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Date: | Fri, 1 Oct 1999 15:13:46 +0100 |
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Ralf Oehlmann asked for our experiences of Sibelius symphony sets.
I possess only the Rattle/CSBO set [CMS7 64118-2], given away free by
"Gramophone" magazine as an incentive to subscribe in the early 1990s.
EMI's distanced sound understates Sibelius' rhythmic vigour, but adds a
wonderful luminosity to his scoring. Highlights in this set include:
1st Symphony & Oceanides: The CBSO violins whisper the slow movement's
melody with more tenderness than any other orchestra I've heard, and
Rattle paces the finale's rhetorical outbursts with more heart-stopping
grandeur. I played this CD to help me recover from a frenetic and
thoughtless performance by the BBC Scottish Symphony under Osmo Vanska
at last August's Proms concerts.
2nd & 3rd Symphony: There are more thrilling and rugged 2nds from
Barbirolli, Jarvi and Karajan. Rattle's build-up to the big horn theme in
the 3rd's first movement is a real thriller. The divided cellos' lament in
the slow movement is all the more moving for sounding so veiled.
4th & 6th Symphony: The 4th is suitably gaunt, but sounds even more
cadaverous under Beecham (LPO 1930s). When I first heard the opening
passage of Rattle's Sibelius 6, I had never encountered such a rare
serenity and joy in music before. Other recordings (e.g. Karajan/BPO,
Davis/LSO) have better articulation in the other movements, but none match
Rattle for transcendent evanescence in the first.
5th & 7th Symphony, Scene with Cranes (Kuolema), Night Ride & Sunrise:
Rattle's taut CBSO 5th is one of the very best, sounding less plush than
his 1982 Philharmonia Orchestra recording. The Philharmonia's trombones
provide a wonderfully fat and sonorous climax to Night Ride & Sunrise.
I have not grasped the 7th Symphony - its mysteries elude me with every
listen so far.
James Kearney
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