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The Rake's Progress, opera in 3 acts
Composed by Igor Stravinsky
Performed by Orchestra of St. Luke's
with Jon Garrison, Arthur Woodley, Shirley Love, Jeffrey Johnson, Wendy White, John Cheek, Melvin Lowery, Jayne West
Conducted by Robert Craft
Igor Stravinsky (The Composer, Vol. VI): The Rake's Progress,Arthur Woodley,Jeffrey Johnson,John Cheek,Igor Stravinsky,Robert Craft,Shirley Love,Wendy White,Orchestra of St. Luke's,Jayne West,Jon Garrison,Melvin Lowery,Music Masters Jazz,American 20th/21st Century Opera,Classical,Classical Music,Opera,Orchestral & Symphonic
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Stravinsky: Rite Of Spring, Fireworks, Petrouchka / Ozawa, Tilson Thomas, Chicago Symphony
Michael Tilson Thomas , and Seiji Ozawa Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000I9MQ Release Date: 1999-03-09 |
Tracks:
- Petrouchka: Scene I - The Shrovetide Fair - Vivace - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- The Magic Trick - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Russian Dance - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Scene II - Petrouchka's Cell - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Scene III - The Moor's Cell - L'istesso tempo - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Dance Of The Ballerina - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Waltz - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Scene IV - The Fair - Toward Evening - Tempo Giusto - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Wet Nurses' Dance - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Peasant With Bear - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Gypsies And A Rake Vendor - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Dance Of The Coachmen - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Masqueraders - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- The Scuffle -Moor And Petrouchka- - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Death Of Petrouchka - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- Appearance Of Petrouchka's Ghost - Boston Symphony Orchestra
- The Rite Of Spring: The Rite Of Spring -- Part I - The Adoration Of The Earth - Introduction - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Harbingers of Spring - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Mock Abduction - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Spring Khorovod - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Games Of The Rival Tribes - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Procession Of The Wise Elder - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Adoration Of the Earth ; Dance Of The Earth - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Part II - The Sacrifice - Introduction - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Mystic Circles Of The Young Girls - Seiji Ozawa
- Glorification Of The Chosen Victim - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Summoning Of The Ancestors - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Ritual Of The Ancestors - Seiji Ozawa
- The Rite Of Spring: Sacrificial Dance - Seiji Ozawa
- Fireworks: Fireworks, Op. 4 -Fantasy For Orchestra - Seiji Ozawa
Amazon.com
The Boston Symphony was at the peak of its powers when it engaged the 34-year-old Seiji Ozawa for this 1969 recording of Petrushka, in which the orchestra's then 24-year-old assistant conductor, Michael Tilson Thomas, played the extensive solo piano part. Ozawa, in those years, was capable of striking sparks with any orchestra he faced, and there is a palpable sense of excitement to the Petrushka he uncorks here. The accounts of The Rite of Spring and Fireworks, recorded in 1968 with the Chicago Symphony, are equally dynamic and colorful. BMG's long-awaited 24/96 remastering unleashes the breathtakingly open sound of the original tapes for the first time on CD, and may require a volume cut to preserve peace with the neighbors. --Ted LibbeyCustomer Reviews:
An Odd Release But A Bargain Price for Excellent Performances.......2006-01-14
Tilson Thomas elects the 1947 version of Petrushka and offers a clear-headed, rhythmically sound, exciting performance. The warm Boston sound is intact and enhances his overall mood of the work. Ozawa and the Chicago forces give an all stops out performance of 'Le Sacre du printemps', a performance that is about as visceral and pagan as any on record. And the bonus of the brief but effective 'Feu D'artifice' fantasy is given a robust reading.
There are many recordings of 'Le Sacre du printemps' in the recorded repertoire: obviously every conductor wants to imprint his mark on this masterpiece. The sonics are all-important when the work is recorded and in the case of this recording the sonics are excellent. But there may soon be a startling surprise for lovers of this mighty, historically important music. This week Esa-Pekka Salonen gave a resplendent, detailed, emotionally charged performance that was recorded live by DGG in the Disney Hall. And if the technicians are able to cope with the amazingly live clarity of the acoustics of this grand architectural triumph, the recording may be the gold standard immediately upon release. Salonen has previously and successfully recorded the work with the Philharmonia Orchestra in 1990. The growth in stature in the intervening years has never been more obvious that this current state of Salonen's Stravinsky. Watch for it! Grady Harp, January 06
Great reading of these 2 works.......2005-12-07
Best or not, you'll really love this Rite of Spring.......2004-06-29
Officially, this is a major highlight throughout Ozawa's conducting legacy, still a very young man with seemly imperishable vigor and force very equilavent to his teacher Lenny. The Boston Symphony is an excellent orchestra to work with (the woodwinds and brass especially); otherwize the Chicago Symphony could have been the only other choice.
In my perspective, I had to admit that, just by focusing on the level of being barbaric and noxious, it slightly lacks that to Lenny, but on the other hand, it's brilliant controlled nail-biting high tempo can cover that.
Definitely worth buying!!! GO FOR IT!!!!!
Totally convincing.......2004-06-16
The best Rite of Spring.......2004-03-28
Ozawa's Petrouchka (with Michael Tilson Thomas at the piano) is equally amazing. The beauty of phrasing and emotion Ozawa instills into the players of the Boston Symphony orchestra is chilling. Indeed, when this recording was made, Ozawa had just taken the reigns or the orchestra (however, over the years, his energy and intensity has lessened) and they play for their new music director with total conviction.
Fireworks, a short symphonic sketch by the young Stravinsky, shows the influences of his teachers, especially Paul Dukas in the orchestration. Although not a seminal work, the opus 4 is delightful.
