SITE RATING: 5/10
SITE
REVIEW: One of those
budget releases that utilizes Eastern Bloc
European countries' orchestras and choirs,
because they can be had cheaply, can be
counted on to give decent performances, but
without all of the pesky baggage of "name"
recognition and clean English diction.
Actually, this is a good performance -
the Baltic Chamber Orchestra plays with light,
quick measure, conductor Rimantas Vivalias
keeps everything tight and controlled; the
recorded sound is excellent - close and
balanced. The unnamed soloists (why?)
are generally good, with the tenor soloist
having a cheerfully heroic tone, beaten only
by the heavy accent which transforms a word
like "plain" into "breeeeeeh", and each of his
"the"'s into "ze". The Riga Festival
Choir has similar issues, with generally good
blend and tone, but mangling the King's
English into something from another world.
They are also not as closely mic'ed as
the soloists and orchestra, giving them a dim
recorded ambiance. The unnamed alto has
a quick, fluttering vibrato which I didn't
care for at all, the soprano seemed to be
singing from separate room and has a sharp,
brittle tone; and the bass soloist chewed his
way through his one representative solo ("Why
do the nations so furiously rage?") in a very
unpleasant manner. The recording has its
charming moments, but the time-tested rule of
"you get exactly what you pay for" is
definitively showcased here.
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