David Stewart wrote: >I have recently become addicted to Elgar. One of the favorite recordings and performances in my entire collection is the Sinopoli/Philharmonia Elgar 1st Symphony coupled with "In the South." I know I am treading in deep water here, (there are many on the list that certainly know Elgar better than I), but it just sounds so right to me. Sinopoli allows the listener to really luxuriate in all of Elgar's lyrical moments, whether they are short interludes, such as in the first mov't, or extended, (the slow mov't and that priceless section in the finale with harps, horns and strings). The string weight in the fireworks-like finale is hair raising. A critic in the Gramophone states that Sinopoli's Italianate phrasing and gesture works very well with this particular symphony. He states, (and remember this is the Gramophone), "it would take a chauvinist not to like this performance". John Smyth