|
| Naxos (Super budget price) (CD) 8 550427 (72
minutes: DDD). |
|
|
| Comparative versionscoupled as above: |
|
|
| NYPO, Bernstein (3/89) CD44711 |
|
|
| USSR Ministry of Culture SO, Rozhdestvensky
(5/89) OCD113 |
|
|
| Atlanta SO, Levi (6/90) CD80215 |
|
Alexander Rahbari draws authoritative and
characterful playing from his orchestra (not the same group as heard on three recent
undistinguished RCA discs of Shostakovich film scores), and the acoustic, despite placing
the first violins and the horn section at a slight disadvantage, is clear and lively.
In interpretative matters too the new recording
can hold its head high. Problems of pacing are particularly acute in the Fifth Symphony;
indeed, few works can have been so often recorded (some 20 versions in the current Classical
Catalogue) and yet have yielded so few satisfying accounts. Rahbari hits the happy
medium more often than most. Only a rather stiff slow movement lets the performance down,
and even here the depth of feeling is considerable. There are some delicious details of
characterization on the way too, and I certainly won't forget the wonderful bellyaching
Belgian double bassoon in a hurry (track 2, from 3'32").
The Ninth Symphony is rather less
successfulthe third movement scherzo lacks a degree or two of panache, there is some
uncomfortable woodwind intonation in the fourth movement and the finale hangs fire in the
later stages. For this reason I would not recommend the disc in preference to
Rozhdestvensky on mid-price Olympia, unless recording quality and a bargain price-tag are
overriding considerations. I would, however, definitely choose it above Bernstein on CBS
and Levi on Telarc.
DJF