EMI
Classics Today - Your Online Guide to Classical Music
Search Reviews
Discographies and Collections
Welcome
Classical World News
Concert Reviews and Features
Ad Index
Link to ArkivMusic.com

HAVERGAL BRIAN
Symphony No. 1 "Gothic"
Various soloists

Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra & Choir
Slovak Opera Chorus
Slovak Radio Symphony

Ondrej Lenárd

Naxos- 8.557418-19(CD)
Reference Recording - This One

Listen to samples on Naxos.com

rating

How vividly I remember the initial release of this set on Marco Polo some 15 years ago. There I was, clutching my copy of this legendary work having suffered previously through the hideous sound of a pirate issue of Boult's performance. Standing in line before me at Tower Records, Lincoln Center, was the New York chapter of the Havergal Brian Society. There were about 10 of them, average age about 70, men with bald scalps and lanky shoulder-length white hair hanging limply in the latest Benjamin Franklin style. All wore thick glasses, and a few had conditions that I thought had been cured by the turn of the last century: goiters, a harelip or two, and various poxes and skin diseases. None had credit cards, or a majority of their teeth, but most had, to put in kindly, olfactorily obvious personal hygiene issues.

"Gothic indeed," I thought, putting down my copy and deciding to try mail order. "If this is the core market for this composer, Marco Polo's projected complete cycle is in trouble." So it has proved, alas, for there seems no sign of anything new on this front, though Brian remains a composer worthy of attention. Yes, his music is quirky, truculent, rhythmically clunky, and not big on catchy tunes, but he has an original voice and I suspect there are more riches awaiting discovery. It's particularly sad that Lyrita's super recording of Symphonies Nos. 6 and 16 never made it to CD.

Eventually I got this recording, along with a score for good measure, and was able to enjoy what remains the only acceptable performance of this monstrous, impossible symphony. It's not perfect. Lots of dynamic markings go ignored (particularly by the brass), and at one point in the third movement the xylophone player gives up entirely and stops dead. Still and all, Ondrej Leonard leads a substantial percentage of the adult population of Bratislava in a noble effort, full of excitement, with enthusiastic (if somewhat rough) choral singing and a very good lineup of soloists (including the young Dagmar Pecková), all vividly if a touch shallowly recorded. We're not likely to see anything better come along soon, which is odd because the original release sold extremely well and we can only surmise that a new version would also. Until then, if you missed it the first time, enjoy this at budget price. Even better, thanks to the miracle of the Internet, you can order on line and never be seen with it in public.

--David Hurwitz



JOSEPH HAYDN
MICHAEL HAYDN
Jasper de Waal (horn); Jörgen van Rijen (trombone)
Concertgebouw Chamber Orchestra
Henk Rubingh
Channel Classics

THE BALKAN PROJECT
Songs & Dances arranged by various composers, including Carlos Rafael Rivera, Vojislav Ivanovic, Boris Gaquere, Atanas Ourkouzounov, others
Cavatina Duo--Eugenia Moliner (flute); Denis Azabagic (guitar)
Cedille

ALAN HOVHANESS
Trinity College of Music Wind Orchestra
Keith Brion
Naxos

WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
Malin Hartelius, Martina Janková (soprano); Anna Bonitatibus (mezzo-soprano);
Javier Camarena (tenor) Ruben Drole (baritone); Oliver Widmer (bass-baritone)
Zurich Opera House Chorus
& Orchestra
Franz Welser-Möst
Arthaus Musik

RALPH VAUGHAN WILLIAMS
The Choir of Clare College Cambridge
The Dmitri Ensemble
David Willcocks
Albion Records


Search Reviews
ABOUT US ABOUT THE RATINGS WELCOME HOME

Review Digest

© 1999-2010 ClassicsToday.com. All rights reserved.