This delightful collection of Offenbach works is interesting because 
                it includes some lesser-known material by this composer. The alert 
                collector may have already come across the reconstructed Les 
                Fées du Rhin, heard for the first time at the 2002 Montpellier 
                Festival. It recording on Accord was given a full review on the 
                Musicweb-International site. The sprightly Concerto Militaire 
                is little known, if at all, and worthy of an appearance in the 
                concert hall while the Ballet of the Snowflakes, although 
                not known by name, will be somewhat familiar.
                The opening overture, Orpheus in the 
                  Underworld is a different and earlier arrangement from 
                  the one regularly heard. It lacks the powerful opening and instead 
                  starts with a strongly rhythmic haunting number 'I was a 
                  King'. Here, the overture is played at a graceful pace though 
                  some listeners may prefer the energy that a faster reading from 
                  certain 'gusto' conductors ensures. For me, only the opening 
                  could be brisker for the middle larghetto sections sound 
                  ideal. 
                The Concerto Militaire has 
                  been shrouded in mystery. Only one complete performance was 
                  known to have taken place - in Cologne, 1848 - although Offenbach 
                  himself played its opening movement back in 1847 (Paris). Offenbach's 
                  grandson unearthed the first movement and a new edition had 
                  been prepared by the cellist, Clement, using piano sketches 
                  to re-orchestrate the missing second and third movements. Jean-Christophe 
                  Keck's CD notes tell us that his reconstruction was uneven and 
                  incomplete. Since then, the manuscripts of the two missing movements 
                  have recently been discovered in Cologne city's archives and 
                  in Washington's Library of Congress, USA. They are used here 
                  for the first time.
                The concerto is a cheery piece with a display 
                  of scintillating cello virtuosity that banishes a doleful lethargic 
                  prominence that cellos often exhibit in their concertos. In 
                  parts, I find this piece could be by Suppé (Poet and Peasant 
                  perhaps) - its bouncy tempo is so bright. As a cello player 
                  himself, Offenbach indulges in more than the usual virtuoso 
                  element and as a result forfeits a strong thematic flow. 
                In this recording, the thirty-four year 
                  old competition-winning cellist of the Paris Conservatoire, 
                  Jérome Pernoo, has much technical difficulty to contend with, 
                  yet is perfectly wedded to Offenbach's demands. His sensitive 
                  reading throughout, for me, magnifies my interest in the piece. 
                  The acoustic for the soloist is dry (close miking) and could 
                  have benefited from the added bloom that deeper reverberation 
                  might have given. 
                The Les Fées du Rhin overture 
                  is essentially the complete barcarolle from Tales of Hoffmann. 
                  This haunting tune was originally written as the Song of 
                  the Elves for this operetta, written fifteen years earlier. 
                  The work was forgotten until this barcarolle brought lasting 
                  fame in Tales of Hoffmann. Compared against the one existing 
                  full recording of Les Fées (Accord 472 920-2), 
                  this reading chops 20 seconds from its 5:20 duration, thus benefiting 
                  from a slightly faster pace. As a studio recording it is free 
                  from the slight background disturbances noticed in the quieter 
                  passages of the live Montpellier version, yet disappointingly 
                  recesses some of the delicate atmospheric background effects 
                  provided by the violins behind the main theme. In the Grand 
                  Valse, an accentuated beat from the percussion is likely 
                  to be more Minkowski's interpretation than a double forte score 
                  marking and makes the passage more Russian than French. Here 
                  I can only visualize elephants trying to dance in a fairyland 
                  landscape. 
                Le Voyage dans la Lune is generally 
                  unknown and so the appearance here of its Ballet des Flocons 
                  de Neige is most welcome. The notes give little help 
                  with background detail (as does Gammon's biography apart from 
                  indicating that the operetta played in London the same year 
                  along with Sullivan's The Zoo, 1873). For me, the music has 
                  character and the Polka will be recognized as 
                  a familiar theme, transferred to Offenbach's ballet Gaité 
                  Parisienne (Rosenthal, 1904). 
                
              Modestly, Marc Minkowski 
                leaves all the biographical space in the booklet to Pernoo and 
                so I had to seek background information elsewhere. It seems that 
                this recording might be the first occasion Minkowski has met a 
                light-weight composer and I wonder if his approach might be too 
                heavy. Originally a bassoonist, he was awarded the Orphée d'Or 
                as "Best Young Conductor" in 1990 having won First Prize 
                at the first International Early Music Competition (Bruges 1984). 
                That same year he founded Les Musiciens du Louvre, a Paris-based 
                period-instrument ensemble, to perform Baroque and Classical repertoire. 
                I am not sure how these period instruments relate this disc, which 
                on the cover boasts "instruments originaux". In the 1990s, he 
                revived Gluck, then Handel (Welsh National Opera, 1994) and later 
                involved himself in Mozart. With Les Musiciens du Louvre, Minkowski 
                signed an exclusive contract with Archiv Produktion in 1994, hence 
                this issue. 
                In more than a couple of places, I notice 
                  that the conductor's breath intake is irritatingly audible but 
                  generally the recording is good. The notes are provided in English, 
                  French and German.
                Raymond 
                  J Walker