This is an excellent version of the complete score to
Prokofiev's still somewhat neglected early ballet Chout.
Michail Jurowski and the WDR Sinfonie Orchester Köln present the score in stunning sound, all sorts of detail emerging with excellent orchestral balances, the whole yielding a generally gracious and somewhat Romantic account of this colorful work. The individual orchestra members play their solos especially well and not always in a conventional manner: in the opening cue, the clarinetist mesmerizes the ear with his beguiling upward slides, making the music tarter and a bit sassy. The brass play with spirit, too: in the closing number, "Le marchand s'eloigne," the tuba growls and howls as the strings and other brass turn frenzied, the whole sounding deliciously wanton and thoroughly exciting.
The suite to this work has received a number of fine recordings over the years, but previously only
Rozhdestvensky had recorded the full version, that effort issued on Melodiya in the mid-'80s. This
Jurowski version compares well to that effort, offering a quite valid alternative view to the more aggressive and grittier
Rozhdestvensky: instead of acid and slapstick,
Jurowski gives the listener honey and playful finesse; when the music arrives or ends with a crash in
Rozhdestvensky, it is more likely to have a good-natured bounce in
Jurowski. Not that
Jurowski turns in a G-rated performance of this farcical ballet about seven buffoons who are tricked into slaying their wives: he, too, captures
Prokofiev's sardonic sense and enfant terrible persona, traits nearly always present in his early works. The CPO sound reproduction is vastly more detailed than the older Melodiya recording, too.