August 2006Following Ole
Kristian Ruuds superb Grieg cycle with the Bergen Philharmonic on BIS, Paavo Järvi
now continues his own Grieg survey on Virgin Classics, which began with last years
release of the Peer Gynt material. While Ruuds fluent, straightforward
accounts of these orchestral works are enormously persuasive, with the Bergen Philharmonic
responding gloriously in BISs powerful SACD recordings, Järvi has marshaled his own
Estonian troops no less effectively. His somewhat more studied approach reveals felicities
of Griegs orchestration (and Hans Sitts in the Norwegian Dances)
which neither Ruud nor any other predecessor has made so clear. This is involvement at
total-immersion level: That incredible detail is not achieved at the expense of momentum,
though some listeners may find Järvis treatment of those big pauses at the end of
the Symphonic Dances a little labored. (Ruud effectively minimizes them.)
There is a curious miscalculation in Virgins disc
layout, separating the Two Elegiac Melodies, for strings alone, with the four Norwegian
Dances. If the Elegiac pair had been left intact, we could have had simple
alternations of full-orchestra dance sets and works for strings, and there would have been
no confusion on the listeners part when the final item on the disc, the Holberg
Suite for strings, begins. This will bother some listeners less than others, of
course, and in any event, all the performances are utterly persuasive, with the Holberg
Suites concluding Rigaudon providing a particularly ingratiating wind-up.
Virgins richly detailed two-channel sound is outstanding in its own right, as
specifically tailored to the character of Järvis performances as BISs is to
that of Ruuds.
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