Staggeringly well performed and recorded, this 2008 EMI disc of Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique performed by the
Berliner Philharmoniker under
Simon Rattle is highly entertaining. Over and over again, the listener is impressed by the super virtuoso playing of the Berlin musicians by the way they blend and contrast in the opening movement, sparkle and shine in the waltz, murmur in the pastoral, roar in the march, and howl in closing fugue. Similarly,
Rattle's masterful control of the music and the musicians and the way he creates satisfyingly effective climaxes is also quite remarkable. Captured in "in-your-face" digital sound by EMI that puts the Berlin right in front of the listener, this all makes for a very appealing performance of a standard repertoire work. When coupled with Berlioz's far less groundbreaking but only slightly less attractive La mort de Cléopâtre sung with incredibly intensity and consummate musicality by mezzo-soprano
Susan Graham, this will no doubt be the first choice for many listeners coming to the works for the first time. Old timers, of course, will already have their favorite performances of both, and to them, these performances may seem glib and superficial compared with the classic performances of
Beecham,
Davis,
Cluytens,
Monteux, and
Münch in the Symphonie and of
Baker and
Tourel in La mort de Cléopâtre. But this argument may just seem like older listeners pulling rank on younger listeners and does nothing to detract from their enjoyment of the present disc.