With this re-release on the American Delos label of a 1995 Russian Disc recording, there are now three more or less complete performances of
Shostakovich's score for the 1931 Soviet silent film Alone. Of the three, this one with
Walter Mnatsakanov conducting the Byelorussian Radio and TV Symphony Orchestra is by far the weakest. Better in every way is the 1995 Capriccio recording with
Michail Jurowski leading the
Berliner Rundfunk-Sinfonie-Orchester. Where
Mnatsakanov moves dutifully from cue to cue,
Jurowski does his best to hold the mood for longer stretches. Where the Minsk musicians dispatch their parts with professionalism, the Berlin players deliver theirs with enthusiasm. And where Delos' minimal remastering hardly improves upon the harsh Russian originals, Capriccio's sound is sharp and vivid. Best of all, though, is the 2006 Naxos recording of the complete score as reconstructed and conducted by
Mark Fitz-Gerald, with the permission of the composer's widow. Conducted with wholehearted enthusiasm by
Fitz-Gerald, performed with surprising brilliance by the
Frankfurt Radio Symphony, and recorded with clarity and lucidity by Naxos, the disc has more of Alone than anyone had heard since the silent film left the silver screen, making it mandatory listening for all fans of the great Soviet composer. This disc, however, is likely to interest only insatiable
Shostakovich fanatics.~James Manheim