13). The rhythms 
                are generally buoyant and dancing; note 
                the light-hearted, infectious zest of 
                the off-beat accents in the Peruvian 
                Dance. However when Solti unleashes 
                the brass there is a certain heaviness 
                for all the splendor of the resulting 
                sonorities. The conductor picks up the 
                pace within many of the individual numbers, 
                sometimes an effective tactic - as with 
                the airborne Viennese feel of the contrasting 
                waltzes in track 14 - but it quickly 
                wears out its welcome through overuse. 
                As always with this conductor taut intensity 
                is preferable to his attempts at forced 
                "relaxation": the opening of the grand 
                waltz (track 14) feels becalmed, the 
                Barcarolle proper a bit sluggish. 
                The warm, full-throated horns, dusky 
                cellos, and, especially, delicate, insinuating 
                woodwinds (particularly feline at the 
                start of the Polka) of the Covent 
                Garden orchestra afford much enjoyment. 
                It's all recorded with impressive depth 
                and impact. 
              
 
              
The rest of the program 
                scores unequivocally higher marks. In 
                the Faust ballet music, 
                the waltzes are nicely sinuous, while 
                an infusion of brilliance elsewhere 
                serves to refresh the score's fading 
                charms. The playing, once again polished 
                and responsive: the opening brass’s 
                call to order is properly brazen, the 
                massed strings voice their broad melodies 
                resonantly, and the woodwinds' rhythmic 
                address is remarkably acute. I still 
                favor Rozhdestvensky's little-known, 
                zippy account of this music - briefly 
                available Stateside on a Westminster 
                Gold LP - but Solti's is definitely 
                one of the better high-profile accounts. 
              
 
              
Rossiniana 
                sounds like it could be a ballet 
                in the manner of La boutique fantasque, 
                also assembled from Rossini piano pieces 
                by Ottorino Respighi, but it was written 
                for the concert hall. It's the sort 
                of appealing, colorful music in which 
                Ansermet and his not-quite-top-of-the-line 
                Suisse Romande Orchestra excelled. Their 
                performance here is nuanced and vibrant. 
                Sour wind tuning is a distraction at 
                2.21 of the Lamento, but the 
                closing Tarantella has lots of 
                bright energy. The sound here, of more 
                recent vintage than in the Solti items, 
                comes up vividly, though oddly it's 
                drier and more restricted in range. 
              
 
              
Each number in Gaîté 
                Parisienne gets a separate track. 
                On the other hand, the entire Faust 
                sequence makes do with just one! 
                Rossiniana, sensibly, gets one 
                track per movement. 
              
Stephen Francis 
                Vasta