Britten's Op.95 
                    Phaedra is called a 'cantata' but might as well be 
                    a highly compressed opera by a composer at his peak of genius 
                    with little time left to him as his health collapsed.
                  It was written 
                    for Dame Janet Baker and those unlucky enough to have missed 
                    the premiere or a recording of it missed glory which the Decca 
                    CD (with The Rape of Lucretia) fails to capture. Steuart 
                    Bedford did his best to rally the ECO troops in the studio 
                    and Dame Janet was on great form but it simply falls short 
                    of what might have been.
                  It plods along 
                    - like Lowell's clumsy translation of Racine - and the harpsichord 
                    is too far forward to make it sound real.
                  Furthermore, Decca's 
                    cynical policy of sticking Britten recordings together at 
                    full price occurs here as awkwardly as the Billy Budd 
                    package where the great opera runs for just a few minutes 
                    on CD1 before getting to the rest.
                  Hyperion's version 
                    with Jean Rigby conducted by Friend (see review) 
                    shows Miss Rigby near her best but the direction and orchestra 
                    are less than friendly and there is a confused air in the 
                    ensemble which lets the soloist down. The recording is also 
                    vague.
                  The best performances 
                    are in the cheaper range with the star recording surely being 
                    the Elatus with the late Lorraine Hunt-Lieberson in her element. 
                    The Hallé Orchestra are on accurate and thrilling form under 
                    Kent Nagano driving the action from his deep understanding 
                    of Britten's works and knowing the stakes regarding the soloist's 
                    health.
                  This full-blooded 
                    performance reminds me of Dame Janet's world premiere because 
                    the character of Phaedra is a woman in middle age crazy about 
                    her son-in law. The part needs maturity but also guile in 
                    her royal court. Dame Janet achieved this live but the studio 
                    recording remains a disappointment.
                  The Elatus recording 
                    lacks some focus and the Shostakovich-like skeletal percussion 
                    in the final bars is muffled; a good mixer can correct this.
                  Enter Steuart 
                    Bedford again on Naxos (8.557199) 
                    with a Collins reissue from 1994 featuring 
                    the Irish Ann Murray as Phaedra, a fresher ECO and far better 
                    recording than Decca managed. This time we hear the intricate 
                    subtleties of Britten's wondrous orchestration.
                  Ann Murray has 
                    a lighter mezzo voice than Baker and Hunt-Lieberson. She is 
                    more restrained than the latter in the passionate abandon department 
                    but Murray picks up the 'foxy' nature of the historical character 
                    (as Baker did live) and is utterly thrilling in a different 
                    way from the late Lorraine Hunt-Lieberson.
                  I suggest buying 
                    the Elatus and the Naxos but maybe borrowing 
                    the overpriced Decca from a library until someone who has 
                    a good recording of Dame Janet live can find a label to release 
                    it in the face of copyright tyranny. 
                  Britten wrote 
                    some great music in his last years and 'Phaedra' is perhaps 
                    the best. Alongside ‘Phaedra’ is a 1943 work by Britten of 
                    interesting form and history. ‘The Rescue of Penelope’ arose 
                    from Edward Sackville-West’s BBC commission called ‘The Rescue’ 
                    to be aired on radio over two evenings. Britten was chosen 
                    to write the incidental music for a fee of £100 – a large 
                    sum in those days.
                  Given that Britten 
                    had returned to the UK with little in his pocket he took on 
                    the perceived “secondary role” with relish when he read Sackville-West’s 
                    modernist version of Homer, which he thought was right for 
                    his country at war.
                  The excellent 
                    CD notes describe how the BBC staff conductor Clarence Raybould 
                    commented on Britten’s pacifism and the BBC Director of Music 
                    (Sir Arthur Bliss) tried to make peace – after all Britten 
                    had sailed back to Britain at the height of U-boat activity 
                    and the composer said that he would complete the music out 
                    of friendship for Sackville-West but would not have further 
                    involvement as he would have normally done.
                  Britten also had 
                    a bad attack of measles when the BBC Home Service rehearsed 
                    the work. This was no trivial matter for a man with delicate 
                    health.
                  The broadcast 
                    in November 1943 had some hostile criticism but George Bernard 
                    Shaw (no less) was intrigued by Britten’s music as having 
                    appropriate grace and originality without undue influences. 
                    Britten fans will notice devices later used in ‘The Turn of 
                    the Screw’, ‘Prince of the Pagodas’ and some of the best woodwind 
                    and brass writing he ever did.
                  The subject of 
                    being faithful, brave and loyal in the person of Penelope 
                    ironically applied to Britten as the mud pies during production 
                    were thrown at him. He made some changes to show Penelope 
                    as more steadfast than heroic. I fancy that he was thinking 
                    of his England after the war turned from pure self-defence 
                    to not being deterred from a true purpose. Quietly right.
                  The separate work 
                    of ‘The Rescue of Penelope’ as prepared by Chris de Souza 
                    contains the basic shape of the BBC presentation. The Elatus 
                    recording has a few edits of repeats which Cleobury’s 1993 
                    premiere with Janet Suzman as narrator did not have. That 
                    left it a bit ragged.
                  Nagano’s command 
                    of Britten’s subtle orchestration is remarkable. Although 
                    there are occasional wobbles by the soloists the real glory 
                    is that the narrator is Dame Janet Baker with a northern orchestra 
                    and a hint of her Yorkshire accent as a mature and sexual 
                    woman just as Homer portrayed Penelope.
                  Music with a narrator 
                    is notoriously risky – e.g. Copland’s Lincoln Portrait 
                    and Stravinsky’s Oedipus Rex - but this CD presses 
                    all the right buttons and the recording quality is quite good. 
                    It nevertheless benefits from a mixer to bring up the middle.
                  On the whole it’s 
                    a damned good drama but for Britten cognoscenti it’s a feast 
                    of emerging genius in the expert hands of Nagano and the Hallé 
                    in top form.
                  Stephen Hall
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