Dunelm Records is, as you may or not know, a "cottage 
          industry", run by Jim and Joyce Patterson from Glossop in the High Peak 
          area of Derbyshire. Their CDs are home produced, from the recording, 
          artwork and printing down to the actual CD burning; this is the second 
          in their series devoted to the symphonies of Shostakovich. It presents 
          a compelling case for a work which has never ranked very highly with 
          this listener, ever since my first encounter as a teenager (Berglund 
          on EMI/HMV), and also showcases the mainly amateur London Shostakovich 
          Orchestra very effectively. 
        
 
        
I had a little trouble with my initial listening, as 
          the CD-R crackled and hissed continually on my personal CD player. Fortunately, 
          my main system player performed perfectly, allowing a proper judgement 
          to be formed. The fact that the recording was made live at a public 
          performance does mean that certain allowances have to be made for the 
          sound (e.g., as noted in the booklet, extraneous noise from various 
          sources) but the passion, feeling, emotion (whatever you want to call 
          it) more than compensates for this. 
        
 
        
One of my long-standing reservations about this music 
          has been the repetitive "invasion theme", always cheap sounding to these 
          ears. As expected, this reading did not really do anything to reinforce 
          or refute these feelings and the booklet notes cover the passage in 
          some detail, including Bartók's alleged parodying of it in Concerto 
          for Orchestra. It remains difficult to disentangle the symphony 
          from the conditions (the siege of Leningrad) that surrounded its genesis 
          and this is something the extensive notes clearly take as read (and 
          they are among the most informative and exhaustive as I have seen in 
          recent times). There is little attempt to present the music as "just 
          music" and maybe that is indeed a pointless exercise but the inclusion 
          of the main jewel case back cover insert photograph is perhaps unnecessarily 
          extreme. Anyway, the performance of the symphony as a whole is as good 
          as (or probably better) than you might expect from a mainly amateur 
          band, the dedication and feeling the players have for the music is tangible 
          but, in the final analysis, it is the sort of work which people will 
          either enjoy or not enjoy and any number of performances/recordings 
          (good, bad or indifferent) is unlikely to alter those views. The slow 
          third movement (Adagio) is usually my "favourite" when I hear 
          the symphony and that remains true here; others may find different and 
          greater listening pleasures but give me the Fifth any day (or, 
          even better, some of the chamber music). I am not a complete Shostakovich 
          convert but he did write some great music; he also wrote some fairly 
          mediocre music too and personally I have to count this symphony in the 
          latter category, his Pomp and Circumstance, perhaps, as opposed 
          to Introduction and Allegro. I am convinced that, at the time, 
          its patriotic and propaganda value was immense and, for that reason, 
          the symphony will always be special to many people; as an outsider on 
          that experience, I can never perceive it in quite the same way. 
        
 
        
Neil Horner 
        
        
DUNELM RECORDS: LIST OF 
          SHOSTAKOVICH RECORDINGS: 2005  
          All made at St. Cyprian’s Church, Glentworth 
          Street, London 
        
          KHACHATURIAN: Suite No.2 from the ballet ‘Spartacus’ 
          [21:48] 
          BARBER: Concerto for violin and orchestra 
          [24:08] 
          SHOSTAKOVICH: Symphony No.6 in B minor, Op.65 
          [30:56] 
          Adrian Varela (violin) 
          London Shostakovich Orchestra/Christopher 
          Cox 
          Recorded "live" 19 May 2001 
          DUNELM DRD0173 [77:19] 
          Reviews: C 
          H Loh, DSCH Journal http://www.opus147.free.fr/reviews16.htm 
        
SHOSTAKOVICH 
          Symphony No.7 in C major [‘Dedicated to the 
          city of Leningrad’] [73:03] 
          London Shostakovich Orchestra/Christopher 
          Cox 
          Recorded "live" 18 May 2002 
          DUNELM DRD0184 [73:03] 
          Reviews: 
          http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2003/Feb03/1aFeb03-5.htm 
          
          http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2003/Feb03/shost7dunelm.htm 
        
SHOSTAKOVICH 
          Piano Concerto No. 2 in F major, Op. 102: 
          (‘To Maxim Dmitrievich Shostakovich’) [20:32] 
          
          Symphony No. 11 in G minor, Op.103, ‘The Year 
          1905’ [67:27] 
          Marina Primachenko (piano) 
          London Shostakovich Orchestra/Christopher 
          Cox 
          Recorded "live" 9 November 2002. 
          
          DUNELM DRD0193 [2 CDs: 87:59] 
          Reviews: 
          http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2003/Jun03/shost11dunelm.htmhttp://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2003/Jun03/1aJun03-5.htm 
        
 SHOSTAKOVICH: 
          Symphony No. 11 in G minor, Op.103, ‘The Year 
          1905’ [67:27] 
          London Shostakovich Orchestra: Conductor: 
          Christopher Cox; Leader: Jonathan Lee 
          Recorded "live" 9 November 2002. 
          
          DUNELM DRD0193B [67:27] 
        
SHOSTAKOVICH 
          Symphony No.4 in C minor, Op.43 [63:39] 
          London Shostakovich Orchestra: Conductor: 
          Christopher Cox; Leader: Louise Lee 
          Recorded "live" 8 November 2003 
          
          DUNELM DRD0216B [63:39] 
          Review: 
          http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2004/Jun04/Shostakovich4_Dunelm.htm 
        
SHOSTAKOVICH 
          Concerto for cello and orchestra No.1 in E 
          flat, Op.107 [28:46] 
          Symphony No.5 in D minor, Op.47 [55:33] 
          Jonathan Ayling (cello) 
          London Shostakovich Orchestra/Christopher 
          Cox 
          Recorded "live" 15 May 2004 
          DUNELM DRD0227 [2 CDs: 84:19] 
          Review: 
          BBC Music Magazine, November, 2004, 
          13, Number 3, p.63 
        
SHOSTAKOVICH 
          Symphony No.5 in D minor, Op.47 [55:33] 
          London Shostakovich Orchestra/Christopher 
          Cox 
          Recorded "live" 15 May 2004 
          DUNELM DRD0227B [55:33] 
          PRICES: 
          Single CDs: £10.95 (inclusive of postage and 
          packing in the UK) 
          Dual sets of 2 CDs: £16.95 (inclusive of postage 
          and packing in the UK)