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             Antonín DVORÁK 
              (1841-1904)  
              Symphony No. 6 in D, Op. 60 [45:38]  
              Nocturne in B, Op. 40 [7:38]  
              Scherzo Capriccioso, Op. 66 [15:00]  
                
              Baltimore Symphony Orchestra/Marin Alsop  
              rec. live 27-30 March 2008 (Symphony, Nocturne), 19-22 March 2009 
              (Scherzo), Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall, Baltimore, Maryland, 
              USA  
                
              NAXOS 8.570995 [68:14]   
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                  I had a lukewarm response to Marin Alsop’s Dvorák Ninth with 
                  the Baltimore Symphony, and was hard-pressed to find anything 
                  special about it. I felt the same way about her Eighth and was 
                  harshly critical of the Seventh. But now, just when I was ready 
                  to write off Alsop’s Dvorák cycle entirely, she offers an unquestionably 
                  superb Sixth.  
                   
                  This is a performance of the symphony which has nearly every 
                  advantage: lively tempi in the outer movements which ensure 
                  that things move along excitingly, a full orchestral sound with 
                  especially commanding brass, and sound which puts the listener 
                  in the center of the concert hall. At first I thought that the 
                  timing of the first movement (16:12) was a misprint, but no: 
                  Alsop, like Witold Rowicki and almost nobody else, takes the 
                  first-movement repeat. True, Dvorák felt the repeat was best 
                  left aside, but Alsop and her band make a great case for it, 
                  especially at the vigorous tempi they have chosen. It feels 
                  right: the music moves along with freshness and life.  
                   
                  The adagio is good. However, Václav Talich’s luxuriously slow 
                  adagio (13:28) has utterly ruined most rivals for me; Talich 
                  and his Czech Philharmonic linger lovingly over every single 
                  woodwind solo in a way which might well strike some as excessive. 
                  I, however, adore it, and as good as Alsop is, her adagio sounds 
                  rather ordinary in comparison. Not that she can be faulted: 
                  sounding ordinary, too, are Kubelík, Ancerl, Rowicki, and Mackerras, 
                  although Otmar Suitner conjures up his own magical effects. 
                   
                   
                  The scherzo is lively but a bit herky-jerky next to Kubelík’s 
                  - does the main tune get faster after the trio? The finale is 
                  hugely exciting and benefits from splendid brass and wind playing, 
                  especially in the thrilling coda. The trombones, especially, 
                  have a satisfying weight which makes their appearances memorable. 
                  All in all, I would say that this eclipses the previous Naxos 
                  effort with the Slovak Philharmonic and Stephen Gunzenhauser 
                  - that sounds like a grudging compliment, but in fact Gunzenhauser’s 
                  Sixth is very good - and will please both Dvorákians and newcomers. 
                  The best digital account is probably that from Charles Mackerras 
                  on Supraphon - which has a simply blazing finale and the glorious 
                  Czech Philharmonic - but any buyer has to consider this.  
                   
                  The couplings are not bad either. The Nocturne is simply gorgeous, 
                  and sounds ahead of its time. Marin Alsop gave us my preferred 
                  recording of Barber’s Adagio (with the Royal Scottish National 
                  Orchestra) and in many ways the Dvorák Nocturne is a perfect 
                  complement: both string orchestra scores with immediate lyrical 
                  and emotional appeal, unusually deep and reflective in mood, 
                  in neighboring keys (B flat minor and B major), and achieving 
                  nearly exactly opposite effects. No wonder Alsop is so assured 
                  here. The Scherzo capriccioso is less unambiguously a 
                  success: it sounds as if Alsop has knowingly traded rhythmic 
                  snap and energy for tonal allure. The advantage is that the 
                  Baltimore Symphony sounds really wonderful; the disadvantage 
                  is that the scherzo is not as capriccioso as Kubelík, 
                  Dohnányi or Mariss Jansons would have it. Kudos to Alsop, though, 
                  for observing the trio’s repeat, something those three men fail 
                  to do.  
                   
                  The last CD in this series was one of my two least favorite 
                  CDs of 2010. So what has changed between this installment and 
                  previous ones? First, Alsop has had a predilection for fast 
                  tempi which helped ruin her Seventh but suits the outer movements 
                  of the Sixth well; second, her orchestra is one I have described 
                  as a Brahms orchestra, with full, rich strings, and the Baltimore 
                  Symphony is therefore better-suited to the Sixth as well. Equally 
                  importantly, the sound engineers here finally give the winds 
                  a bit of room to breathe. The timpani are still rather recessed, 
                  but the brass have much more of a say here than they did in 
                  the Seventh, where they occasionally seemed to have been caught 
                  napping or in another room. The trombones, as mentioned, earn 
                  a really satisfying prominence.  
                   
                  The bottom line: this is the best (so far) of Marin Alsop’s 
                  Dvorák, by a long shot. Admirers of the Sixth Symphony will 
                  find much to enjoy. If you have been collecting this series, 
                  invest in the new volume with confidence, and then sell the 
                  earlier issues at a rummage sale.  
                   
                  Brian Reinhart  
                     
                 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
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