The BBCSO and Belohlávek enter a crowded and competitive field 
                  with this issue. They are up against the classic recordings 
                  of Vaclav Neumann and the Czech Philharmonic to begin with, 
                  plus a startlingly cheap and good set on BIS by the Bamberg 
                  Orchestra and Järvi to name just two. What it comes down 
                  to is first whether these performances offer anything to place 
                  them at the front of the field, because the price is higher 
                  than most other issues, and second why should you buy a set 
                  of symphonies you probably do not know? Let me deal with the 
                  second question first. The reason you should buy all the Martinů 
                  Symphonies is because they are each amongst the best symphonies 
                  written by anyone in the entire 20th century. They measure up 
                  to Stravinsky, Nielsen, Sibelius, Shostakovich and Prokofiev 
                  and are not found wanting in any respect. They are original 
                  and they span a wide range of structures and emotions. They 
                  have tunes, drama and coherence. In performance they are absolutely 
                  thrilling. None of the six is an early work because Martinů 
                  didn't write a symphony until he was over 50 so the listener 
                  does not have to tolerate early experiments. The reason they 
                  are not yet part of the regular repertoire is just happenstance. 
                  Fifty years ago Mahler was hardly ever played, Nielsen was just 
                  a name and Sibelius was mistrusted. So it goes. 
                    
                  Few conductors can claim more right to record this set than 
                  Jiri Belohlávek. He has recorded most of the symphonies multiple 
                  times with Czech forces. This series with the BBC Symphony was 
                  recorded at the Barbican during his cycle for Radio 3. Your 
                  reviewer was present for them all and can vouch for the excitement 
                  in the hall before and after each. He can vouch for newcomers 
                  to Martinů going away converted having attended for some 
                  other part of the programme and never having heard a note of 
                  the composer's music. The BBC orchestra played superbly and 
                  showed no sign of unfamiliarity even with the much less played 
                  1st and 2nd symphonies. It was one of the great concert series 
                  and well worth the 6 times 180 mile round trip. 
                    
                  The engineers were using the usual microphone tree for stereo 
                  pick-up plus a large number of microphones spread around the 
                  orchestra to make sure the listener at home didn't miss anything, 
                  and that is what has degraded these CDs to technical ordinariness. 
                  I would not say mediocrity because that has more negative implications 
                  than I intend, but these are not special recordings. This is 
                  not how the orchestra sounded from the best central stalls seat 
                  I occupied. The terracing of the instrumental forces from front 
                  to back has gone. The woodwind was not this prominent and I 
                  suspect the percussion was more prominent. It is merely OK. 
                  The main competition has to be the classic Supraphon 
                  set from Neumann issued originally on vinyl many years ago and 
                  the bargain price set on BIS. I have to agree with Rob 
                  Barnett that Järvi's set is extremely competitive. 
                  It is most certainly the best recorded. Neumann is very convincing 
                  and spaciously recorded in good analogue sound but the CD transfer 
                  is rather unkind to the ears. The Onyx set is very good but 
                  I would go for the BIS unless, like me, you would prefer to 
                  own several sets, or if you particularly want the latest editions 
                  of the scores, which I assume Belohlávek uses, though Mike Crump's 
                  interesting notes do not specify that he does. 
                    
                
Dave Billinge 
                    
                  
                  And a further review of this set by Rob Barnett 
                    
                  None of Martinů's six symphonies is an early work. They 
                  were all written after the move to the USA fleeing flight from 
                  a Europe that might well have been fatal for Martinů and 
                  his family had he stayed. The post-war regime in Czechoslovakia 
                  was another barrier to return to his homeland. 
                    
                  The First Symphony here is very idiomatic. How the conductor 
                  extracts the same intrinsic sound as the 1960s Czech PO from 
                  the BBCSO we do not know. The effervescence and sheer bounce 
                  and lighter than air propulsive drive is remarkable. The second 
                  movement is a triumph of eager acceleration. The finale chatters 
                  anxiously. It is a precursor to the pacy and sprinting exuberance 
                  of the Fourth Symphony. 
                    
