While 
                      Kurt Weill’s contribution to music for the stage is certainly 
                      well known, it is a sad fact that his works for the concert 
                      platform are restricted to his early years as a composer, 
                      and do not make up the most remembered or performed part 
                      of his output. The ever-adventuresome Marin Alsop and her 
                      Bournemouth Symphony have set about in this recording to 
                      restore some of Weill’s symphonic pieces to the repertoire, 
                      and we as listeners are all the better for it. In her typically 
                      outstanding fashion, Maestra Alsop has given us exemplary 
                      performances of Weill’s two symphonies and a suite of music 
                      intended for a collaborative musical theater project with 
                      Moss Hart and Ira Gershwin - pretty good company, I would 
                      venture.
                    The 
                      so-called “second symphony” (neither work was given a number 
                      by the composer) was a product of Weill’s study in the late 
                      1920s with famed pedagogue Ferruccio Busoni, who had sent 
                      the younger composer off to work with his sometimes assistant 
                      Philipp Jarnach. Although earlier serious works had been 
                      well received, with orchestral pieces being performed by 
                      no less than the Berlin Philharmonic, the rise to power 
                      of the Third Reich in 1933 effectively eliminated any chance 
                      for Weill’s music to get a performance in his homeland. 
                      After his departure for Paris, 
                      the symphony was premiered by Bruno Walter in both Amsterdam and New York, and 
                      it received luke-warm reviews at best. After these unsuccessful 
                      first performances, it languished on library shelves until 
                      the 1970s when it finally began to see appearances on symphony 
                      programs. 
                    One 
                      must indeed wonder why so fine a composition was so poorly 
                      received. Structurally tight, fascinatingly orchestrated 
                      and full of both melodic and rhythmic interest, it is without 
                      question a very worthy work, if perhaps not the kind of 
                      masterpiece that a Prokofiev or a Shostakovich may have 
                      created in the same time-frame. In a somewhat unusual gesture, 
                      Weill makes the middle movement the axle around which the 
                      entire work turns. With its central rhythmic gesture first 
                      introduced by the entire orchestra, and never straying too 
                      far from earshot, the movement also features a rather haunting 
                      trombone solo, somewhat startling on first hearing since 
                      the instrument seldom takes the soloist’s role in the most 
                      of symphonic canon. The final movement rips along jauntily, 
                      but in spite of its insistent rhythms, the entire symphony 
                      has a veil of darkness about it, perhaps the composer’s 
                      subconscious response to the pending doom in his homeland. 
                      
                    The 
                      Symphony No. 1 is a much more angular work, and is filled 
                      to the brim with ethereal melodies for the principal strings, 
                      and is punctuated with brassy, percussion-laden dissonances 
                      that jar one out of these reveries of melody. A youthful 
                      work, it shows tremendous skill and savvy on the part of 
                      the twenty-one year old composer, and foreshadows the rather 
                      brooding, cynical nature of Weill’s stage works, produced 
                      after his move to the United States, and after the terrible years of the Nazi regime. Cast in a single 
                      movement, it is nonetheless divided into three distinct 
                      sections. Deadly serious, this music is obviously the work 
                      of a young artist trying to prove himself. There is no question 
                      that he succeeds.
                    The 
                      Symphonic Nocturne, culled from tunes from the stage show 
                      Lady in the Dark is a completely different kettle 
                      of fish from the two more serious and esoteric symphonies. 
                      Fraught with sweeping melody, Robert Russell Bennett helps 
                      to deliver a work worthy of a warm summer night at the Hollywood 
                      Bowl. A very sharp contrast to the other works on this program, 
                      Ms. Alsop was wise to include it as a bit of aural relief 
                      from the tense seriousness of the two symphonies. 
                    Marin 
                      Alsop is in her customary top form throughout. Perhaps the 
                      most remarkable aspect of this conductor’s work is her careful 
                      attention to structure and pacing. I have yet to hear a 
                      performance under her baton that was anything less than 
                      rhythmically spot-on, and her sense of both tempo and rubato 
                      are nearly flawless. The Bournemouth Symphony seems to have 
                      become quite at home with American music (although this 
                      is expatriate stuff), first under Andrew Litton, and now 
                      carried on by Alsop. They play the serious works with determination 
                      and precision, the populist music with ease and grace. 
                    Naxos continue to astound with their dedication to expansion of the repertoire, 
                      and this disc is yet another jewel in their crown. Long 
                      may ‘ole Klaus’ and his merry band of musical ambassadors 
                      live. Tutti bravi! Add this one to your collection soon.
                    Kevin 
                      Sutton