Bruno Walter was getting on in years when he made this classic recording of Barber’s First Symphony, but it’s the kind of piece that played to Walter’s strengths–Romantic but with strongly Classical leanings–and it makes a curiously apt coupling to the two Strauss tone poems. Like the composer’s own performances, Walter’s are swift and light, which works wonderfully well in Don Juan, a bit less so in Death and Transfiguration, which could use more sheer intensity at the climaxes. Throughout, the playing is lively and comfortably at home in the music. The Dvorák encore is nice to have, but hardly necessary, and it’s sonically inferior to the otherwise perfectly fine mono engineering in evidence elsewhere. Now available “on demand” from Arkivmusic.com, this is a disc of genuine historical significance for both Strauss and Barber collectors.
