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Symphony 2
Elgar, Elder, Halle Orchestra
Symphony 2
Genres: Special Interest, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (6) - Disc #1


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Elgar, Elder, Halle Orchestra
Title: Symphony 2
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Asv Living Era
Release Date: 10/19/2004
Genres: Special Interest, Classical
Styles: Forms & Genres, Concertos, Symphonies
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 743625750720
 

CD Reviews

Sensitive and Beautiful Performances
D. A Wend | Buffalo Grove, IL USA | 06/09/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I have heard the electric recording of the Second Symphony made by Sir Edward Elgar many times and also have a copy of a recording by Sir Malcolm Sargant, but I was interested in a performance that is sonically more up-to-date. This recording by the Halle Orchestra, conducted by Mark Elder, caught my attention from my having attended a concert conducted by Mr. Elder. I noticed that the timings for each movement were slower than Elgar's own recording of the symphony but tempi can be very fluid in Elgar's music and not an indication that the performance was dragging. That is the case with this recording. Rather than sounding a bit slow the music is beautifully phrases and played with great feeling.



The Halle are magnificent in this performance. The first movement is noble played with great energy and the "Ghost" theme has the mysterious sound that I have come to expect. The second movement is sensitively played and has a sweet melancholy as if recalling happy events long past: the movement had its genesis from the death of a close friend. The Rondo is well played with, nicely expressing the restless quality of the music and the drums and brass in the middle section of the movement are not overly loud. The Finale returns to the noble music of the first movement but as the music develops it is more of consolation and the tempo slows to express Elgar's "passionate pilgrimage of the soul." The performance is beautifully phrased and the recording balance is superb.



The Introduction and Allegro (for string orchestra) of 1905 is included as the first work on the disc and is beautifully played. Elgar quoted from Cymbeline, "Smiling with a sigh" to describe this work and these words truly describe this performance. The CD also includes Mark Elder reading Shelly's poem "Song" which Elgar quoted in the score of the Second Symphony.

"
Elder: The Finest Interpreter of Elgar Symphony 2!
Victor Ochoa | Danville, IL USA | 04/11/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I had the great fortune that, on April 3, 2010, I attended a performance of Sir Edward Elgar's Symphony Number 2 conducted by Sir Mark Elder (of the Halle Orchestra) by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. It is, to my recollection, one of the best, if not the best, performance of music I have ever attended. Mark Elder's interpretation of this most difficult yet most lovely symphony is by far the most sensitively handled and the most accomplished. It was indeed a stunning revelation.

First, I would be remiss were I not to assert that Sir Mark Elder freely reveals and exudes a love for music that I have never seen in a conductor. He adores it, is not afraid to show it, however properly 'English' he is. Sir Mark Elder is a truly loving human being.

This being said, the recording by the Halle Orchestra and Sir Mark Elder of Elgar's Symphony Number 2 is, in my estimation, the best I have ever heard.

I have two other recordings. One is by the London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Sir Georg Solti. This is a fine recording and as a denizen of Illinois I am indeed a great fan of Solti, long-time conductor of the CSO, though indeed the recording is flawed. The effort is simply too much willed into being, an effort of will, the sound forced, the result not entirely beautiful. It is a less than natural interpretation simply because the performers 'will' a perfection into existence, when such a venture is destined to be not entirely successful. The Penguin Guide to Music says that this recording by Solti/LPO is the finest, yet I do beg to differ. Elder's recording with the Halle Orchestra is superior. It is, indeed, a perfect recording of a most difficult piece of music. It is not willed to be, but is simply a musical expression filled with a great tenderness and love, and deep respect for the letter of the music.

I also have a recording of Jeffery Tate conducting the Symphony Number 2 with the London Symphony Orchestra. This is a fine recording, as is the Solti. It is a grand attempt at making the piece breathe, with an infusion of tenderness not unlike that of Sir Mark Elder's. But again, there is here, as there is with the Solti recording, a forced quality which, inversely, results in a sometimes ragtag result.

Indeed, Sir Mark Elder is the finest interpreter of this most vexing yet most beautiful piece of music.

If you have not been to a performance of music conducted by Sir Mark Elder, let me tell you that you must schedule one as soon as you are able. He is that good!"