Kirill Petrenko's name 
                is unfamiliar but after hearing this 
                I hope we will hear him in other works 
                with his Berlin orchestra. 
              
 
              
Asrael is gaining 
                an extended discography. Of the works 
                making up the Suk trilogy Asrael 
                is the most dramatic. Ripening 
                is lyrical; Epilogue philosophical 
                - visionary. 
              
 
              
Mercurial urgencies 
                are injected at 4.57 onwards in the 
                first movement and the sway Petrenko 
                injects into the music suggests that 
                he wishes to bring out Tchaikovskian 
                parallels. The macabre ‘Mendelssohnisms’ 
                of the 7.36 section are mixed with Manfred. 
              
 
              
Followers of Suk's 
                music will find this rewarding listening 
                as an alternative approach to the more 
                tempered and rounded yet still pungent 
                tradition established by Talich and 
                carried forward with tributary variants 
                by Neumann, Pesek and Behlolavek. 
              
 
              
I am not convinced 
                by the speed of the fevered temple-hammering 
                section at 12:30 onwards. This should 
                be taken at a steadier pace with a feeling 
                of colossal oppression. On the other 
                hand the exhaustion of the andante 
                is aptly captured complete with 
                that mesmeric metronomic beat (a steadiness 
                also very assertive in the finale at 
                11.01 onwards). This no doubt reflects 
                the remorseless passage of time. The 
                chorale-like trumpet at 4.43 sounds 
                uncannily like Shostakovich. 
              
 
              
Petrenko's first violins 
                shudder in steely delicacy at the start 
                of the Vivace, reaching 
                back to the long eerie tradition of 
                Czech ‘grand guignol’ - reflected in 
                the late tone poems of Dvořák and, 
                to some degree, in Fibich and Novák. 
                 
              
 
              
In 
                the fourth movement Delian idylls mix 
                with Dvořák’s folk sweetness. Listen 
                for the exquisite solo violin 
                at. 3.42. In the finale Petrenko and 
                the engineers bring out the superbly 
                chesty attack of the strings at 2.03. 
                I have heard the ‘squeaky’ flutes done 
                with more eldritch atmospheric virtuosity 
                but there is real attack here. 
              
 
              
The coughs of the Berlin 
                audience are especially heard in the 
                second movement. If you want complete 
                silence then opt for the studio versions. 
              
 
              
The Orchester der Komischen 
                Oper Berlin and conductor have prepared 
                this admirably detailed and caring performance 
                with great attention and feeling. It 
                is a privilege to have on disc the same 
                performance that was heard by that Berlin 
                audience in 2002. 
              
 
              
I would recommend this 
                to seasoned Suk enthusiasts and especially 
                to Asrael fans. It is not the 
                most intensely tragic of readings though 
                it does not stint in that respect. However 
                the meticulous attention to mood and 
                detail and the sense of spontaneous 
                fantasy - almost in the Scriabin league 
                in the first movement - is something 
                special. For a mainstream studio recommendation 
                try Belohlavek 
                on Chandos 
                and Pesek on Virgin. If you are near 
                an HMV shop try the bargain price Pesek 
                issue on HMV Classics. Talich 
                is hors de concours (mono and 
                extraordinarily atmospheric). Svetlanov 
                on Russian Disc I have always wanted 
                to hear and should be memorable. Kubelik 
                on Opus is outstanding and if you had 
                to go for one in modern sound that's 
                the one to take. 
              
 
              
I liked this CPO version 
                very much and I hope that dedicated 
                Suk enthusiasts will try it. 
              
Rob Barnett