For anyone looking for one and only one complete collection of Alexander Borodin's three symphonies, this two-disc set with Gennady Rozhdestvensky directing the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic shouldn't be the one and only. It's not that the Swedes don't play with tremendous power and heartmelting passion. They do: listen to the Second's closing Allegro. And it's not that Rozhdestvensky doesn't conduct with immense energy and complete understanding. He does: listen to the First's central Andante. And it's surely not that the ...
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For anyone looking for one and only one complete collection of Alexander Borodin's three symphonies, this two-disc set with Gennady Rozhdestvensky directing the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic shouldn't be the one and only. It's not that the Swedes don't play with tremendous power and heartmelting passion. They do: listen to the Second's closing Allegro. And it's not that Rozhdestvensky doesn't conduct with immense energy and complete understanding. He does: listen to the First's central Andante. And it's surely not that the sound recorded by Chandos in the mid-'90s and released here by Brilliant in 2007 is anything less than thrilling. It is: listen to the tympani in the Third's opening movement. It's that the conductor has slightly but noticeably retouched the scores -- mostly crossing out occasional wind or brass doublings or giving an especially lyrical line to a solo string rather than the whole section -- and while these retouchings make these performances a bit clearer and a tad more affecting,...
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