rec. January 2014, Helsinki Music Centre.
    
 This impressive programme of works by Luciano Berio 
      has as its overture the gently transformed 
Ritirata Notturna di madrid 
      by Boccherini. This superimposes the original versions by Boccherini and 
      doesn’t add modern strangeness to this antique idiom as he did in 
      
 
      Rendering. The effect of a marching band looming out of the 
      darkness and receding in sonorous harmony is nicely done.
       
      
Calmo was written in memory of Berio’s friend Bruno Maderna, 
      who died unexpectedly in 1973. Texts for this are given in the booklet in 
      Italian and English. This is a ‘calm’ work in many respects, 
      with references to nature and the moon reflected for a large part in a kind 
      of restless nocturnal tranquillity. This doesn’t all pass without 
      drama however, though the outbursts of passion are reined in through the 
      general transparency of the instrumentation. Virpi Räisänen’s voice 
      is excellent for this piece, strong enough to carry the weight of the words 
      and leading or responding to the instrumental timbres in a work with a poetry 
      and sense of despondent magic all of its own.
       
      
Sinfonia is one of those landmark contemporary works which has 
      received more attention over the years, and competition on other recordings 
      has to be acknowledged. Looking at the score is a more daunting prospect 
      than listening to a performance however. Berio’s sense of theatre, 
      instrumental colour and potent harmony are ever-present. The vocal parts, 
      originally designed for the talents of The Swingle Singers, are also an 
      essential element and superbly performed here. The voices have to mix with 
      the instruments and should not be heard as soloists. This balance is respected 
      in this excellent recording, but following the text in the booklet is not 
      straightforward. Better just to know that certain words and meanings are 
      being conveyed. If you are fearful of this piece just have a listen to the 
      second movement, Berio’s tribute to Martin Luther King 
O King, 
      and find yourself transported into strange and wonderful realms. This is 
      followed in the central movement with wit and humour, including references 
      to Mahler, Stravinsky, Ravel and heaven knows what else, the singers going 
      on and on with their understated self-referential quasi-nonsense.
       
      That third movement is in many ways the main feature. However, the vast 
      landscapes of the intermezzo-like third movement and pointillist features 
      and layers of texture in the fourth are every bit as powerful. My own reference 
      for the 
Sinfonia has long been that with Ricardo Chailly conducting 
      Electric Phoenix and the Concertgebouw Orchestra on Decca. This is also 
      a keenly observed performance, with a recording which is almost too detailed 
      in its various multi-microphoned layers. 
      
      The Ondine recording is also something of an exercise in hyper-reality, 
      but the 5.0 surround experience is truly remarkable, and at times genuinely 
      overwhelming. The performance is tremendously idiomatic and convincing. 
      This production is an all-round winner from beginning to end.
       
      
Dominy Clements