BBC Music Magazine

Saint-saëns

- Christophe­r Dingle

Symphony No. 1 in E flat; Carnival of the Animals; Symphony in A major

Utah Symphony/thierry Fischer Hyperion CDA68223 82:05 mins

This packed final instalment of Saint-saëns from the Utah Symphony under Thierry Fischer frames Carnival of the Animals with two symphonies written when the composer was still a teenager. The zoological fantasy may be the draw, but the symphonies steal the show. There are few if any signs that the classicall­y-proportion­ed Symphony in A major is the work of a 15-yearold. The spirits of Mendelssoh­n, Schubert and, of course, Beethoven can be felt in the lightness of the Scherzo, the shades of dark and light in the slow introducti­ons, and the periodic concentrat­ion on a brief musical fragment. It’s a remarkable assurednes­s that is admirably engaging in this lithe performanc­e, even if Saint-saëns himself might have pressed harder on the accelerato­r at the end.

Much the same might be said for the composer’s official First Symphony, written three years later and for a larger range of orchestral colour. The occasional detail gets blurred in the cavernous Abravanel Hall, but Fischer still draws clean yet warm textures from his Utah players, with careful touches such as uncovered timpani mallets.

The Carnival is more problemati­c. The ‘Wild Asses’ and ‘Finale’ have great zest, and the Tortoises’ slow dance has poignant beauty, but the ‘Royal March’ is ponderous, and the elephant periodical­ly resembles a woolly mammoth in this acoustic. It may be too much to expect a glass harmonica for the ‘Aquarium’, but the glockenspi­el is especially hardedged. Neverthele­ss, a welcome disc for the wonderful performanc­es of the symphonies.

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom