“Implacable tread, eerie atmosphere, attention to the minutest of details (such as quiet timpani figures), a wide dynamic range, and great significance applied to invention and incident that makes this performance [The Isle of the Dead], so compelling … The slow movement [Third Symphony] is beautifully done – nostalgic and yearning – the scherzo-like middle section finely poised, played with virtuosity, with Charlie Lovell-Jones’s violin solos later especially enticing; and if the Finale is just a notch too quick (even quicker on the opening material’s return), it is also emotive and (fugue) exciting and exacting, with the coda, led-off by a notable flute solo, chased by demons, unstoppable…”