The idea of playing the Brahms symphonies using a 
        chamber orchestra is not new. Attempting to replicate the size of orchestra 
        that Brahms heard playing his music in Meiningen, Sir Charles Mackerras 
        led the way with his revelatory 1997 Telarc set with the Scottish Chamber 
        Orchestra. More recently we’ve had Sir John Eliot Gardiner in equally 
        revelatory live recordings with the period-instrument ensemble, the Orchestre 
        Révolutionnaire et Romantique. There have been other similar ventures 
        although the majority of the performances that you’ll find in the 
        
MusicWeb 
        Resource Index for the Brahms symphonies are played by conventional 
        modern symphony orchestras. Here Ondine offer a straight reissue of a 
        set that first appeared, I think, in 2001 (ODE 990 2-T). 
          
        For these performances the COE numbers 20 violins, 8 violas, 6 cellos 
        and 4 basses with the usual woodwind and brass forces. That’s virtually 
        identical to the size of the SCO on the Mackerras recordings. Like Mackerras, 
        Berglund’s orchestra uses modern instruments; however, his performances 
        were not recorded under studio conditions but, like Gardiner’s, 
        in concert. The Baden-Baden audience is commendably silent throughout 
        and there’s no applause. 
          
        The use of a reduced body of strings means that the woodwind and brass 
        parts come through very easily - though not aggressively so. Listening 
        to these performances I was reminded that quite a number of conductors 
        have doubled the woodwind section when playing Beethoven symphonies the 
        better to balance the woodwind lines against a full-sized modern string 
        section. A similar effect is achieved here by reducing the string band 
        and employing standard-sized wind and brass sections and I like the results. 
        In movements such as the third movement of the First Symphony I was put 
        in mind of the Serenades of Brahms, precisely because the prominence of 
        the wind recalls the scoring of those two underrated works. 
          
        I like the way Berglund moves the music forward in the first movement 
        of the First Symphony. The introduction is fairly fleet - it’s certainly 
        not ponderous - and though the liner-notes refer to “a rugged introduction 
        that seems carved in granite” that’s not what I hear. The 
        main 
allegro is lithe and surging; here, as elsewhere in these 
        performances, Berglund takes the exposition repeat, which pleases me very 
        much. I relished the excellent rhythmic articulation and energy that is 
        on display in this performance and in the development section the vitality 
        of the music making is splendid. There’s a good deal of refined 
        playing in the second movement and the principal oboe and clarinet distinguish 
        themselves, as do the leader and the first horn in the closing pages. 
        The third movement is light and airy, benefiting from the ease with which 
        the winds can be heard. Berglund takes the introduction to the finale 
        spaciously but when the 
allegro is reached he moves the music on 
        with purpose and the performance is exciting. In the closing section there’s 
        a real drive for the finishing line with no slowing whatsoever for the 
        chorale. This is a bracing performance of the movement and, indeed, of 
        the symphony as a whole. 
          
        Berglund’s way with the first movement of the Second Symphony is 
        relaxed, though this doesn’t mean a lack of forward momentum. And 
        how nice, in this movement above all, to be able to hear the wind and 
        horns so easily! This is an objective, clear-eyed traversal. The slow 
        movement is broadly phrased and very well played and I like the reading 
        of the finale in which Berglund takes the ‘con spirito’ injunction 
        to heart; the music has fine energy and the ending is properly exultant. 
        
          
        The Third Symphony is one of the most difficult pieces in the repertoire 
        to launch and I don’t think Berglund quite brings it off. The music 
        sounds curiously earthbound for the first couple of minutes. Matters soon 
        improve, however and when the repeat is taken the music has the right 
        impetus this time round. One small detail that pleased me was how well 
        the contrabassoon registers at times. Overall, this is a good, dynamic 
        account of the movement. The two middle movements both go well and there’s 
        lots of energy at the start of the finale. The lovely 
sostenuto 
        ending seems to me to get slower by degrees, though I may be imagining 
        that. 
          
        Berglund leads a thrusting account of the first movement of the Fourth 
        while the 
Allegro giocoso movement is vibrant and joyful with strong 
        rhythmic articulation. The concluding passacaglia is often powerful and 
        penetrating. The flute solo in variation 12 is very eloquent and the woodwind 
        solos that follow are no less good. Towards the end of the movement Berglund 
        and his players bring out all the strength in the music in a way that’s 
        most satisfying. 
          
        Throughout these performances the playing of the COE is excellent. Berglund’s 
        direction is sure-footed though some may feel he’s a little too 
        objective in his approach. Nonetheless these are very good accounts of 
        these inexhaustible symphonies and the reduced orchestral forces enable 
        a fine and most welcome degree of clarity, in which task the players are 
        helped by Ondine’s good, clear recordings. I shan’t lightly 
        give up the full-sized orchestral versions of such masterly Brahms conductors 
        as Cantelli, Furtwängler, Giulini, Kempe, Tennstedt or Toscanini. 
        However, smaller-scale performances such as these have much to teach us 
        about these symphonies, especially when they are as well played as here. 
        This is a desirable set which I’m glad I’ve heard and to which 
        I’m sure I’ll return with pleasure. 
          
        
John Quinn 
          
        Very good accounts of these inexhaustible symphonies using reduced orchestral 
        forces.  
        
        Masterwork Index: 
Brahms symphonies