This release is enlightening on two fronts, one 
                  aesthetic, one discographic. Aesthetically, it reminds us that, 
                  despite the image of Rachmaninov propagated by academics and 
                  miscellaneous avant-gardistes as an unregenerate reactionary, 
                  his music incorporates novel and imaginative elements within 
                  its admittedly Romantic idiom. Much of the D minor symphony 
                  has an unsettled air contradicting the stereotype of self-satisfied 
                  lushness; the orchestration of the A minor symphony, particularly 
                  in its central Adagio ma non troppo, is unexpectedly 
                  pointillistic, rather than conventionally rich. Even the E minor 
                  Symphony encompasses a real innovation in its assignment of 
                  quick, legato motifs to the horns; those short, whooping phrases 
                  add a new weight and dynamism to the orchestral textures. 
                
Additionally - and importantly, for younger listeners, 
                  or those with short memories - these performances remind us 
                  that Walter Weller, whose "day job" was co-concertmaster 
                  of the Vienna Philharmonic, was quite the distinctive conductor 
                  as well. His recording activity, for Decca and later Chandos, 
                  was unfortunately sporadic; Stateside, at least, he was hardly 
                  a household word. 
                
The D minor symphony shows what we've missed. 
                  I'm not sure why Decca chose to record this piece in Geneva 
                  - perhaps the orchestra, which had previously documented lovely 
                  if unambitious readings of the other two symphonies under Paul 
                  Kletzki, had been contracted for this one as well. Weller's 
                  intense performance of the first movement finds this musical 
                  but generally second-tier ensemble playing well "above 
                  its head." Certainly this bold, brazen brass playing wasn't 
                  a hallmark of the Ansermet era; neither were these tensile, 
                  bristling strings, opening in a moment into full-throated lyrical 
                  outpourings. The sparkling woodwinds, conversely, are a familiar 
                  quantity. 
                
In the remaining movements, Weller gives every 
                  phrase due consideration, taking nothing for granted, but ensemble 
                  is less keen. The scherzo isn't so tautly etched, but the conductor 
                  captures its churning Angst, with tender woodwind phrases 
                  providing only a brief respite. The conductor builds the slow 
                  movement inexorably, but one expected a more strongly profiled, 
                  eventful journey -- the climax at 9:02, for example, wants fuller 
                  tone than this -- so the concluding major-key resolution feels 
                  unearned. The finale recovers somewhat: Weller has both the 
                  fanfare-festooned marziale theme and the rhythmically 
                  off-kilter second group well in hand, though the playing doesn't 
                  regain the dazzling heights of the first movement. 
                
In the E minor symphony, Weller's tempi as such 
                  aren't extreme, but the conductor draws sharp contrasts between 
                  them, playing off agitation and lushness against each other. 
                  Thus, after a purposeful, deliberate introduction, with the 
                  separate phrases distinctly marked off, the pace steps up conspicuously 
                  for the exposition proper at 5:24; the airy second subject (7:02) 
                  begins quietly, but keeps on moving. In the development, which 
                  correctly returns to the impulsive manner; Weller's grip is 
                  a bit less sure -- there's a lot going on here -- but he keeps 
                  the textures reasonably well sorted, and the little brass fanfares 
                  are unusually bracing. The incisive scherzo similarly allows 
                  for a pronounced, expansive relaxation for the contrasting subject 
                  at 1:11; Weller perhaps maintains the momentum a bit too rigidly 
                  for the coda, where the clarinet seems hasty. In the spacious 
                  slow movement, the sustained clarinet notes maintain a clear 
                  sense of direction; the mood moves through nostalgia and regret 
                  before the positive though strangely un-reposeful resolution. 
                  The finale maintains a forthright bustle through the coda, though 
                  Weller finds time for some expansive surges along the way. 
                
With the A minor symphony, Rachmaninov steps 
                  somewhat away from the E minor's "cosmopolitan" stance, 
                  tapping instead into a familiar Russian strain of melancholy, 
                  though presenting it in posh orchestral garb. In the first movement, 
                  surging strings parlay the melancholy into full-blown nostalgia; 
                  the second subject - the "lonesome cowboy" theme - 
                  begins with dark, resonant 'cellos, building steadily in affirmation 
                  through the brass restatement. Once past the exposition repeat 
                  -- which, after so convincing a journey through the exposition, 
                  feels oddly redundant -- the development ratchets up the anxiety 
                  level, and this is reflected in the recapitulation. The first 
                  theme has become desolate, answered with a consoling sweetness; 
                  the second theme isn't allowed its optimism unimpeded - all 
                  the little harmonic and motivic disruptions pose obstacles, 
                  and the upward harmonic shift in the tutti distinctly 
                  undermines it. Throughout, Weller's keen dynamic control shapes 
                  the music in compelling arcs. 
                
The second movement - Adagio ma non troppo, 
                  though with an edgy, undulating faster episode - is unusually 
                  ambivalent. The opening horn solo over harp chords is soft-edged, 
                  and we can't tell where it's headed; it unexpectedly settles 
                  into the major, with a sweet and searching violin solo. At 3:12, 
                  the mood is anxious; unstable harmonies belie the ascending 
                  strings' Romantic sheen. The crisp, pointed finale fittingly 
                  rounds off an intrepid, exploring score. 
                
The engineering, from the heyday of Decca analog, 
                  is breathtakingly pellucid in Geneva, as impressive in the quiet 
                  passages as in the big, juicy ones. The rich Kingsway Hall sound 
                  is excellent in its way - note the deep, focused basses at the 
                  start of the E minor - but an elusive interference, not even 
                  tangible enough to be called "white noise," compromises 
                  the quiet background. Listen to the sparkling woodwinds at 4:05 
                  of the D minor's first movement, crisply defined against pristine 
                  silence, and then compare the English horn solo at 5:02 of the 
                  E minor - there's definitely "something" there. Additionally, 
                  the mixing board has been applied to the E minor with a heavy 
                  hand: the pumped-up sonics become claustrophobic when everyone's 
                  going, and, while the full-throated interplay of parts at 6:50 
                  of the Adagio is impressive, there's nowhere to build 
                  for the climax at 7:47 - the textures have already reached saturation 
                  point. 
                
These performances, like most of Weller's others, 
                  unfailingly command attention, and the set is inexpensive enough. 
                  Still, depending on your particular interest, it might be worth 
                  picking and choosing from among the separate Eloquence issues 
                  of the individual symphonies, which come with fillers. Note 
                  also that to accommodate the three symphonies on two discs necessitates 
                  splitting one symphony - here, the A minor - between them. Meanwhile, 
                  I'm holding on to my LP of Weller's E minor - the rich-sounding 
                  vinyl proves more forgiving of the mix-down's excesses. 
                
Stephen Francis Vasta