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Stravinsky
Stravinsky - Oedipus Rex
Dowd; Johnson; Herincx
Sadler's Wells Opera Chorus; Royal Philharmonic Orchestra / Davis
CFP 585 0112

Release date June 2003

The pick of CFP’s Sadler’s Wells reissues, this marvellous Oedipus Rex has been languishing in the vaults for far too long – indeed, I confess that I had no idea of its existence. Despite the early indifference of audiences and the ungrateful reaction of its dedicatee, Sergey Diaghilev - he called it ‘un cadeau macabre’ - Oedipus Rex has proved to be one of Stravinsky’s most enduring masterpieces.Sir Colin Davis’s 1984 recording with Thomas Moser and Jessye Norman is well known and remains highly recommendable. Davis’s headlong approach is if anything even more pronounced with the Sadler’s Wells forces; the last five minutes is a ride to the abyss. Ronald Dowd, in the title rôle, has a heftier voice than the piece ideally demands; however, he shows more concern for what Stravinsky actually wrote than many practitioners of this part seem to do. Patricia Johnson, the Jocasta, is a fire-eating Verdian mezzo; Oracula, oracula seems to come up from the soles of her feet. A sign of the strength of this company in the early 1960s is that Alberto Remedios was on hand to take the small but important part of the Shepherd. The Sadler’s Wells chorus combines accuracy with the heart-and-soul commitment usually only found in amateur choirs. Ralph Richardson reprises his well-known persona of a public school head-master. It’s good to have him; I must say that I prefer the narration in French, just because lines like “Il tombe! Il tombe de haut!” sound so cool! Very highly recommended.

Sandy Matheson