Saint-Saëns Symphony 3

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Camille Saint-Saëns

Label: Decca

Media Format: Vinyl

Media Runtime: 0

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: SXDL7590

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Symphony No. 3, 'Organ' Camille Saint-Saëns, Composer
Camille Saint-Saëns, Composer
Charles Dutoit, Conductor
Montreal Symphony Orchestra
Peter Hurford, Organ

Composer or Director: Camille Saint-Saëns

Label: Decca

Media Format: Cassette

Media Runtime: 0

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: KSXDC7590

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Symphony No. 3, 'Organ' Camille Saint-Saëns, Composer
Camille Saint-Saëns, Composer
Charles Dutoit, Conductor
Montreal Symphony Orchestra
Peter Hurford, Organ
Each time I listen to a new recording from Charles Dutoit I am reminded of his famous French predecessor in the gramophone world. Pierre Monteux had similar gifts, bringing a naturally sympathetic response to the widest range of repertoire and, even more important, bringing everything fully to life in the studio. With Dutoit—as with Monteux—his records have both immediacy and natural spontaneity and one has the sense of being at a live performance. So it is with this splendid new digital record of Saint-Saens's Third Symphony which also confirms yet again what an excellent orchestra—in every department—is the Montreal group. The recording itself is transparently detailed and everything that Dutoit does is clearly conveyed. The strings are given a thrilling brilliance above the stave—There is a hint of digital edge but the quality is truthful—and for the symphony's closing pages (and indeed the actual entry of the organ) the weight of the sound is very impressive. All in all this is technically now perhaps the finest record of this much-recorded symphony, but this must be a subjective view; as well shall see, the competing versions (except Karajan's DG, which I find fierce) have much to offer too. Dutoit creates (as does Barenboim, also DG) an evocative feeling of expectancy in the opening, the allegro has fine attack and bustles with energy while the contrasting secondary material is beautifully played. The slow movement is very telling, the combination of strings and organ heart-warming (I find the digital sound particularly lustrous at mezzo forte). The movement reaches a climax of great intensity and the closing pages are touching. The Scherzo has tremendous energy and the finale is able to make a powerful dynamic contrast because of the weight and freedom from bass distortion. There is an exhilarating quickening at the coda and one is left tingling as the final chord dies away.
Altogether a first-rate disc, the performance is enticing for its lyrical flow as for its sense of spectacle. My one very slight personal reservation is that when Peter Hurford comes in with that irresistible tune at the beginning of the finale, he plays it more pointedly than usual and the effect is less massive than in some versions, notably the Barenboim, which remains a great performance with a marvellous feeling of jubilation in the outer movements and a genuine nobility in the slow movement. The DG sound for Barenboim is first class and those who like an analogue ambience will find this still very competitive. But then so too are the mid-price versions. Paray's account is distinguished in every way and the Mercury sound balance has remarkably clear detail as well as warmth and weight. Paray's approach to the slow movement is more elegiac while the entry of the organ in the finale is very full and positive. Fremaux (HMV) has a more reverberant acoustic and this brings a spreading amplitude in the finale that some may like best of all. The recording has a strikingly wide range, both of frequencies and dynamics, yet there is no sense of strain. The outer movements have great rhythmic verve and there is a genial feeling of gusto at the end which is endearing. You really can't go wrong with any of these records, and the work itself has a perennial freshness. I listened to Dutoit and was still enjoying myself hugely at the end.'

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