Telarc re-issues are 
                making up quite an impressive catalogue 
                for impecunious collectors. 
              
 
              
Using what might conventionally 
                be considered "second league" 
                American orchestras with their resident 
                conductors in charge, and generally 
                recorded in stunning sound, there is 
                very little risk with these discs. This 
                is because generally, the second league 
                of American orchestras, on a good day 
                are almost indistinguishable from their 
                first league cousins. Telarc’s choice 
                of repertoire is usually interesting 
                enough to make league placement irrelevant. 
               
               
              
 
              
The current disc is 
                a good example. Rachmaninov’s two late 
                orchestral works partner well, there 
                already being about half a dozen couplings 
                of these works in the catalogue, as 
                well as many others coupled differently. 
                Zinman comes up against competitors 
                such as Previn (LSO), Jansons (St. Petersburg 
                PO), Mackerras (RPO) Fedoseyev (USSRRSO), 
                Pletnev (Russian National Orch), to 
                say nothing of differently coupled performances. 
                With such competition, it largely comes 
                down to personal preference. 
               
               
              
 
              
Where these Telarc 
                issues are better than most of the competition 
                is in the quality of the recorded sound. 
                Long famous as perhaps the best transatlantic 
                company for sound quality in general, 
                this current disc is well up to the 
                normal Telarc sound, i.e. very clear, 
                with a wide dynamic range, good separation, 
                and a highly believable acoustic. 
               
               
              
 
              
Rachmaninov’s Third 
                Symphony is less well known than 
                the popular Second but nevertheless 
                is no worse as a symphonic statement 
                than its predecessor. It is in three 
                movement form, and like other late works 
                has a nostalgic sadness about it, perhaps 
                due to the poor reception his works 
                received in the 1920s; the fourth Piano 
                Concerto was unenthusiastically received 
                in 1927. This was his first major work 
                since 1910. Although in three movements 
                the symphony’s second movement is a 
                combination of slow movement and scherzo 
                so the four movement structure is implied. 
               
               
              
 
              
The work is strongly 
                symphonic, being based upon a motto 
                theme heard at the outset. This is woven 
                into the structure and returns on a 
                regular basis to give a strongly unified 
                feeling. Rachmaninov also uses the Dies 
                Irae, which also appeared so successfully 
                in one of his earlier works for piano 
                and orchestra, Rhapsody on a Theme 
                of Paganini. The heavy brass of 
                the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra relish 
                this expert writing and the recording 
                allows us to revel in the sheer volume 
                and quality of the orchestral playing. 
                Zinman has been making quite a name 
                for himself recently with the Zurich 
                Tonhalle Orchestra in Beethoven, Schumann 
                and Strauss. We forget how good were 
                his performances in the States before 
                he took up his Swiss appointment. 
               
               
              
 
              
The coupling is the 
                three movement Symphonic Dances, 
                which in some ways might be considered 
                as Rachmaninov’s Fourth Symphony. It 
                was written for Eugene Ormandy and Rachmaninov’s 
                favourite orchestra, the Philadelphia. 
                Although more dance-related than the 
                symphonies, it is still a serious work, 
                and like the Third is infiltrated with 
                the Dies Irae theme throughout; a leit 
                motif of sorts. In this Zinman is not 
                as good as Kondrashin, but is so much 
                better recorded; highly recommended. 
              
John Phillips