                  Belohlávek favours a more generously paced and romantic sighing 
                  susurration for the Second Symphony. Its third movement recalls 
                  a clattering donkey puppet suddenly becoming flowingly articulated 
                  as the great melody is unleashed. The song flies over the rush-hour 
                  excitement of the orchestra decorated with Martinů’s trademark 
                  piano. The Second Symphony is one of his most underrated works; 
                  well worth starting there. 
                    
                  The Second and Third strike me as counterparts to Sibelius 3 
                  and 6. Belohlávek does not stint on excitement in the Third 
                  Symphony - listen to how he quickens the pulse for the first 
                  movement at 1:47 then emboldens the whipped-up clamour in the 
                  finale (III). 
                    
                  The Fourth is taken with considerable deliberation in the first 
                  movement. The upwardly mobile strings are allowed to soar steadily 
                  and progress can be a mite tired at the end. Any fatigue evaporates 
                  for the ruthless urgency of the Allegro Vivo (II). The Largo 
                  is sweetly rounded but the initial brass gesture seems unsatisfactorily 
                  resolved into the overall canvas. That said as a fresh approach 
                  it certainly fascinates. Back to bustle, mystery, motile power 
                  for the finale of this Martinů's most wonderful symphony. 
                  The movement shifts constantly from broad expansive hymn to 
                  kinetically triumphant drive. It's not as bright-eyed and full-on 
                  as the classic Turnovsky from the 1960s but when the BBCSO horns 
                  hit out (7:04) you really know about it. 
                    
                  The Fifth Symphony, like the Third and Sixth is in three movements. 
                  Belohlávek captures its mysteries better than anyone else. He 
                  knows its metronomic clicks, its echoes of The Rite (I 
                  1:15) and its Beethovenian potency. 
                    
                  There was quite a gap between 5 and 6 and we are in the mid-1950s 
                  by the time we reach this last symphony with its beckoning insect 
                  buzz. It could have sounded avant-garde but no such thing. The 
                  bubbling power of the great themes prevents that happening. 
                  Strangely, several sections recall RVW's Ninth Symphony though 
                  that lay in the future at the time Martinů was writing. 
                  
                    
                  The set is presented neatly in a four-fold card casing complete 
                  with a concise booklet that fits into the pocket of the first 
                  of the four folded segments. 
                    
                  Belohlávek's set is important and overtakes in terms of completeness 
                  the two discs he recorded with Supraphon (review 
                  review). 
                  Who else has such a track record of Martinů performances? 
                  Importance and pleasure are not the same yet these three discs 
                  make for good listening. For the best of the symphonies I would 
                  still opt for Turnovsky's Fourth. No Martinů collection 
                  would be complete without having that 1960s Turnovsky recording 
                  (Warner 
                  Apex); it’s that good. For the most affluent sound 
                  opt for Belohlávek on three Chandos CDs where the only symphonies 
                  featured are 1 (CHAN8950), 4 (CHAN9138) and 6 (CHAN8897). As 
                  a set I still like Järvi on Bis 
                  and Brilliant 
                  and Thomson on Chandos. 
                  Valek has had a bad press though I would still like to hear 
                  that set to make my own appraisal. Fagen on Naxos 
                  is not special enough and often runs on thin under-energised 
                  gruel. This very impressive Onyx entry is well worth your attention 
                  though the handsome sound image is neither as sumptuous nor 
                  as analytical as I would ideally have wanted. 
                    
                  There’s a brief but valuable liner-note from Michael Crump whose 
                  book on the symphonies from Toccata Press is well worth reading 
                  while hearing the symphonies. The notes are in English with 
                  German and French translations. 
                    
                  The comparative avalanche of Martinů recordings unleashed 
                  two years ago around the fiftieth anniversary of the composer’s 
                  death has injected fresh life into this part of the catalogue. 
                  Too often however these birth/death splurges simply go to underscore 
                  longer term neglect – a huge exposure followed by a vertiginous 
                  fall back even deeper into obscurity. We must hope that Martinů’s 
                  star has a sustainable higher profile. This set shows that his 
                  music has all the necessary stamina and allure. 
                    
                  Rob Barnett