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Hector BERLIOZ (1803-1869)
Lélio, ou Le retour a la vie Op. 14b (1831) [45:01]
Roméo et Juliette Op. 17 (1839, rev. 1847) [93:10]
BBC Chorus
Raymond Nemorin (speaker); Michel Sénéchal (tenor); Bernard Lefort (baritone)
London Symphony Orchestra/Jean Fournet (Lélio)
Nancy Evans (mezzo); René Soames (tenor); David Ward (bass)
BBC Symphony Orchestra/Alfred Wallenstein (Roméo)
rec. 6 January 1956, BBC studio recording broadcast (Roméo); live radio broadcast 7 March 1957 (Lélio); ADD mono
French texts and English translation
CAMEO CLASSICS CC9110 [2CD: 64:19 + 74:03]

This is a double bill of vintage recordings to excite the interest of any devoted Berliozian (an inelegant coining which I think I shall avoid in future), especially as it features two under-recorded conductors and a work which remains neglected, although perhaps not without reason. Lélio is a highly original but strange and diffuse piece, encompassing six musical numbers all of which are very different from each other, linked by an overblown, hyper-Romantic narrative and the literary theme of the artist healing himself following unhappy love affairs by immersing himself in his music; it was intended as sequel to the Symphonie fantastique and in his subsequent revision Berlioz specifically made his future wife, Harriet Smithson, its object.

It has not received that many recordings and it has never established a proper foothold in the repertoire. Martinon, Boulez and Dutoit recorded it but if it is known at all to British audiences it is probably via Colin Davis excellent LSO version with José Carreras and Thomas Allen, wisely omitting the text – which was undoubtedly the best way to try to rehabilitate it, or at least by performing it with the link-narrative judiciously cut.

This live performance gives us the whole shebang and Speaker Raymond Nemorin decides to throw caution to the winds and deliver its emotive excesses in a fully animated and unashamedly whole-hearted manner and it is, enough to embarrass any buttoned-up Englishman - but it is a pleasure to hear the French so beautifully enunciated.

We also hear Michel Sénéchal’s distinctive, nasal, yet attractive and very French lyric tenor as Lélio; he is in fine voice. His opening song, the lilting and memorable strophic ‘Fisherman’s Song’, set to Goethe’s text, is beguilingly sung but at rather too slow a pace for my taste; his elegant pianist is uncredited. Baritone Bernard Lefort gives us a neat, lively ‘Brigands’ Song’ and the BBC Chorus is more than competent, if too recessed. Berlioz lifted and reworked so much of his own material in Lélio that part of its charm resides in playing ‘Spot that tune’ – the idée fixe from Symphonie fantastique, tunes from La mort de Cléopâtre, La mort d’Orphée and Benvenuto Cellini. (Question: did Richard Strauss steal wholesale the opening melodic riff of the ‘Chanson de bonheur’ for one of my favourites among his Lieder ‘Breit über mein Haupt’ and am I the first to notice?) Why Berlioz had his Chorus of Spirits of the Air sing in Italian rather French for the Tempest Fantasy, I do not know; it is certainly the most original of the six vocal sections and is given a confident account.

The Roméo et Juliette here has considerably more competition in the catalogue. In the vintage category, there is, for example a recording under Pierre Monteux with the LSO made two years later (review) and I have long enjoyed versions by Munch, Ozawa and Maazel, which have superior casts and sound, and thus remain the prime stereo recommendations. A wobbly, matronly Nancy Evans is unfortunately no asset; her nasal vowels and dodgy intonation do not enchant me. The light-voiced tenor René Soames sings neatly enough as Mercutio, if unmemorably, and sounds rather English in terms of both voice and accent. David Ward is his usual, sonorous, dependable self; he reprised the role of Père Laurence in the Monteux recording referred to above.

Both conductors seem wholly at home in Berlioz’ mercurial idiom, unfazed by the swift succession of moods and tempi and the orchestral playing in both is fine – insofar as we can hear it clearly. The BBC brass is especially impressive when depicting the Prince’s strictures in the opening and the woodwind playing throughout is lovely.

Indeed, that is an issue; aesthetic considerations apart, the main obstacle to appreciating this twofer and giving it a whole-hearted endorsement is its recording quality: Lélio has been transferred from analogue tape and Roméo from acetates. By and large, the remastering is good; there is some unavoidable hiss and distortion in both and everything is inevitably quite crumbly and distanced, if perfectly listenable. Given the options, only Berlioz devotees (that’s better) habituated to, and tolerant of, essentially historical, mono sound will want this.

Ralph Moore

 

 



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