The recording quality is of equal quality. Highly recommended.
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Rimsky-Korsakov: Scheherazade; Stravinsky: Song of the Nightingale [Hybrid SACD]
Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0006PV5VC Release Date: 2005-01-25 |
Tracks:
- The Sea And Sinbad's Ship
- The Story Of The Kalender Prince
- The Young Prince And The Young Princess
- Festival Of Bagdad/The Sea/The Ship Goes To Pieces On A Rock Surmounted By A Bronze Warrior (Shipwreck)/Conclusion
- Presto
- Chinese March
- Song Of The Nightingale
- The Mechanical Nightingale
- The Emperor's Displeasure At The Departure Of The real Nightingale
- The Emperor's Sickroom
- The Real Nightingale Returns To Thwart Death
- Funeral March And Finale
Amazon.com
This is a classic recording of these two works, led with grand authority by Fritz Reiner. The Chicago's brass and wind section play gloriously throughout, and the final movement of Scheherazade (we learn from the original producer [1960] in an accompanying essay) was recorded in one take--an almost unheard-of feat. This fast movement is taken at breakneck speed, with no loss of clarity or power, with the strings in the hands of magicians. Stravinsky's Nightingale has never sounded so exotic, so bristling over with color, since this 1956(!) recording under Reiner, and the wonderful surprise with this new release of old material is the revamped sound: the original "Living Stereo" was a fantastic breakthrough in recording, and this new SACD format has returned the spatial relationships to something so "real" that it comes as close as I've ever heard to a true concert hall experience. Simply glorious. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
Scheherazade.......2007-07-08
Definitive SACD of Scheherazade - Outstanding!!!!.......2007-02-18
best recording I could find.......2007-01-19
Russian rousers!.......2007-01-06
Amazing Sound.......2006-09-19
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25 Thunderous Classics
Manufacturer: Vox (Classical) ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004Y6SQ Release Date: 2000-09-05 |
Tracks:
- Also Sprach Zarathustra (Sunrise) - R. Strauss
- Mars (The Planets) - Holst
- Overture 1812 - Tchaikovsky
- Entry Of The Gladiadtors - Fucik
- Sabre Dance - Khachaturian
- Procession Of The Sardar - Ippolitov Ivanov
- Night On Bald Mountain - Mussorgsky
- Anvil Chor (II Trovatore) - Verdi
- The Thunderer March - Sousa
- Thunder & Lightening Polka - J. Strauss
- Prelude To Act III : Lohengrin - Wagner
- The Ride Of The Valkryies - Wagner
- Montagues & Capulets (Romeo & Juliet Ballet Suite) - Prokofiev
- The Storm: Symphony No. 6 In F Major, 'Pastorale' - Beethoven
- Rondeau - Edward Carroll
- Overture: Fireworks Music - Handel
- March To The Scaffold: Symphonie Fantastique - Berlioz
- LesToreadors - Bizet
- William Tell Overture: Finale - Rossini
- Revolutionary Study - Abbey Simon
- Fanfare For The Common Man - Copland
- Sym No. 1 'Titan' IV Sturmisch Bewegt (Excerpt) - Mahler
- Augurs Of Spring From Rite Of Spring - Stravinsky
- Russian Dance From Petrouchka - Stravinsky
- The Great Gate At Kiev From Pictures At An Exhibition - Mussorgsky
Customer Reviews:
Good selection.......2005-10-02
thunderous applause.......2005-08-31
This is a who's-who of great pieces of music you have heard all of your life, and never knew the names and stories! I listened to it over and over in the car and had my own concert! A friend borrowed it to add music to his Home Movies and it was perfect!
Good Music at a Great Price.......2004-03-06
You will like this!.......2004-02-19
This CD is at the top of them all. They may be short, but not that short. Wondrous music.
I can almost guarantee that you will like this music.
Well worth the price!
Good for the novice.......2002-06-08
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Walt Disney's Fantasia: Remastered Original Soundtrack Edition
Manufacturer: Disney ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001M4K Release Date: 2001-07-31 |
Tracks:
- Toccata And Fugue In D Minor - (by Bach)
- The Nutcracker Suite Op.71A: Dance Of The Sugar Plum Fairy
- The Nutcracker Suite Op.71A: Chinese Dance
- The Nutcracker Suite Op.71A: Dance Of The Reed Flutes
- The Nutcracker Suite Op.71A: Arabian Dance
- The Nutcracker Suite Op.71A: Russian Dance
- The Nutcracker Suite Op.71A: Waltz Of The Flowers
- The Sorcerer's Apprentice
- Rite Of Spring
Tracks:
- Symphony No.6 ('Pastoral') Op.68: I. Allegro Ma Non Troppo
- Symphony No.6 ('Pastoral') Op.68: II. Andante Molto Mosso
- Symphony No.6 ('Pastoral') Op.68: III. Allegro/IV. Allegro/V. Allegretto
- Dance Of The Hours (From The Opera 'La Gioconda')
- A Night On Bald Mountain
- Ave Maria Op.52 No.6
Amazon.com essential recording
It's hard to believe now that Walt Disney's bold 1940 impressionistic experiment in wedding then-state-of-the-art animation with classical music was a rather resounding failure upon its release. The cliché proves the rule: Fantasia was decades ahead of its time (Disney even launched a "psychedelic"-themed rerelease campaign in the late '60s). It's even harder to fathom that then-Disney management spent over a million dollars in the early '80s replacing the muscular Leopold Stokowski score with a digitally recorded clone, then another undisclosed fortune to digitize Leo and put him back alongside Mickey at the conductor's podium in the '90s! This much-traveled Stokowski score will gain no points for subtlety (a symphonic Shaq attack is more like it), but it was Walt's first--and only!--choice and has never sounded better. --Jerry McCulleyCustomer Reviews:
Mickey mouse on cover, elevator music for 70 year olds.......2007-06-04
Optical soundtrack recording limitations.......2007-03-05
to the theaters of 1940 as optical tracks on the side
of the film being shown. Such recordings cannot be
compared to the magnetic tape recordings made after WWII
(using captured or "liberated" German machines at first),
to say nothing of the current digital technology.
An analog optical soundtrack on motion picture film was
bad enough, but the film itself was nitrate, notorious
for disintegrating over a relatively short period of time,
as well as for its flammability. The prints in
circulation wore out until "the sound had gotten so bad,
theaters were refusing to book the film" according to a
Disney spokesman quoted in the New York Times of March
11, 1982.
Stokowski knew what a difference stereo recording made,
compared to mono, because almost a decade earlier, he and
the Philadelphia Orchestra participated (without the
players' knowledge) in a series of experimental high
fidelity and stereo disc recordings made by Bell
Telephone Labs. At the time, Bell Labs and Western
Electric tried to interest several manufacturers of
phonographs in the new technology, but the Great
Depression was underway, and the idea of marketing
phonographs with two stylii and two loudspeakers was
deemed unfeasible. (The Bell system had 33-1/3 rpm
discs with two parallel grooves, requiring two stylii
for playback.)
The Fantasound process, as I understand it, required a
theater to install a single loudspeaker behind the screen
and three loudspeakers along each of the two side walls,
resembling somewhat today's "surround sound." But the
idea was not to produce true stereo sound, but rather
the "ping-pong" stereo concept, with the sounds from the
loudspeakers following the cartoon characters as they
moved back and forth across the screen.
I sometimes wonder if the original recordings were made
with discs, not on soundtrack film -- in which case they
might still exist somewhere in the Disney archives. The
many thousands of original cartoon animation cels used to
create the film images were not treated as archival
material, such as the original Technicolor negatives
of "Gone With The Wind" which were stored in underground
Kansas caves, where the temperature remained steady for
decade after decade. Instead, the cels were either
destroyed or individually distributed to interested
parties. All told, it's remarkable that the film and
soundtrack have survived almost seventy years in the
shape they're in.
Stokowski was not thrilled with the end product
of "Fantasia" because, reportedly, Disney engineers
played with his recording, snipping off beats to match
the animation and enhancing crescendos. Stravinsky --
the only composer represented who was still living at
the time -- also was appalled at Stokowski's rearrangement
of his work (which Stravinsky sold to Disney for $5,000
because he needed the money at the time), to say nothing
of the dinosaurs prancing about to his ballet. The 1940
audiences were either outraged (the purists), puzzled or
bored (the general public), or snickering that Disney
had "lost it" (the film industry). But some of us loved it.
Yet "Fantasia," like "The Rite of Spring," proved far
more durable than its critics could imagine. At the
time, I was familiar with the music of Beethoven's Sixth
Symphony, Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker", Bach's "Ave Maria,"
and even Ponchielli's "Dance of the Hours," but "The Rite
of Spring," and "The Sorceror's Apprentice," and "Night on
Bald Mountain" as well as Bach's "Toccata and Fugue" were
revelations for me. I didn't know then that Stokowski
tinkered with those scores, but now I have a large number
of various performances of all of them in my recording
collection. My "Fantasia" recordings were issued on LPs
in the 1970s and are treasured as historic artifacts.
In effect, that is what this two-CD album is. It's a
mistake to listen to it as performances comparable to
modern digital recordings. Enjoy them for what they are
- historical efforts to popularize classical music.
Richard Q. Hofacker, Jr., Basking Ridge, NJ
Review of soundtrack Fantasia issues.......2007-02-16
Fantasia.......2007-01-10
low-fi fantasia.......2007-01-10
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Stravinsky: Three Greek Ballets (Apollo, Agon, Orpheus)
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0008JEKCW Release Date: 2005-05-17 |
Tracks:
- Prologue: The Birth Of Apollo - London Symphony Orchestra
- Apollo's Variation - London Symphony Orchestra
- Pas D'Action: Apollo And the Muses - London Symphony Orchestra
- Variation Of Calliope - London Symphony Orchestra
- Variation Of Polymnia - London Symphony Orchestra
- Variation Of Terpsichore - London Symphony Orchestra
- Variation Of Apollo - London Symphony Orchestra
- Pas De Deux: Apollo And Terpsichore - London Symphony Orchestra
- Coda: Apollo And the Muses - London Symphony Orchestra
- Apotheosis: Apollo And the Muses - London Symphony Orchestra
- Pas De Quarte - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Double Pas De Quarte - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Triple Pas De Quarte - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Prelude - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- First Pas De Trois: Saraband-Step - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Gaillarde - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Coda - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Interlude - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Second Pas De Trois: Bransle Simple - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Bransle Gay - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Bransle Double (Bransle De Poitou) - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Interlude - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Pas De Deux/Piu Mosso/L'Istesso Tempo/Refrain - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Coda/Doppio Lento/Quasi Stretto/Coda - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Four Duos - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Four Trios - Orchestra Of St. Luke's
- Lento Sostenuto - London Symphony Orchestra
- Air De Danse - London Symphony Orchestra
- Dance Of the Angel Of Death - London Symphony Orchestra
- Interlude - London Symphony Orchestra
- Dance Of The Furies - London Symphony Orchestra
- Air De Danse - London Symphony Orchestra
- Interlude - London Symphony Orchestra
- Air De Danse - London Symphony Orchestra
- Pas D'Action - London Symphony Orchestra
- Pas De Deux - London Symphony Orchestra
- Interlude - London Symphony Orchestra
- Pas D'Action - London Symphony Orchestra
- Apotheosis - London Symphony Orchestra
Customer Reviews:
Robert Craft & Stravinsky: 3 Ballets on Themes of Greek Mythology.......2006-12-20
On this disc we get three of the later ballets that the composer did, based on Greek themes in mythology.
The earliest of these works is the ballet, Apollo. Or Apollon musagete. (1928) Craft seems to have had a complex relationship to the master, part family, part soul-mated colleague, and maybe part worshipper of the muses. He leads a deft and balanced reading of Apollo with the LSO. Do not let yourself be misled by the mainly diatonic, or major-key based, nature of this neo-classically fresh music. It is euphonius, and transcends its analytical means.
After visiting for a day with the composer, the Russian impresario Diaghilev wrote to a friend, "...it is, of course, an amazing work, extraordinarily calm and with greater clarity than anything he has done: filigree counterpoint around transparent, clear-cut themes, all in a major key, music not of this world, but from somewhere above ..."
Diaghilev got it, then, and so do Robert Craft and the players.
Second comes the latest of these 3 ballets, Agon. (1957) By this time the master was going serial, or twelve-tone, in his very own special way. He finished Agon close to his 75th birthday, and there is little or nothing quite like it in most of the published twelve-tone literature. Somehow, Stravinsky finds the intense economies that we associate with Webern while staying true to himself. There is no published scenario to Agon, as if the music were its own reason for being a ballet. The Orchestra of St. Luke's is smaller than the LSO, but no less musically gifted. Yet again, Robert Craft's leadership is astute, and he seems to have an ear no less incisive than Pierre Boulez when it comes to pitch, texture, and rhythm. What he offers that Pierre Boulez sometimes does not, at least as recorded, is a certain warmth and involvement, a certain sensory richness and physicality.
The last ballet on this disc is the one written in between Apollo and Agon: Orpheus (1946). The choice of subject originated with Georges Balanchine who was much taken with the Orpheus myth, but ballet stage designer Isamu Noguchi also deserves credit for bringing the work to life as dance, as scene, and as total art work. Stravinsky's genius was supported and nourished by the other two, and so we get a sort of return of the younger composer, all that much wiser for being able to embrace sensuality again after having survived two world wars and ending up settled amid the posturing glitz of Hollywood and southern California. Craft leads the LSO in another fine reading.
Apollo and Orpheus were caught in Abbey Road, U.K., and Agon in an auditorium at SUNY, Purchase. The sound matches the clarity, brilliance, and sensual heft of these three performances. Never flashy. No kitsch. But generous and scintillating, nonetheless.
Check out the whole Robert Craft series of recorded Stravinsky. This disc is just one among a string of finely matched pearls, waiting for the black velvet of your listening room's expectant quiet.
A Return to the Greeks a la Stravinsky.......2006-06-24
'Apollon musagete, ballet in 2 scenes for string orchestra' (1927) is probably the finest of his neoclassical period works for orchestra alone. It can be steely cool in other's hands, but here Craft draws an achingly beautiful sound from the London Symphony. It is meditative, serenely poignant and ethereal.
'Agon, ballet for twelve dancers & orchestra' (1957) is one of Stravinsky's twelve tone works that manages to go beyond the usual constrictions of that form to become an unusually melodic work. Craft and the Orchestra of St. Lukes offer a performance that gives all of the sixteen variations individual importance.
'Orpheus, ballet in 3 scenes for orchestra' (1947) concludes the recital with the admixture of both Stravinsky's neoclassicism with his early penchant for seething romantic melody lines. This is the work of the three that will find widest audience appeal for those not yet captivated with the Stravinsky 'cerebral works' and it makes a fine way to complete this exploration into Greek themes so cleverly programmed by the reconstructors of this first class CD. Highly Recommended. Grady Harp, June 06
Absolute Caftsmanship.......2005-07-17
In this recording Craft is actually the best interpreterof Starvinsky's ballet music. Before I listened to this extraordinary Naxos CD, I thought tha Ansermet went farther than anybody else did --even more than Stravinskij himself. Craft made me change my mind: when you listen to his intepretation of this music, you have the feeling that he is talking to his longstanding friend Igor while conducting his music.
This recording will mark a milestone in revealing the beauty of Stravibnskij's music. Buy it, you won't regret it!
Very good rendition.......2005-07-01
The performance is beautiful. I could find nothing wrong with the interpretation, and I can assure you I am quite picky.
Anyway, I highly recommend this CD.
Fine Performances of Three Fine Stravinsky Ballets.......2005-06-10
In 'Apollo' (or 'Apollon musagète' as it is called in French) all violence and abrasiveness (as one might expect from the composer of 'The Rite of Spring') are eschewed. Rather the work coolly and lyrically limns the birth and life of Apollo in music that is like some 18th-century court ballet filtered through 19th-century French ballet composers like Adam and Delibes. Delicious. And deliciously performed here by the London Symphony under Craft.
'Orpheus' was commissioned by Lincoln Kirstein for George Balanchine who had suggested the subject. It was originally intended to be coupled with 'Apollo' in performance but in fact that did not happen at its première. Although narrative, it is intensely hieratic and uses neobaroque gestures including canon, other kinds of counterpoint, restless bass lines, ostinati and the like. It is more austere than 'Apollo' but lyrical nonetheless. It, too, is given a lovely, flexible, suave performance by the LSO.
