BBC Music Magazine

Saint-saëns

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Symphony No. 3 ‘Organ’;

Urbs Roma

Thierry Escaich (organ); Orchestre Philharmon­ique Royal de Liège/ Jean-jacques Kantorow

BIS BIS-2470 (CD/SACD) 74:24 mins Some writers have been perplexed by Saintsaëns’s failure to publish his early symphony Urbs Roma. For a 21-year-old it’s a fairly accomplish­ed effort, but he may well have become aware of its weaknesses: it suffers from undoubted longueurs in the ‘serioso’ slow movement and in general from the common failing of the time to overdo sequences of the same pattern at different pitches. The themes are adequate, no more. Although he did complain once, over 30 years after writing it, that the work was never performed, we may reasonably respond that not publishing it didn’t exactly help. Kantorow elicits vigorous playing, with sharp contrasts, and manages the imaginativ­e die-away ending with sensitivit­y.

The Organ Symphony, by contrast, shows the composer marrying passion and logic with a masterly hand, and this performanc­e is almost entirely excellent. Over the first performanc­e, in London in 1886, The Telegraph was not alone in finding fault, complainin­g that ‘the pianoforte was a profitless tinkle and the overwhelmi­ng personalit­y of the organ dwarfed everything else’. While these complaints are certainly not applicable here, the organ is indeed involved in two small infraction­s. In the first movement (one bar before letter U) the pianissimo is spoilt by overloud organ chords, largely caused by the entry of the pedal. In contrast, the organist ignores the ‘morendo’ (dying away) on the last chord of the first movement. This just means previously keeping the swell box

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