Carl NIELSEN (1865-1931)
Symphony No. 3, Op. 27 ‘Sinfonia espansiva’ (1910-1911) [36:43]
Symphony No. 4, Op. 29, ‘The Inextinguishable’ (1914-1916) [34:07]
Estelí Gomez (soprano), John Taylor Ward (baritone)
Seattle Symphony/Thomas Dausgaard
rec. live, 8, 9 & 10 June 2017 (3) and 12 & 14 November 2015 (4),
    Mark Taper Foundation Auditorium, Benaroya Hall, Seattle
Reviewed as a 24/96 download from
    
        eClassical
    
Pdf booklet included
SEATTLE SYMPHONY MEDIA SSM1017 [70:50] 
	Nielsen’s 150th birthday celebrations spawned three complete symphony 
	cycles, from Alan Gilbert and the New York Philharmonic (Dacapo), John 
	Storgårds and the BBC Phil (Chandos)
    and the Royal Stockholm PO under Sakari Oramo (BIS). I wrote off the first 
	in the latter’s series, which couples Nos. 4 and 5, only to find the 
	follow-ups were simply magnificent. And while Gilbert’s readings are not 
	without merit, it was much harder to be positive about Storgårds’. All three 
	face competition from stalwarts Ole Schmidt (Regis
    
    /Musical Concepts), Jukka Pekka Saraste (Warner, Finlandia), Michael
    Schønwandt (Dacapo/Naxos) and Herbert Blomstedt (EMI-Warner, Decca).
    I’ve reviewed a number of Seattle Symphony releases, the earlier ones with
    Gerard Schwarz on Naxos, and, most recently, those with Ludovic Morlot (on
    the orchestra’s own label). These SSM performances have ranged from
    run-of-the-mill
    
        Saint-Saēns
    
    and variable
    
        Stravinsky
    
    to catalogue-topping
    
        Ives.
    And while Morlot’s eclectic programmes are certainly challenging – he
    rejoices in the soubriquet ‘Sir Mixalot’ – they don’t always work. It must
    have been fun to start with, but I did wonder when the novelty would wear
    off. As it happens, Morlot is stepping down as music director at the end of
    the 2018/19 season, and will be replaced by Thomas Dausgaard. The
    MD-in-waiting has already recorded a Deryck Cooke Mahler 10th with these
    players, an account much praised by
    
        Ralph Moore.
    
    Dausgaard hasn’t given us much Nielsen, but his collection of orchestral
    excerpts (Dacapo 6.220518) and his
    
        C Major
    
    video of Espansiva – both with the Danish National Symphony
    Orchestra – have been well received. We never reviewed the first of these
    two releases, which I have on SACD and as a 24/96 download from
    
        eClassical
    
    (no booklet). Revisiting that album in preparation for this review, I soon
    realised why I hadn’t listened to it in years; the playing is robust and
    the recording is excellent, but the performances don’t engage me at all.
    That doesn’t detract from Dausgaard’s ongoing commitment to the 
	music of his homeland; the DNSO set of Rued Langgaard symphonies is 
	invaluable (Dacapo).
    Initial impressions of this Seattle Third are quite favourable. As I
    noticed in those excerpts, Dausgaard doesn’t dawdle, although, in fairness,
    he doesn’t overdrive the music either. His approach is Vesalian, the flesh
    flayed to reveal the muscle and bone beneath. Indeed, the combination of a
    no-nonsense reading and a very immediate recording reinforces that
    impression. And therein lies the rub: I have no problem with urgency and
    tautness, but I feel Dausgaard loses some of the work’s humanity in the
    process. That said, his singers are fine and I really like his balances,
    the lower strings particularly audible. Indeed, there’s something of the
    distinctive ‘terracing’ that makes Schmidt’s readings so tactile.
    One need only turn to Oramo’s
    
        Third,
    coupled with a First of striking shape and temperament, to realise just
    how much Dausgaard misses here. There’s vigour, certainly, but there’s also
    insight, engagement, and, in the ‘meadow-haunting vocalise’, real
    loveliness. As I elaborated in my review: ‘Even the hint of a gathering
    storm à la Beethoven or Berlioz can’t dispel the music’s mood of
    contentment.’ In this instance at least, Dausgaard simply doesn’t convey
    that depth or contrast of feeling. Moreover, SSM’s engineering, although
    good, isn’t in the same class as BIS’s. Given such a raft of riches, it’s
    no wonder I made the latter release a Recording of the Month. It’s now my
    go-to version of both symphonies.
    What of the Seattle Fourth? A troubled and troubling work – epitomised by
    those duelling timps – it’s been well served on disc. In light of
    Dausgaard’s forensic way with the Third, one might expect something rather
    special here. Alas, I just don’t sense the architecture of the piece – its
    span rather than its individual joists – and while that makes for moments
    of excitement I’m not convinced by the reading as a whole.
    
        Schønwandt
    
    and Saraste are much more consistent and compelling, with all the conflict
    and drama the music demands. Their orchestras – the DNSO and the Finnish
    Radio SO respectively - play with great passion, and both albums are well
    recorded.
    Muscular performances that fall short of the best; ditto the sound.
    Dan Morgan