Berlioz: Symphonie fantastique

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EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 65:40

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Gavin Borchert

eMusic Contributor

Gavin Borchert is a composer and music critic living in Seattle.

04.22.11
A "difficult" composer, conducted with ease.
2001 | Label: LSO Live / IODA

What makes Berlioz's music a particular challenge for conductors? Its rhetoric: his scores are full of starts, stops, turns, parenthetical thoughts, moment-to-moment surprises. It doesn't flow like any other composer's music does, and for a conductor to preserve that quality of surprise while keeping everything moving along and not sounding incoherent is difficult. Few can manage it like Sir Colin Davis, long praised for his Berlioz performances. His reading of the composer's five-movement recreation of the opium dream of an obsessed lover is dramatically stirring, ablaze with color (the composer's orchestral special effects never sounded more startling) and perfectly paced. As a bonus, this disc includes Davis 'quicksilver performance of the overture to Berlioz's 1862 opera (also available complete on eMusic) based on Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing.

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Fourth time lucky - again

SpinyNorman

Sir Colin’s fourth (!) version of the main work is a reading that is mature yet exciting and spontaneous (live, as usual with the label). There is sleight of hand rather than mannerism, so that the end result flows and has a feeling of inevitability about it. I think this is better than CD’s old Philips version (also LSO) and is on the same level as his highly-regarded Amsterdam version of the mid 70s. The sound is typically a bit airless, but overall the sound-picture is convincing and is very present in feel. The overture is a bit scruffy sounding in places, but the symphony is the thing here.

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beautiful recording

ianguy

The tempo of March to the Scaffold is a little slower than I like, but other than that this is a very clear recording of a very good performace

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