Britten - Peter Grimes / Davis, Winslade, Watson, London Symphony Orchestra

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
This is the third time Sir Colin Davis has recorded Britten's Peter Grimes (if you count the video version). On some very important levels, this is the best. The orchestral playing and the singing of the chorus are clearer---and captured more clearly by the engineers in this live performance---than anyone could have wished for. The people of the Borough are the real villains of this piece and never have they seemed more vicious; their hatred for and persecution of Grimes is terrifying. Similarly, Davis tears into the angry orchestral interludes with malice. His energy and tension in the telling of this story never flag, with tragic occurance piling atop tragic occurance. With one exception, the cast is superb: Janice Watson is the best, freshest-sounding Ellen on discs; Anthony Michaels-Moore is honesty personified as Balstrode, Auntie and her "nieces" are the most mellifluous to be heard. It is only Glenn Winsdale as Grimes who disappoints. Granted, his competition is fierce (Peter Pears, Jon Vickers, Philip Langridge) but even so, he has a great deal of trouble just with the notes (his scene in the hut before the boy's death is almost catastrophically sung) and lacks the searing insights of the other singers. In all, he's good enough not to hurt the performance, but given how superb the rest of the show is, it's a pity he's not better. But if you want to hear some of the glorious specifics of Britten's genius, this recording will not disappoint. --Robert Levine

Britten - Peter Grimes / Davis, Winslade, Watson, London Symphony Orchestra, Music, Britten, Glenn Winslade, Janice Watson, Colin Davis, London Symphony Orchestra, Anthony Michaels-Moore, Catherine Win-Rogers, British 20th/21st Century Opera, Classical, Classical Composers, Opera, Opera / Operetta / Oratorio
Britten - Peter Grimes / Davis, Winslade, Watson, London Symphony Orchestra
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Peter Grimes Given a Powerful, Meditative Makeover by Davis
Britten - Peter Grimes / Davis, Winslade, Watson, London Symphony Orchestra
Britten , Glenn Winslade , Janice Watson , Colin Davis , London Symphony Orchestra , Anthony Michaels-Moore , and Catherine Win-Rogers
Manufacturer: Lso Live UK
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B00026VQ7I
Release Date: 2004-08-10

Amazon.com

This is the third time Sir Colin Davis has recorded Britten's Peter Grimes (if you count the video version). On some very important levels, this is the best. The orchestral playing and the singing of the chorus are clearer---and captured more clearly by the engineers in this live performance---than anyone could have wished for. The people of the Borough are the real villains of this piece and never have they seemed more vicious; their hatred for and persecution of Grimes is terrifying. Similarly, Davis tears into the angry orchestral interludes with malice. His energy and tension in the telling of this story never flag, with tragic occurance piling atop tragic occurance. With one exception, the cast is superb: Janice Watson is the best, freshest-sounding Ellen on discs; Anthony Michaels-Moore is honesty personified as Balstrode, Auntie and her "nieces" are the most mellifluous to be heard. It is only Glenn Winsdale as Grimes who disappoints. Granted, his competition is fierce (Peter Pears, Jon Vickers, Philip Langridge) but even so, he has a great deal of trouble just with the notes (his scene in the hut before the boy's death is almost catastrophically sung) and lacks the searing insights of the other singers. In all, he's good enough not to hurt the performance, but given how superb the rest of the show is, it's a pity he's not better. But if you want to hear some of the glorious specifics of Britten's genius, this recording will not disappoint. --Robert Levine

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Peter Grimes Given a Powerful, Meditative Makeover by Davis.......2005-06-13

A remarkable work that began Benjamin Britten's opera-writing career, "Peter Grimes" is an enthralling, sometimes challenging work that requires passionate singing of the first order to make it resonate. Fortunately Colin Davis, in his second recording of this work, leads the London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus and a superb cast to bring this masterwork to vivid life in this three-disc set. Tenor Glenn Winslade proves to be a striking choice for the title role of the conflicted fisherman with a clear and strong voice, operatically dramatic and supple as he maneuvers around some sinuous phrasing. He is not a dominant presence like the role's originator Peter Pears, but Winslade is often a moving in conveying the troubled nature of his character. He passionately expresses his aspirations in Act I's "Now the Great Bear and Pleiades" and handles the much anticipated mad scene at the end with supreme dexterity. Soprano Janice Watson has a beautiful voice and creates a strong portrayal of Ellen, the widowed schoolteacher, particularly splendid in the Act I inquest scene with "Let her among you without fault", the Act II confrontation with Peter on "Now that the daylight fills the sky", and the poignant "Embroidery in childhood" in Act III. Baritone Anthony Michaels-Moore makes a burly and sympathetic Balstrode, as he peaks with Act I's "We live and let live".

The smaller roles are well interpreted including alto Jill Grove's self-righteous Auntie and the two nieces, voiced by sopranos Sally Matthews and Alison Buchanan, team up well with Grove and Watson in their second-act quartet, which leads very effectively into Davis' devastating account of the passacaglia. Baritone James Rutherford makes his moments count as a suitably pompous Swallow, and tenor Ryland Davies is a suitably feisty Reverend Adams. They team nicely on the Act II closer, "The whole affair gives Borough talk". However, I feel the standouts of this large ensemble cast are mezzo-soprano Catherine Wyn-Rogers as Mrs. Sedley and two of my favorite singers, baritone Nathan Gunn as Ned Keene, described as "apothecary and quack" and rising baritone Jonathan Lemalu, who leaves a vivid impression as Hobson the carrier. Davis provides superlative musical direction throughout evoking the stormy seas with power and articulation - all of the big choral scenes, the four sea interludes and passacaglia, and Act I's thundering conclusion. The chorus, over 200 voices strong, gives a powerful performance singing with the same commitment that the lead singers do with sharp diction and dramatic context. The "Now is gossip put on trial" march has real menace, and the hysterical Act III cries are appropriately terrifying. The themes of Britten's opera have to do with passion, guilt and self-doubt, universal traits that are felt more intensely by those profoundly in conflict with themselves. That's what gives this opera its power. While there are a number of recordings of this opera on the market, it will be hard to surpass this one in terms of the overall virtuosity of the performance.

Track Listings:

  1. Busoni Recalled - The 1941 New York Commemorative Concert / Mitropoulos, New York PO
  2. Caliente! Laurel Zucker & Christopher Caliendo
  3. Calliope Dances: A Renaissance Revel
  4. Chant: Tenebrae Factea Sunt; Alleluia
  5. Christmas Mood
  6. Christmas Treasures
  7. Classical Music Nursery Rhymes
  8. Dances for Two Pianos
  9. Dangerous Graces: Music by Cipriano de Rore and his pupils
  10. Dear Mother, I've Come Home to Die Quickstep & Other Favorites of the Band of the 19th Virginia Heavy Artillery

Track Listings

track listings

Track Listings

One Way, It's Every Way

Romantic Rarities: Volume Two

Shelter for an Evening [Import]

Medellin

Can't Hold Back

Sweetest Days

Sunset Boulevard (1995 Toronto Cast) [Cast Recording]

Rimsky-Korsakov: Scheherazade/Respighi: Fontane Di Roma

Rock 'n' Roll Outlaws

Schubert: String Quintet In C Major, D. 956

Star Bright

Puras Rancheras

Reinaldo El Papi Diaz

Broadway: America's Music 1935-2005

The Big Ones/Satin, Saxes and Bouncing Brass