'Agon' (Greek for 'contest') is essentially a dance contest before the gods. Not really quite atonal, but making use of a 12-tone row, it combines Renaissance dances (including a galliard in C major with a canon featuring harp and mandolin), coupled with what Stephen Walsh in Grove's calls 'high-speed stream-of-consciousness chromaticism.' Its première was conducted by Robert Craft, and here, conducting the Orchestra of St. Luke's, he leads a fast-moving performance that occasionally gets a little out of breath, but is energetic and energizing for all that.
There have been other recordings of these works, including those conducted by Stravinsky himself, but these are satisfying and in modern sound.
Recommended.
TT=77:45
Scott Morrison
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Stravinsky By Stravinsky [Germany]
Igor Stravinsky Manufacturer: Sony / Bmg Import ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000PTYUQG Release Date: 2007-07-23 |
Album Details
2007 Issue of 22 CDs Filled with the Works of the Great Composer Drawn from the Vaults of Columbia Records.Customer Reviews:
The prime Stravinsky collection.......2007-08-01
This boxed set of 22 CDs contains more Stravinsky music than any other contemporary box, and the price is a complete steal (less than $2.5 for each CD, and even cheaper if you buy it used).
Here are some examples of what you get for your money:
- The early ballets: Firebird, Petroushka, Rite of Spring, Les Noces, Pulcinella, and the later, neo-classical ones (e.g., Agon, Apollon).
- The symphonies (in E and in C and in Three Movements).
- Oedipus Rex and The Rake's Progress.
- Chamber music, such as Ragtime, Septet and Octet.
- Jazz suites, and the piano concerto.
- Songs and choral works, such as the Mass, the Cantata and the Symphony of Psalms.
- Later works, such as Threni.
- And much more... (including the Robert Craft recordings that Stravinsky supervised).
Sound quality is vintage analogue from the sixties, generally very fine and remastered as well. In addition, the box is of the slim cardboard kind, with each CD in a cardboard sleeve. Booklet is included, but (unfortunately) no texts and translations of libretti.
In short, this is an essential set. Warmly recommended even if you already have individual Stravinsky by Stravinsky recordings - I suggest you use them as presents to friends and relatives. Grab and save this one!
An amazing set and bargain..........2007-08-01
BALLETS AND BALLET SUITES
SYMPHONIES, REHEARSALS AND TALKS
CONCERTOS
MINIATURE MASTERPIECES
CHAMBER MUSIC AND HISTORICAL RECORDINGS
OPERAS
35 SONGS
ORATORIO - MELODRAMA
SACRED WORKS
ROBERT CRAFT CONDUCTS UNDER THE SUPERVISI0N OF IGOR STRAVINSKY
The sound quality is admirable, the performances respectable (though the Columbia Symphony can be inconsistant), and with Stravinsky at the helm, these recordings are more than just a definitive historical document. It allows us to rediscover and fully appreciate the entire span of Stravinsky's musical life and genius.
Thank you Sony........2007-08-01
This repackaging of the cumbersome multibox set issued previously has been very well done. The performances are unique in that Stravinsky conducts all his major works (Robert Craft conducts 1 CD of smaller works extremely well). The sound is incredibly good throughout considering the hatchet jobs Columbia Records (now Sony) used to bestow on some of their artists in the 1960s. However, that some in that company had the presence of mind to capture these performances for posterity must be thankfully acknowledged.
5 stars for the real thing.
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Stravinsky: The Rite of Spring; The Firebird Suite (1919)
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0001ENYLM Release Date: 2004-02-24 |
Tracks:
- Introduction. Lento - London Symphony Orchestra
- The Spring Divinations - Dances Of The Young Girls - London Symphony Orchestra
- Mock Abduction - London Symphony Orchestra
- Spring Round Dances - London Symphony Orchestra
- Games Of The Rival Tribes - London Symphony Orchestra
- Procession Of The Wise Elder - London Symphony Orchestra
- Dance Of The Earth - London Symphony Orchestra
- Introduction. Largo - London Symphony Orchestra
- Mystical Circles Of The Young Girls - London Symphony Orchestra
- Glorification Of The Chosen Victim - London Symphony Orchestra
- Summoning Of The Ancestors - London Symphony Orchestra
- Ritual Of The Ancestors - London Symphony Orchestra
- Sacrificial Dance (The Chosen Victim) - London Symphony Orchestra
- Introduction - Leonard Bernstein
- The Firebird And Its Dance - Leonard Bernstein
- Variation Of The Firebird - Leonard Bernstein
- The Princesses' Round - Leonard Bernstein
- Infernal Dance Of King Kashchei - Leonard Bernstein
- Lullaby - Leonard Bernstein
- Finale - Leonard Bernstein
- I. Adoration Of Veles And Ala - Leonard Bernstein
- II. The Enemy God And The Dance Of The Black Spirits - Leonard Bernstein
- III. Night - Leonard Bernstein
- IV. The Glorious Departure Of Lolli And The Procession Of The Sun - Leonard Bernstein
Amazon.com
Considering that Stravinsky's Rite of Spring has been around for nearly a century, it's surprising that even today, conductors literally get lost while attempting to beat through it--and that goes for some of the biggest names. Difficult as the piece is, conductors have no excuse for major lapses, now that this recording is available for study. Bernstein not only keeps complete control of the complex rhythms and constantly-switching meters throughout the work but he also interprets it with fire and sweep and emotional versatility. The Firebird is equally breathtaking. It's priceless, too, for the fabulous horn solo played by the New York Philharmonic's legendary James Chambers. --Gwendolyn FreedCustomer Reviews:
Three Le Sacres from Bernstein.......2005-10-01
The first recording occasioned a "wow" from Stravinsky in one of his memoirs (no doubt in part being ironic). The second recordingt is just as splashy and extroverted, although I prefer the 1958 version as the more flexible and less blatant. Both are wonderful and show off Bernstein's exuberance at its best.
