| February 1, 2008 SACDs and CDs  Someone recently asked me why I
    dont review CDs. What the four letters in SACD stand for is "Super Audio
    Compact Disc." PentaTone, the record label based in the Netherlands that issues
    recordings only on SACD, puts it this way: SA-CD, which might make the point more
    clearly. When Sony began issuing SACDs, some of its titles contained only
    advanced-resolution tracks, which meant they would not play at all in a regular CD player.
    I havent seen one of those in a long time. Now, almost all SACDs released are
    actually SACD/CDs, or hybrid discs, which contain a layer of standard CD audio in addition
    to their high-resolution two-channel and/or multichannel tracks. And because these discs
    are usually mastered with some care, the CD tracks sound good, too. But if youre
    devoted to CDs "Red Book" 16-bit/44.1kHz standard, weve started a
    new column, to rotate on a quarterly basis with "Radical Sounds" and
    "Keepers." From what has trickled down to me from the recent Consumer
    Electronics Show and the Internet, more changes in the priorities of formats are coming,
    probably before the end of 2008, as CD and SACD give way to downloaded music files.
 Grainger: The Warriors; Irish Tune from County
    Derry; Danish Folk-Music Suite; Hill-Songs 1 & 2; Beautiful
    Fresh Flower; Colleen DhasMelbourne Symphony Orchestra; Geoffrey Simon, conductor.
 Cala CADS 4033, Multichannel SACD/CD.
  Percy Grainger (1882-1961) was born in
    Melbourne, Australia, so its entirely appropriate that that citys orchestra
    record a program of his music. Grainger frequently used folk songs in his compositions,
    and his music is complex -- he loved to experiment with sound, much in the manner of
    Charles Ives. His music is as full of tremendous energy as was the man himself. I remember
    when he came to the University of North Carolina to play the first movement of the Grieg
    Piano Concerto and to conduct a few of his own works, and though then in his 70s, he
    bounded on and off the stage like a crazed gazelle as he went back and forth to check
    balances in the hall. The performances here are letter perfect and in the right spirit.
    But this disc appears in this column is because of its sound. The recording was made in
    1989 and has only now been remastered for multichannel SACD, but I had no idea it was that
    old until I read the program notes. The sound is large and lush, with commanding bass, yet
    the many exotic instruments in these scores -- vibraphone, harmonium, xylophone, gong,
    and, in The Warriors, three pianos -- all come through with amazing clarity and
    presence. The soundstage is deep, but the instruments playing at the back of it have
    commanding presence. The two-channel tracks are quite acceptable, but dont do
    complete justice to Graingers intricate, colorful scoring. If you have multichannel
    equipment, youll want to hear this disc many times over.
 Roy Harris: Symphonies 8 ("San Francisco") &
    9; Memories of a Childs SundayAlan Feinberg, piano; Albany Symphony Orchestra; David Alan Miller, conductor.
 Albany TROY 350, Multichannel SACD.
  Roy Harris (1898-1979) is considered a
    founder of the American school of symphonic composition. I once heard a discussion of
    American music in which it was concluded that while American music comprises many
    different elements, the main one held in common is that of energy. The word
    certainly applies to these bustling works, with their skittering contrapuntal passages and
    broad melodies punctuated by pungent rhythmic figures. Conductor David Alan Miller
    understands this music inside out, and his Albany players respond to his direction with
    clean, virtuoso playing. This recording did not start life as multichannel. It was
    upsampled by Frederick Hohman at Zarex in a proprietary system that converts it to DSD.
    Then, a six-channel mix was derived from the original master using the stereo phase
    relationships to extract center, surround, and LFE tracks. If this disc is a typical
    example of the results, the system works very well. The multichannel tracks have admirable
    presence and are clean as the proverbial whistle. The recording was made in the fabled
    Troy Savings Bank Music Hall in Troy, New York. It sounds like a fairly dry hall that
    contributes little of its own ambience, making the music sound very transparent. The level
    on the SACD is low; youll need to crank it up more than usual, but when you do, it
    rocks.
 Prokofiev: Symphony 5; Ode to the End of the
    WarRussian National Orchestra; Vladimir Jurowski, conductor.
 PentaTone 5186 083, Multichannel SACD/CD.
  Prokofievs Fifth Symphony is
    extraordinary music, but typical of the composer in its blend of lyric and rhythmic
    elements. Conductor Vladimir Jurowski grasps all facets of the Russian composers
    music, and the fine Russian National Orchestra responds to his direction splendidly. The
    flittering rhythms of the second movement are mercurial in a Russian way, and the long
    lines of the main melody in the third are lyrical to a fault. The strings sound rich and
    play virtuosically; the brass can be mellow, yet snarl when asked to do so. It all adds up
    to a five-star recording of this work, and the recording helps. Its spacious yet
    detailed, with good stereo separation up front and just the right amount of rear ambience.
