I have had cause before to complain about the miserable presentation 
                  of these Warner Apex reissues and their lack of any information 
                  about the music contained on the discs. In this case one has 
                  to look in the small print inside the booklet to ascertain the 
                  most interesting point about this disc: the performance of Mussorgsky’s 
                  Pictures at an exhibition is given not in the more usually 
                  heard orchestration by Maurice Ravel but in the version by Sergei 
                  Gorchakov made in 1954, which Kurt Masur clearly prefers since 
                  he has also recorded it with the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra. 
                  The booklet tells us absolutely nothing about the differences 
                  between the Gorchakov edition and the more familiar Ravel, nor 
                  does it provide any information about the ‘pictures’ 
                  themselves. No matter how cheaply the discs are sold, the purchaser 
                  must expect more than this. 
                    
                  In fact the differences between Gorchakov and Ravel are not 
                  that substantial. Gorchakov includes the Promenade before 
                  Limoges which Ravel cut - the latter was working from 
                  an earlier edition of the score. He also adheres more closely 
                  to Mussorgsky’s original piano score, when the oxcart 
                  in Bydlo does not - as in Ravel - approach from the distance; 
                  instead (as in Ashkenazy’s orchestration) the cart is 
                  physically prominent from the very start. Again, instead of 
                  Ravel’s saxophone portraying the minstrel in The old 
                  castle we have what sounds like a muted trombone. In the 
                  absence of any booklet information, which doesn’t even 
                  mention the minstrel, any more than it does the oxcart, this 
                  can only be a speculative guess. Nor is it clear what brass 
                  instrument takes over the depiction of the poor Jew in Samuel 
                  Goldenberg and Schmuyle from Ravel’s muted trumpet. 
                  Otherwise Gorchakov uses a greater range of percussion than 
                  Ravel, to spectacular effect in Gnomus which sounds more 
                  seriously menacing than Ravel’s grotesque figure. For 
                  more information about Gorchakov’s version readers are 
                  referred to Bob 
                  Briggs’ review on this site of a live performance 
                  by the Royal Philharmonic. 
                    
                  The performances sound very well in the acoustic of the Snape 
                  Maltings although the booklet assumes that audiences outside 
                  the UK will know precisely where this is located. The Prokofiev 
                  Classical Symphony is given plenty of life by Masur. 
                  This is not a piece that lends itself to much variety of interpretation, 
                  but it does demand superlative orchestral playing, which it 
                  certainly gets here. Prokofiev deliberately set out to mimic 
                  the procedures of the eighteenth century while using the orchestral 
                  resources of the twentieth. The result is one of the most delightful 
                  pieces of froth you will ever hear. Masur doesn’t miss 
                  a point. 
                    
                  The disc is decidedly short measure, and unless you particularly 
                  want the Gorchakov version of Pictures you would be better 
                  off looking for a recording of the ‘standard’ Ravel 
                  orchestration - of which there are a great number, many of which 
                  are recommendable. If this reissue had given more information 
                  about the Gorchakov edition it might have been more valuable. 
                  Comparison of the numerous orchestrations of Mussorgsky’s 
                  original is a very enjoyable and instructive pastime. I have 
                  complete versions not only by Ravel, Ashkenazy and this Gorchakov 
                  in my collection, but also ones by Stokowski 
                  and Funtek - and Leonard 
                  Slatkin made a very enjoyable compilation of excerpts versions 
                  by various other hands including Sir 
                  Henry Wood; see also Nashville/Slatkin 
                  version. The casual listener needs more informative guidance 
                  than is given here. Worse still, someone who buys the disc expecting 
                  the Ravel may be disappointed, if only because Ravel’s 
                  often subtle orchestration still remains the most enjoyable 
                  for general listening. Nice to hear an alternative once in a 
                  while, though. 
                    
                  Paul Corfield Godfrey 
                   
                Masterwork Index: Pictures 
                  at an exhibition ~~ Classical 
                  Symphony
                
                   
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