This is the second reading from 1972, now in stereo, the 1958 being out of print. The Israel Phil. version made for DG in the Eighties--I don't have the exact date since I threw away the CD--is a parody of the young Bernstein by the old one, and the orchestra is far from being able to master the score.
WOW........2005-09-13
I only complain of the sound quality and the firebird. It is NOT A GOOD FIREBIRD.
BUY IT
Commonplace "Rite"... and a TERRIFIC "Firebird".......2005-07-26
The 60s recording (which sadly may be only available in the "Royal Edition" series) remains on of my favorite performance of the "Rite" (along with the "Fast and the Furious" Ozawa's with the CSO on RCA), because it has more brashness in the music, more savagery, more tension. His interpretation is far more extraordinary compared to this recording in this album. The extra "ornaments" Lenny added to further exxagerate the wildness and primitiveness in the 60s recording has competely disappeared in this performance, making a more commonplace, even tamed, performance. Same goes with the 80s performance on DG with the Isreal Phil.
Lenny's performance "Firebird" Suite, on the other hand... is an electrifying 5 Star performance... THE main attraction of the album, not the 70s "Rite". This recording was done in the 60s with the NYPO, so there is more youthness and vigor in the performance. While the sound quality is not at its best, the performace is as hot as it can get. You will especially love the climax of the "Infernal Dance" and the "Finale". The only other recording I equally love is Claudio Abbado's performance with the LSO on DG, powerful in its own way... and more crystal-clear).
Proikofiev's "Scythian Suite" (the Bonus tracks) is another plus in this album. The "Dance of the Dark Spirits" is especially thrilling, as Lenny actually takes the tempo a bit faster compared to most other performances, including Abbado on DG and Jarvi on Chandos.
P.S. - Do you notice the "Jaws" theme hidden under the movment?
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Stravinsky Conducts Stravinsky: Petrouchka/ Le Sacre du Printemps
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000026GJ Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Petrushka - Tableau I: The Shrove -Tide Fair: Beginning
- Petrushka - Tableau I: The Shrove-Tide Fair: The Crowds
- Petrushka - Tableau I: The Shrove-Tide Fair: The Charlatan's Booth
- Petrushka - Tableau I: The Shrove-Tide Fair: Russian Dance
- Petrushka: Tableau II: Petrushka's Room
- Petrushka - Tableau III: The Moor's Room: Beginning
- Petrushka - Tableau III: The Moor's Room: Dance Of The Ballerina
- Petrushka - Tableau III: The Moor's Room: Waltz (Ballerina and Moor)
- Petrushka - Tableau IV: The Shrove - Tide Fair (Near Evening): Beginning
- Petrushka - Tableau IV: The Shrove - Tide Fair (Near Evening): Dance Of The Nursemaids
- Petrushka - Tableau IV: The Shrove-Tide Fair (Near Evening): Dance Of The Peasant And The Bear
- Petrushka - Tableau IV: The Shrove-Tide Fair (Near Evening): Petrushka - Dance Of The Gypsy Girls
- Petrushka - Tableau IV: The Shrove -Tide Fair (Near Evening): Dance Of The Coachmen and Grooms
- Petrushka - Tableau IV: The Shrove - Tide Fair (Near Evening): The Masqueraders
- Petrushka - Tableau IV: The Shrove-Tide Fair (Near Evening): Conclusion (Petrushka's Death)
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part I: The Adoration Of The Earth: Introduction
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part I. The Adoration Of the Earth: Dances of the Young Girls
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part I: The Adoration Of The Earth: Mock Abduction
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part I: The Adoration Of The Earth: Spring Round Dance
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part I: The Adoration Of The Earth: Games of the Rival Tribes
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part I: The Adoration Of The Earth: Procession Of The Wise Elder
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring: Adoration Of The Earth (The Wise Elder)
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part I: The Adoration Of The Earth: Dance Of The Earth
- Le Sacre Du Printemps -The Rite Of Spring - Part II: The Sacrifice: Introduction
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part II: The Sacrifice: Mystical Circles Of The Young Girls
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring _ Part II: The Sacrifice: Glorification Of The Chosen Victim
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part II: The Sacrifice: Summoning Of The Ancients
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part II: The Sacrifice: Ritual Of The Ancients
- Le Sacre Du Printemps - The Rite Of Spring - Part II: The Sacrifice: Sacrificial Dance
Amazon.com
Whatever the limitations of Stravinsky's baton technique, no one else on disc conjures the same bustling excitement at the outset of Petrouchka. Overlapping, polyrhythmic textures in Petrouchka and in Le Sacre du Printemps come off with Mozartian lucidity, Mendelssonian lightness, and, well, Stravinsky-esque rhythmic exactitude (notwithstanding a few hesitant entrances). The clarity partly stems from the composer's use of his leaner revised scores, helped by close-up, analytical mike work by CBS. There are, of course, slicker, more sonically opulent versions of these 20th century landmarks. And then there are Stravinsky's. --Jed DistlerCustomer Reviews:
the best........2007-07-23
Najinsky who?!.......2007-03-09
Hermann and Stravinsky.......2006-10-10
With nothing to add to the other reviews, I just want to note that when I got to "Harbingers of Spring (Dances of the Young Girls and Boys)," I was struck by the similarity between parts of it and Bernard Hermann's soundtrack for Psycho. One more example of how mid-century US film and and television scoring was influenced by late-19th and early 20th century composers (listen to Debussy's Images in this context).