    One easily perceives the stage depth: the woodwinds are center and back a little, the
    brass and percussion behind them, yet all have equal presence. The Symphony 5 was recorded
    in concert, with patches inserted later to replace passages marred by applause. The
    recording of the Ode to the End of the War (referring to World War II) was made
    without audience, and does a great job of conveying Prokofievs exotic scoring for
    wind band, eight double basses, eight harps, four pianos, and percussion. The percussion
    have a field day, the engineers accurately documenting every solid thud of bass
    drum, every shimmer of struck cymbal, every entrance of the deliberately intrusive snare.
    It is, in short an ideal recording that I dont think anything could improve.
 Howard Shore: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of
    the King -- The Complete RecordingsRenée Fleming, Sir James Galway, Ben del Maestro, Annie Lenox, Sissel, Liv Tyler, Billy
    Boyd, Dominic Monaghan; London Philharmonic Orchestra; Howard Shore, conductor.
 Reprise 162044-2, 4 CDs, 1 DVD-Audio. Mixes: Dolby Digital 5.1 and 2.0 mixes, MLP 5.1 and
    2.0 mixes.
  This is the third and final installment
    in Reprises recordings of the complete music from The Lord of the Rings
    films. The only other film project of similar scope is the music for the six Star Wars
    films, all composed by John Williams. Because so much music was composed for each Rings
    film, it has taken three CDs and one DVD-Audio disc to contain the music of each of the
    first two chapters of the trilogy, and now, for The Return of the King, no fewer
    than four CDs and a double-sided DVD-A. This last volume is laid out like the
    others: The CDs are contained in a four-disc foldout inside a box of leatherette. As in
    the preceding sets, the DVD-A perches, not all that securely, on a hub on the inside of
    the box lid. The DVD-A contains all the music found on the CDs, but in glorious
    5.1-channel MLP sound. Whether solo flute or full orchestra with chorus, the sound is
    magnificent, with excellent definition and focus. The bass is singularly well focused in
    addition to being ample, and the surround channels add great warmth without calling
    attention to themselves. The percussion instruments have great bite without ever sounding
    shrill or distorted -- quite an accomplishment. This set makes me wish that all big
    orchestral soundtracks were released in hi-rez surround sound. The Star Wars
    soundtracks, in particular, seem to cry out for such deluxe treatment.
 Haydn: Symphonies 97 & 102; Overture
    "Lanima del filosofo ossia Orfeo ed Euridice"Austro-Hungarian Haydn Philharmonic; Adám Fischer, conductor.
 MDG 901 1452, Multichannel SACD/CD.
  Lets hope that this, conductor
    Adám Fischers second Haydn release on MDG, means that there will be an ongoing
    series of the symphonies. This time Fischer has chosen two of the composers happiest
    symphonies, both in major keys, and his performances bubble over with good humor. The prestos
    are exceptionally fleet, at tempos that would find some orchestras scrambling for notes.
    But in the hands of the Austro-Hungarian Haydn Philharmonic everything remains precise, no
    matter the speed -- this is some of the cleanest playing I have heard from an orchestra.
    The recording is exceptionally clean, too, with good stage width and depth and remarkable
    dynamic range. Take the Menuetto of Symphony 97: The strings echo the first
    statement of the theme note for note, but pianissimo. The woodwinds play their
    solos and duets from a space clearly tucked in slightly behind the strings; the brass and
    timpani (with their surprising early entrance) interject from a space a little farther
    back. All instruments have good presence. The two-channel tracks are crisp and clean; the
    multichannel ones add just a little ambience in the rear channels to make the sound up
    front more three-dimensional. The vivacious overture is a neat bonus. This disc is a
    winner all the way.
 BritanniaBritten: Sinfonia da Requiem
 Davies: An Orkney Wedding, with Sunrise
 Elgar: Pomp and Circumstance Marches 1 & 4
 MacMillan: Britannia
 Turnage: Three Screaming Popes
 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra; Donald Runnicles, conductor.
 Telarc SACD-60677, Multichannel SACD/CD.
  The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra is very
    fortunate to have Donald Runnicles as principal guest conductor. For my money, he often
    turns in the best performances, outshining even those of music director Robert Spano.
    Telarc seems aware of this, as they have divided their recordings of the orchestra about
    equally between the two young maestros. In this collection, Runnicles offers an
    exceptionally varied menu of British compositions, ranging from two of Elgars noble Pomp
    and Circumstance marches to the strident Three Screaming Popes by
    Mark-Anthony Turnage. Benjamin Brittens Sinfonia da Requiem, perhaps the
    best-known work after the Elgar, is given a taut, dramatic reading that is among the best
    on disc. As usual, the Telarc production team has come up with sound that is just right,
    with a stage depth that is particularly impressive. James MacMillans Britannia
    is a singularly complex work scored for a wide variety of percussion instruments,
    including car horns and referees whistles. The engineers have handled them with
    accuracy and ease. In fact, if you want to hear how important transparency can be to a
    great recording, the MacMillan offers ample opportunity for the engineering to shine
    alongside the virtuoso playing.
  ...Rad Bennettradb@ultraaudio.com
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