This two-disc set of the orchestral music of Bohuslav Martinu is an odd mix of repertoire and performers. On disc 1 is the composer's turbulent Fourth Symphony and sprightly Sinfonia La Jolla from a 1979 English EMI recording with
Walter Weller, former concertmaster of the
Wiener Philharmoniker, conducting the
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic plus a 1958 Capital recording of the kaleidoscopic Frescoes of Piero della Francesca with
Rafael Kubelik leading the
Royal Philharmonic. The second disc has three characterful concertos -- the Double Concert for two string orchestras, piano, and timpani; the Concerto for string quartet and orchestra; and the Sinfonia Concertante for oboe, bassoon, violin, cello, and orchestra -- performed by the
City of London Sinfonia led by the late
Richard Hickox and recorded by Virgin Classics in 1989 plus the tragic yet consoling Memorial to Lidice from a 1995 German EMI recording by
Ingo Metzmacher and the
Bamberger Symphoniker.
But odd as the mix is, the performances themselves are consistently good to excellent.
Weller's Fourth forceful and determined, while his Sinfonia La Jolla is bright, clean, and ebullient and in both works the Liverpool musicians deliver well-played and enthusiastic performances.
Hickox's concertos have just the right balance of energy, sentimentality, and, in the Double Concerto, deep tragedy, and the London musicians give him enthusiastic and expressive playing.
Metzmacher's Memorial is appropriately grim at the start, but ultimately builds to a cathartic climax with the committed playing of the Bamberg musicians. But the best performance here is certainly
Kubelik's Frescoes, with their luminous colors, bottomless depths, and endless energy, and the
Royal Philharmonic's playing is the most virtuosic of any ensemble's here. Understandably, the sound here varies greatly, but is generally speaking as good as it gets for its times and places.