BBC Music Magazine

Opera

Britten

Peter Grimes

Stuart Skelton, Erin Wall, Roderick Williams, Catherine Wyn-Rogers, Robert Murray, Neal Davies, Susan Bickley, James Gilchrist, Marcus Farnsworth; Edvard Grieg Kor; Royal Northern College of Music Chorus; Choir of Collegium Musicum; Bergen Philharmonic Choir & Orchestra/ Edward Gardner

Chandos CHSA5250 (CD/SACD) 138:16 mins (2 discs)

The best feature of this new Grimes is the orchestral playing, similar in tempo and character to Britten’s own recording. Where Edward Gardner really scores is the Bergen Philharmonic’s precision, captured in detailed yet natural sound. In the final Act, we clearly hear the ‘Moonlight’ music continue gently into the following scene, the main orchestra’s echoes and interjections to the off-stage dance band subtly suggesting the symbiotic relationship between the coastal community and the sea off which it makes its living.

If only that community sounded more weather seasoned. The well-disciplined chorus sounds as if recruited straight from music college, and Auntie is no mature matron to command even grudging respect from patrons of her pub. More convincing is Catherine Wyn-Rogers as Mrs Sedley, and Roderick Williams, though lyrical, shows enough heft in the pub scene to suggest Balstrode’s authority.

The two leads, Ellen Orford (Erin Wall) and Grimes (Stuart Skelton), start well in the Prologue; but Wall’s voice develops a wobble under pressure and just before ‘let her among you without fault’ overshoots her note by

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Music Magazine

BBC Music Magazine3 min read
Ibiza Spain
Headphones adjusted, the conductor raises his arms. Strings twist and turn, the sound swells; electronic vocals ride the crest of the wave. The beat drops. Then, as lights flash across the Royal Albert Hall, glockenspiels duet over a keyboard motif.
BBC Music Magazine2 min read
Farewell To…
Born 1942 Pianist and conductor ‘That young man can play the piano better than any of us,’ enthused Arthur Rubinstein on hearing an 18-year-old Maurizio Pollini play his way to victory in the International Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw in 1960.
BBC Music Magazine5 min read
Have Your Say…
Write to: The editor, BBC Music Magazine, Eagle House, Bristol, BS1 4ST Email: music@classical-music.com Social media: contact us on Facebook and Twitter I was fascinated by The Magnificent Seven (April), in which Ben Goldscheider chose seven works h

Related Books & Audiobooks