Powerful rendition.......2004-10-08
(Note for Robert Lewis: very few people interested in classical music would be ignorant enough to attempt to nap to the Rite of Spring, one of the most violent works ever written.)
From the Master.......2004-03-29
He shared conducting duties with his long-time associate, Robert Craft.
Because of his obvious age and frailty, it was expected he would sort of ceremoniously conduct one or perhaps two of his shorter works, leaving the bulk of the concert to Craft. Imagine my, and the audience's astonishment when we saw in the program that Maestro Stravinsky would be the conductor for several works, culminating in the concluding work on the program, "Le Sacre du printemps".
When the time came for "Le Sacre", the maestro, assisted and with some difficulty, made his way to the podium, at which he, not surprisingly, sat. He gazed at the score for a long moment. Slowly, his gaze rose from the score to his orchestra, which he observed for a few seconds, which seemed like hours. The audience grew silent with expectation. Slowly, deliberately, he raised his baton. And it began. What followed for the next 30 plus minutes was one of the most electrifying, galvanizing, and thrilling performances of anything I have ever seen or heard in my life, before or since.
After the concert I made it a point to chat with several friends of mine who were in the orchetra. I suggested that the orchestra must have been well prepared by Robert Craft so that Maestro Stravinsky would be better able to conserve his energy. To a man (and woman) they assured me that absolutely the opposite was the case. The portions of the concert, including "Le Sacre" that Stravinsky was to conduct were rehearsed, in total, by Stravinsky himself. In addition, Stravinsky attended the rehearsals for the balance of the program and had no problem contributing whatever he felt was necessary to the procedings. They also found him to be extremely alert and utterly charming.
How can I recommend anyone else's performance of "Le Sacre du printemps"? There is only one, and this is it.
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Hovhaness: Mysterious Mountain
Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000003FMX Release Date: 1995-03-14 |
Tracks:
- Mysterious Mountain, Op. 132 (Symphony No. 2): Andante
- Mysterious Mountain, Op. 132 (Symphony No. 2): Double Fugue: Moderator maestoso
- Mysterious Mountain, Op. 132 (Symphony No. 2): Double Fugue: Allegro vivo
- Mysterious Mountain, Op. 132 (Symphony No. 2): Double Fugue: Andante espressivo
- The Fairy's Kiss: Divertimento: Sinfonia
- The Fairy's Kiss: Divertimento: Danses suisses
- The Fairy's Kiss: Divertimento: Scherzo
- The Fairy's Kiss: Divertimento: Pas de deux
- Lieutenant Kije - Symphonic Suite, Op. 60: The Birth Of Kije
- Lieutenant Kije - Symphonic Suite, Op. 60: Romance
- Lieutenant Kije - Symphonic Suite, Op. 60: Kije's Wedding
- Lieutenant Kije - Symphonic Suite, Op. 60: Troika
- Lieutenant Kije - Symphonic Suite, Op. 60: The Burial Of Kije
Amazon.com
Most people became acquainted with Hovhaness's greatest symphony, Mysterious Mountain (Symphony 2), through this recording when it appeared on vinyl during the Stone Age. It plays like an extended prayer and is oddly structured. It was an immediate hit when it appeared in 1955. Stravinsky's The Fairy's Kiss is a 1928 ballet commission that, quite intentionally, recalls Tchaikovsky and was written to commemorate the 30th anniversary of his death. Last here is a bang-up reading of Serge Prokofiev's classic Lieutenant Kije Suite. If you want to turn a young person onto classical music, play this disc. Worked with me. --Paul CookCustomer Reviews:
Sublime.......2007-07-01
Try to find a better recording than this. Go ahead, I'll wait........2007-04-24
Fire and Ice: Fritz Reiner's Legacy Lives On.......2006-05-09
This CD remastering of the old 1955 recording is a terrific example. This is probably the most eloquent recorded performance of Armenian American Alan Hovhaness' Symphony No.2 (better known as 'Mysterious Mountain'). Hovhaness created some lushly atmospheric works that have somehow slipped into the realm of 'old style' and therefore are not performed frequently. But this performance of Symphony No. 2 should bring back some to the fold. The recorded sound of this extended poem is lush and full-bodied and Reiner moves the blocks of strings movements like few others can.
Keeping in line with his penchant for embracing new and old works this CD includes an abbreviated but well played 'Divertimento', Stravinsky's own symphonic suite from his Tchaikovskyesque ballet 'The Fairy's Kiss'. This is not one of Stravinsky's more memorable scores and is far better represented in the violin/piano transcription, but Reiner makes it work well in the few moments he includes here.
Prokofiev's suite from 'Lieutenant Kije' fares very well in Reiner's bristling and tongue in cheek reading. This is a romp of a performance and one that should please even the most 'anti-contemporary music' friends you may have! But the glory of the recording is the respect Reiner pays to Hovhaness and for this it is worth the purchase. Grady Harp, May 06
Mountaintop Experience.......2006-04-26
In his second symphony, which he called "Mysterious Mountain," Alan Hovhaness imagined a mountain where one could indeed have a spiritual experience. Perhaps this was his vision of an IDEAL mountain, certainly a place to get away from things and spend time in contemplation. There's no doubt that the symphony, which was premiered by Leopold Stokowski and the Houston Symphony in 1955 (on NBC television), is an uplifting piece. It is also very majestic and profound at times, setting a pattern for Hovhaness in the numerous symphonies he wrote in the years after 1955.
