Wondered what was missing from Sargent's recently reissued Wasps 
                overture? Listen to Silvestri and you will find out. There's 
                a leaping dynamism about this playing and my is it fast! 
                This is Silvestri injecting the Golovanov factor into Vaughan 
                Williams. Even so he finds time for delicacy and the broad archetypical 
                pastoral melody at 3:06 is as expansive as you could ask and, 
                yes, as passionate. This is completely in keeping with his restlessly 
                exuberant Elgar In the South - another treasure of the 
                gramophone. Silvestri's Tallis Fantasia is spiritual, 
                centre-anchored and sensational just like the sound-image. Be 
                assured it does not feel rushed. It does sometimes feel romanticised. 
                It sings and prays with such ardent conviction.  
              
The Oboe Concerto is dedicated 
                    to Leon Goossens. It is a plaintively singing work and John 
                    Williams’ oboe is a modest and gracious presence, recorded 
                    to match. The Concerto's first two movements serenade the 
                    countryside. A chilly but not confounding wind blows through 
                    the finale like a Moeran scherzo. There is a defiant delight 
                    and a sweeping ecstasy about this writing as at 1.20 in III. 
                    The Bax-dedicated Fourth Symphony was recorded first 
                    by the composer with the BBC Symphony Orchestra who also premiered 
                    it with the composer (Dutton and Naxos now). Berglund is a 
                    fine advocate and this symphony suits his temperament well. 
                    It is a dark interpretation and one which takes the work close 
                    in the second movement to Sibelius's own Fourth, a work which 
                    Berglund would have been even more familiar with. Berglund 
                    is in best fettle with the scherzo and finale; the latter 
                    accelerant-laced and tramping forward at a faster than usual 
                    pace. Perhaps this could have done with a lick of the Silvestri 
                    paint for added vivid colouring but it impresses in its own 
                    dour right.
                  
CD1 coincides with EMI CDM 5665392 which has been available as a single CD since 1997. The second CD in this 
                    set includes recordings new to the catalogue. The RPO prove 
                    themselves a virtuoso orchestra as they did for Temirkanov 
                    when they recorded the Tchaikovsky symphonies with him for 
                    BMG-RCA. 
                  
The RPO are centre-stage for a rarity 
                    - Gibson's reading of the Fifth Symphony here taken 
                    at a contemplative tack spanning nearly 40 minutes. This is 
                    as against Barbirolli's 38 minutes. Bound up in a complicated 
                    knot of links with Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress this 
                    is a work of seraphically peaceful benediction. That it should 
                    emerge in wartime perhaps emphasises the need from which the 
                    music arose - an emollient, a honeyed healing for pain and 
                    loss. The natural and detailed sound-image for Gibson's Fifth 
                    is entirely fitting and the chirping and sappy woodwind fit 
                    the bill to perfection. Gibson insists on ‘world enough and 
                    time’ and the steady pacing only seems to falter and lumber 
                    in the finale although it does work extremely well from 1:32 
                    onwards. 
                  
Doubts there are none in connection with 
                    the whirlwind and desolation that Berglund and the BSO make 
                    of the Sixth Symphony. This recording has never previously 
                    made it to CD which is a great surprise given its excellence. 
                    It is searing, stirring and terrifying. The saxophone puts 
                    in a leering and noticeable appearance. The wind lines are 
                    superbly articulated by Berglund’s players. One is very conscious 
                    of his point-making but the results are gratifying. The BSO 
                    strings sing out in clean-limbed eloquence, for instance at 
                    4:03 in the first movement. 
                  
The Fifth Symphony is from 1943. The Sixth 
                    was written between 1944 and 1947 being premiered in 1948 
                    when the composer was 76. There were still three more symphonies 
                    to come. Berglund was good at the Fourth Symphony and is equally 
                    well attuned to the almost Shostakovich-like Sixth. Its desolation 
                    is not a million miles from the searing adagios of the Russian 
                    composer's wartime symphonies. 
                  
              
For all that we are spoilt with so many 
                complete RVW symphony cycles each of the versions here have 
                something to tell us and to enthral.
                
                Rob Barnett