A delightful collection of lightish French works for violin 
                  and orchestra, which tickle the ear and gladden the soul. Lightish 
                  to listen to, but a virtuoso minefield for the poor soloist, 
                  for behind the very attractive façade is a veritable 
                  smörgåsbord of technical difficulties. Virtuosi of 
                  Shlomo Mintz’s calibre take these things in their stride 
                  and make it all sound like child’s play. I am sure that 
                  sometimes they wish it were! 
                    
                  Lalo’s marvellous Symphonie Espagnole is given 
                  in the five movement version, and I feel that it works better 
                  this way, for the work is fuller and more attractive. From a 
                  performance point of view Mintz is in his element here, obviously 
                  enjoying the music and having a good time playing it. The problem, 
                  for me, is that Mehta’s accompaniment is too heavy for 
                  this summer sunshine work. It’s too over-played with too 
                  little humour and not enough smiles. Although a virtuoso work, 
                  this is also a jeu d’esprit, and, as such, requires 
                  the lightest of touches. Oddly, both Mintz’s and Mehta’s 
                  views of the piece work fairly well together. 
                    
                  The Fifth Concerto by Henri Vieuxtemps was once a real 
                  old war-horse, but I haven’t heard it in years. It may 
                  have fallen out of the concert repertoire but there are still 
                  17 different recordings of the piece by 16 different violinists 
                  ranging from Lola Bobesco to Jascha Heifetz. Mintz and Mehta 
                  are at one here and give a pleasant performance of a pleasant 
                  work. There are no highs and lows in this piece, just a nice 
                  walk in the musical countryside with some flashy passages and 
                  thoughtful melodic material. It might not set the blood boiling 
                  but it will give pleasure. 
                    
                  Saint-Saëns’s brilliant Introduction and Rondo 
                  Capriccioso has always been a favourite amongst violinists, 
                  and it’s easy to understand why this is. It has two contrasting 
                  sections which allow the soloist to meditate and sparkle. There’s 
                  not much for the orchestra to do, but that isn’t important 
                  for we want to hear the fiddle scintillate, and that is what 
                  Mintz does here. 
                    
                  If you don’t know them, this disk is a solid introduction 
                  to all three works, but for real blistering interpretations, 
                  I couldn’t be without Nathan Milstein live at Montreux, 
                  on 11 September 1955 with L’Orchestre Nationale de Paris 
                  under André Cluytens in the Lalo (Claves 50-2708 - coupled 
                  with the Brahms Concerto live in 1960 with the NDR-Sinfonieorchester, 
                  under Paul Kletzki) - this is the four movement version but 
                  anything Milstein touched became pure gold and that is the case 
                  here, so I forgive him his refusal to play the Intermezzo. 
                  For the Saint-Saëns go to Michael Rabin with the Philharmonia 
                  under Alceo Galliera (only available in a 6 CD set called The 
                  Art of Michael Rabin, EMI Classics CMS 7 64123 2). 
                    
                  Bob Briggs