Florent Schmitt's once popular ballet on the biblical story of Salome was revised and reorchestrated for concert performance in 1911, and the shortened version is what
Yannick Nézet-Séguin and the Orchestre Métropolitain recorded for ATMA Classique in 2010. A vivid score that incorporates rich harmonies and lush sonorities from late Romanticism and impressionism, La Tragédie de Salomé in its revised form is a tone poem in two parts, rather in the style of
Richard Strauss, though quite unlike his famous opera Salomé. While
Schmitt's work has flashes of brilliance and is famous for the irregular meters and propulsive rhythms that
Igor Stravinsky admired, its orientation is essentially conservative and it lacks the shock factor that made
Strauss' work daring and scandalous. Indeed, the inclusion of César Franck's Symphony in D minor as a companion piece seems to point up the inherent conservatism in
Schmitt's work. However, the performances are much livelier than that assessment suggests, and
Nézet-Séguin and the Montreal-based orchestra play with their expected interpretive skill and technical excellence. While the
Schmitt selection is a fairly uncommon item and worth hearing at least once, the Franck is the more satisfying performance and what makes this disc worth owning. The fluidity of the playing and coherent shaping of the music give this symphony a vitality that is sometimes lacking in other, stodgier renditions. The reproduction is warm and resonant, though the recording sounds best with a moderately high volume setting.