Since the Gewandhaus was Mendelssohn's own orchestra, it makes sense 
                  that that composer's music would figure in a new Music Director's 
                  inaugural concerts, as they did for Riccardo Chailly's in 2005. 
                  But why choose the rarely encountered Lobgesang? Well, 
                  the score certainly conveys an appropriate sense of occasion, 
                  on a more accessible, less Olympian scale than the ubiquitous 
                  Beethoven Ninth. And veteran listeners may remember that Chailly 
                  made a splendid but short-lived Lobgesang for Philips 
                  in late-analog days, though in its revised version as the Second 
                  Symphony rather than the original "symphony-cantata" 
                  form performed here. 
                
So the conductor has a history with this particular score, in whatever 
                  form. He also clearly has a strong affinity for it, which is 
                  good news after his extensive, ultimately dispiriting series 
                  of recordings with the Concertgebouw Orchestra. The occasional 
                  trim, well-proportioned performance - the Mahler First Symphony, 
                  for example - would emerge, but overall the series increasingly 
                  came to suggest an inexperienced driver relying on a fine car's 
                  "cruise control" - the ride, smooth and uneventful 
                  when traversing known roads, could be bumpy in less familiar 
                  terrain. But this performance is another matter altogether - 
                  energized, purposeful, and evincing a level of involvement I 
                  haven't heard from Chailly in years. In fact, this might just 
                  be his best record since that first Lobgesang!
                
Chailly projects the first movement's dotted rhythms with a thrust 
                  that propels the music forward, avoiding the whiff of sanctimony 
                  that hovers over some performances (as it also can over the 
                  Reformation Symphony); the trombones' statements of the 
                  main theme, at the beginning at end of the movement, are clear 
                  and forthright. The airy ease and naturalness of the inner instrumental 
                  movements leads the ear along; the woodwind phrasing is particularly 
                  sensitive and alluring. 
                
The choral movements sound a bit generalized in sonority, in the hearty 
                  big-oratorio manner, but the textures surge and contract appropriately, 
                  with nicely sprung rhythms again building inexorably into stirring 
                  climaxes, especially at the finish, where the organ registers 
                  as a strong reinforcing presence. On the way there, the high 
                  choral intonations of Nun danket alle Gott (track 12) 
                  are ethereal, while the busy orchestral answers look back to 
                  Bach and other older models; the individual choral parts, handsomely 
                  blended, are well defined in the fugal passages of track 14. 
                  The solo singing is good, and the first soprano entry shines 
                  - I suspect it's Anne Schwanewilms, though the booklet doesn't 
                  indicate which of the two sopranos might be singing where. 
                
Chailly and Decca preface Lobgesang with a relatively 
                  conventional Midsummer Night's Dream overture. The booklet 
                  makes a big deal of the "original version" here, too, 
                  but any differences from the standard edition - largely concerning 
                  phrase and articulation markings - are basically imperceptible. 
                  There are mild passing blemishes - a few indecorous violin screeches 
                  in Bottom's theme, a premature wind entry at 8:36 - for which 
                  the gentle, precise woodwind chording and the winding down into 
                  the serene coda afford ample compensation. 
                
The 
                  recorded sound has all the depth and burnished blend of past 
                  Gewandhaus recordings, adding a modicum of the color and definition 
                  one as one expects from Decca - most attractive. 
                
              
Stephen Francis Vasta