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EMI - THE SIBELIUS EDITION |
Ray Tuttle reviews a recent EMI release of Sibelius recordings by Sir John Barbirolli (see Special offers and promotions).
| SIBELIUS Symphonies (complete). Karelia
Suite. Finlandia. Pohjola's Daughter. Valse triste. Lemminkäinen Suite:
The Swan of Tuonela; Lemminkäinen's Return. Pelléas et Melisande: 4 selections.
Scènes historiques. Rakastava. Romance in C Sir John Barbirolli conducting the Hallé Orchestra EMI Classics CMS5672992 [ADD] (5 discs: 58:48, 78:21, 78:53, 72:11, 68:31 - GB pounds 38.50) |
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| These
recordings were made between 1966 and 1970; Symphony No.
6 was recorded in May 1970, just two months before Sir
John Barbirolli's death. These have been favorite
recordings for many collectors since their first LP
release. It must be said, however, that there's never
been a great deal of agreement as to how good they really
are, objectively speaking. The Hallé Orchestra's wiry
string tone frequently is criticized, and it's difficult
to make the claim that all of the orchestral timbres are
first class; wind solos are more often characterful than
ideally polished. Barbirolli and his producers (Christopher
Bishop, Victor Olof, and Ronald Kinloch Anderson) were
not sticklers for perfection, and while the Hallé's
playing is only infrequently ragged, it hardly can be
described as well-drilled. Another drawback, now in the
past, has been the quality of the recorded sound. I have
owned EMI Phoenixa and Classics for Pleasure CD
remasterings of some of these recordings, and at their
clattery and midrange-starved worst, they sold Barbirolli's
Sibelius short. It is a pleasure, then, to report that these new digital remasterings, completed in 1999 in London's Abbey Road Studios, have brought these recordings back into a flattering light. They're well-balanced and not inferior to other major-label recordings made in the second half in the 1960s. No one should shy away from this set for fear that they will find the engineering unacceptable. |
Barbirolli's
conducting is wonderful. Although one may prefer
individual recordings of these works by this conductor or
that, this set, taken as a whole, holds up to the
competition extremely well. Barbirolli conducts with
passion, and he taps into each work's elemental power. He
appreciates what makes Sibelius's music unique, and what
makes each symphony different from the one that came
before. There are few conductors who are equally
successful conveying the haunted disillusion of the
Fourth Symphony and the nature-driven exhilaration of the
Fifth, for example. There are less expensive ways to acquire a Sibelius symphony cycle. Lorin Maazel and Sir Colin Davis, both excellent in their own way, are on three and four discs, respectively. Barbirolli's 5-CD set contains many more of the shorter pieces, however, and in consistently treasurable performances. (The conductor's groaning during "The Swan of Tuonela" is a minor setback, though.) It is regrettable that there was no stereo recording of the Violin Concerto to include, but one can't have everything. Even with that gap, these discs constitute a Sibelius collection that can be recommended to just about any music-lover. I am grateful to EMI for reissuing them. |
© Raymond Tuttle
Born in 1962, Ray Tuttle holds a Doctorate in Microbiology and Immunology and currently serves as an administrator at Mary Washington College in Fredericksburg, Virginia. He is a regular contributor to Fanfare (USA), International Record Review and Classical Net. He can be contacted at rtuttle@mwc.edu.
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