Fritz Reiner's remarkable recording of "Mysterious Mountain" was one of a series of incredible stereophonic recordings that RCA Victor made in Chicago's Orchestra Hall between 1954 and 1962. Using just three microphones and a triple-track tape recorder, RCA achieved outstanding results with a greater clarity than had been accomplished in earlier recordings. This particular recording remains a "high water" mark and is probably the definitive version of a magnificent work that can be quite inspirational. Yes, Hovhaness does represent a mountaintop experience and, some years later, he celebrated yet another mountain in his "Mount Saint Helens" symphony, recorded by the Seattle Symphony Orchestra to celebrate the volcano's violent 1980 eruption.
The lighter work on this disc is a top-notch performance of Igor Stravinsky's tribute to Peter Tchaikovsky, a divertimento drawn from the ballet "The Fairy's Kiss." Much in the same vein as Tchaikovsky's "Sleeping Beauty," this is magical, delightful, and enchanting music that is given a very fine interpretation by Fritz Reiner and the Chicago Symphony. Although there are a few obvious quotes from the music of Tchaikovsky, much of the score is a homage to the earlier composer that represents his considerable imagination and musical abilities.
Stravinsky (1882-1971) once said, "Of all of us, Tchaikovksy was the most Russian." Stravinsky once glimpsed Tchaikovsky, just before the premiere of the sixth symphony in 1893, and was left forever with an image of a tragic but very gifted composer/conductor. Reiner's recording is a very good representation of this musical tribute.
One of the first recordings this writer ever heard by Fritz Reiner and the Chicago Symphony was their performance of the orchestral suite that Sergei Prokofiev prepared from his film score for "Lt. Kije," based on a classic Russian tale of a mythical Russian Army officer created by a bureaucratic error. The satirical qualities of the story were not lost on Prokofiev, who readily composed music that suited the various episodes of the lieutenant's supposed life.
Reiner's interepretation of this delightful music was thoroughly enjoyable, even if it omits the baritone solo in the original score (included in Seiji Ozawa's Deutsche Grammophon recording with the Boston Symphony).
The score begins with a mysterious, haunting theme representing the birth of Kije; this music is later repeated, in a somewhat altered version, for Kije's death. Along the way, we hear a delightful, appropriately martial, march; an exquisite and intense love theme; a grandiose, pompous wedding celebration; and a furious sleigh ride. All of this is played extremely well by the Chicago musicians and, once again, the ground-breaking stereophonic recording still has a remarkably modern sound.
"Mysterious Mountain" has aged badly, but the Stravinsky and Prokofiev live on.......2006-01-17
The Hovhaness work is from 1955 (Reiner's account came two years later, although the RCA Living Stereo sound could be from yesterday), and it proved to be the composer's fifteen minutes of fame. Writing the same piece twice is excusable, but Hovhaness went on to write Mysterious Mountain dozens of times over, never advancing by a single jot or tittle beyond its modal string harmonies, simple fugues, plangent prayers to heaven, and a noticeable aversion to modernity. These qualities went down very well for a brief period, and here he gets the superstar treatment from Reiner and the CSO. If I had been Hovhaness, I would have played this recording every day of my life.
The Lt. Kije Suite comes from 1958 and is so famous that there's not much to say. Reiner always played Prokofiev without a Slavic accent, and although the CSO sounds totally mid-West here, their virtuosity, even in simple movie music like this, is thrilling.
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The Art Of The Theremin
Manuel de Falla , Alexander Konstantinovich Glazunov , and Henryk Wieniawski Manufacturer: Delos Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000006U6 Release Date: 1992-12-14 |
Tracks:
- Vocalise
- Song Of Grusia
- The Swan
- Pantomime
- Hebrew Melody
- Romance
- Berceuse
- Piece en forme de Habanera
- Berceuse
- Valse sentimentale
- Serenade melancolique
- Chant du menestrel
Customer Reviews:
Elegance and precision.......2007-06-30
A one-of-a-kind disc of a one-of-a-kind performer. If you like the samples you can hear on this site. by all means buy it.
Did not buy this item.......2007-05-03
Mysterious, magical, and a little bit maudlin.......2007-03-08
While the rest of my family violently disagrees, this is indeed lovely music. A careful listening to Mrs. Rockmore's technique reveals, I think, that she's fascinatingly far beyond waving her hands up and down in front of antennas. She makes glissandos and runs happen with discrete pitches in a way that is hard for me to picture on an instrument that can generate any pitch, and every pitch in between. She developed a way to "finger" an instrument you don't touch. That's why it's magical.
A note on the recording: the timbre of the theremin seems to land in a resonant frequency range on most systems/speakers on which I have listened to this recording, leading to the solo instrument badly overbalancing the piano accompaniment.
PS: I have given on someday owning a theremin. Phase over.
Hypnotically Beautiful.......2007-02-28
I knocked a star off for the lack of arrangement-diversity, but I have to admit that I usually listen to this disc from start to end. Its lyrical qualities are very transfixing and hypnotic. A welcome diversification to my music collection!
THE ART OF THE THEREMIN.......2007-02-24
Meditation Music:
- L'arlesiana
- L'Elisir d'amore
- Lalo: Le Roi d'Ys
- Leoncavallo: Pagliacci
- Manon
- Mascagni: Iris / Gelmetti, Opera di Roma
- Massenet: Chérubin / von Stade, J. Anderson, Ramey, Upshaw, P. Steinberg
- Monteverdi: L'Orfeo/Il Ritorno D'Ulisse in Patria/L'Incoronazione Di Poppea [Box set]
- Mozart: Così fan tutte / Martinpelto, Hagley, Murray, Streit, Finley, Allen, Rattle
- Mozart: Die Entfuhrung aus dem Serail
Meditation Music
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Josquin: Requiem; La Rue: Hercules Mass
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Le Plus Grands Succes [Import]
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John P. Kelly [Explicit Lyrics]