ELGAR Symphony No 1. Cockaigne Overture

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Edward Elgar

Genre:

Orchestral

Label: BIS

Media Format: Super Audio CD

Media Runtime: 67

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: BIS1939

BIS1939. ELGAR Symphony No 1. Cockaigne Overture

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Symphony No. 1 Edward Elgar, Composer
Edward Elgar, Composer
Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra
Sakari Oramo, Conductor
Cockaigne, 'In London Town' Edward Elgar, Composer
Edward Elgar, Composer
Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra
Sakari Oramo, Conductor
Here’s a welcome companion issue to Sakari Oramo’s account of Elgar’s Second Symphony (9/13). If the Finn’s view of its majestic A flat major predecessor doesn’t quite ignite the senses to the same degree, there’s still heaps to admire, not least the terrifically spruce and scrupulously dedicated contribution of the Royal Stockholm PO, as well as some splendidly ripe and transparent sound courtesy of the BIS production team.

Oramo’s commendably trim and purposeful conception is clearly the result of painstaking preparation and he certainly knows his way round the score; scarcely a fleck of detail escapes his eagle eye, and the antiphonally divided fiddles are an enormous boon. He is especially appreciative of the nature music in the first two movements: try the Trio section with its gently insistent drone and rustling of reeds (a passage which Elgar once memorably encouraged an orchestra to play ‘like something we hear down by the river’) – though not everyone will approve of the way he nudges on the brakes a little later on from fig 77 (4'29"). Perhaps, too, the slow movement misses out on the last ounce of rapt intimacy and lump-in-throat emotion – the towering Molto espressivo e sostenuto from fig 104 (8'27") right through to the end comes across as just a little calculated and doesn’t move me to tears in the way that, say, both the Solti or Boult’s astounding live 1976 Proms performance manage to every time. The finale, on the other hand, comes off swimmingly, its grandly opulent peroration and tearaway coda providing exactly the right rush of adrenalin.

The fill-up comprises a lustily vigorous account of Cockaigne but the music never really smiles as it should – I do miss the beaming affection and twinkling fun of those charismatic mono recordings from van Beinum or Barbirolli (in the stereo stakes Handley and Elder also spring to mind). Still, Oramo’s reading of the main work has enough in the tank to merit investigation by any Elgarian seeking a fresh view.

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