German Classics: Electrobeats [Import]

German Classics: Electrobeats [Import]

German Classics: Electrobeats [Import]

Editorial Reviews
Product Description
Features Kmfdm, Girl Under Glass, Armageddon, Catastrophe Ballet, Einsturzene & More.

German Classics: Electrobeats,Various Artists,Visio
The Most Famous Opera Arias
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Great for kids!
  • Mediocre Sound Quality
  • I was pleased
  • The Most Famous Opera Arias
  • Okay But.... - a review of "The Most Famous Opera Arias"
The Most Famous Opera Arias

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Delibes, Léo | ( D ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
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Similar Items:
  1. The Most Famous Opera Duets
  2. The Best of Italian Opera
  3. The #1 Opera Album
  4. The Best Opera Album in the World...Ever!
  5. Nessun Dorma ~ 20 Great Tenor Arias / Pavarotti, Carreras, Domingo, Bergonzi, Aragall, Björling, Di Stefano, Kollo, Corelli, Del Monaco...

ASIN: B000002SCE
Release Date: 1994-07-19

Tracks:

  1. Rigoletto: Act I - Caro nome
  2. Rigoletto: Act III - La donna e mobile
  3. Gianni Schicchi: O mio babbino caro
  4. Carmen: Act I - Habanera: La voila...L'amour est oiseau rebelle
  5. Orfeo ed Euridice: Act III - Che faro senz Euridice
  6. Madama Butterfly: Act III - Un bel di, vedremo
  7. Romeo et Juliette: Act I - Ah! je veux vivre
  8. Le nozze di Figaro: Act II - Voi che sapete che cosa e amor
  9. Samson et Dalila: Act II - Mon coeur s'ouvre a ta voix
  10. Tosca:: Act II - Vissi d'arte, vissi d'amore
  11. Aida: Act I-Celeste Aida
  12. Il Barbiere Di Siviglia: Act I-Una voce poco fa
  13. Lakme: Act II - Ou va la jeune indoue?
  14. La Wally: Act I - Ebben? Ne andro lontano
  15. La Boheme: Act I - Che gelida manina
  16. Die Zauberflote: Act II-Die Holle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great for kids!.......2007-06-27

I'm generally not a fan of music "samplers," but opera can be tough to introduce to children. And hey--even adults played cards, ate, and talked through the recitative sections of the early operas while they waited for the next aria! So I feel that getting kids hooked on opera through great arias probably can't hurt (the next 10 years or so will determine whether I'm right or not). My 4-year-old loves this CD; it's a delight to watch her imitate Anna Moffo (the sincerest form of flattery, for sure). Highly recommended resource for introducing young kids to opera. More top picks: Siberell's Bravo! Brava! A Night at the Opera, and the Black Dog Opera Library CDs.

2 out of 5 stars Mediocre Sound Quality.......2007-03-31

If you note the album was released in 1994, and includes selections from many years prior, you will understand that the quality of the sound engineering is not going to dazzle your ear.

It's a very nice collection to hum along to, but don't expect shivers down your spine as the sound quality is not sufficient to reproduce the dynamic range of these voices.

5 out of 5 stars I was pleased.......2007-02-18

I am by no means an opera expert, but found this to be a wonderful CD. Along with the songs I already knew I liked (such as a song from Carmen,) I found many others I enjoyed. In fact, Samson et Dahlila turned out to be my favorite. If you are just getting started or at any point in your adventure of opera, I would recommend this one.

5 out of 5 stars The Most Famous Opera Arias.......2007-01-05

I was completely surprised in the product as well as the time in which it was delivered.

I would not only refer this seller but I will come back myself.

3 out of 5 stars Okay But.... - a review of "The Most Famous Opera Arias".......2006-08-18

My daughter (6 y.o.) and I like opera; but sitting for two hours to watch Turandot is just not within the realm of possibilities for my 4 year old son right now... so I was looking for an opera CD for the car. He will sit and listen to short arias.

This was the first we purchased and it is okay but not great.

Problem #1 - where is Wagner. No Wagner?
Problem#2 - Elena Obraztsova - she sounds like Carmen's grandmother. Rather matronly for a vixen (imho--lol)

Three Stars. [C+] Great Price and good sound quality for the car. The operatic styles of some of the performers are antiquated and frilly sounding, but I would probably buy this CD again.

Note: We purchased and really preferred "The # 1 Opera Album". It has more selections and better artists in our opinion. Also it's a two CD set. Just something to consider.
The Best of Italian Opera
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Great Stuff
  • A Great Introduction to Italian Opera
  • Best of the best!
  • Fabulous bargain for anyone
  • Great songs for a low price.
The Best of Italian Opera

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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  1. The Most Famous Opera Arias
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  5. The Best Opera Album in the World...Ever!

ASIN: B000000UXN
Release Date: 1997-01-21

Tracks:

  1. La Traviata: 'Libiamo, Libiamo'
  2. Rigoletto: 'La donna e' Mobile'
  3. The Barber Of Seville: 'Una voce poco fa'
  4. La Boheme: 'Che gelida manina'
  5. Rigoletto: 'Gualtier Malde!' Caro nome'
  6. Il Trovatore: 'Vedi! le fosche'
  7. Il Trovatore: 'Il balen del suo sorriso...Per me ora fatale'
  8. TOSCA: 'Vissi d'arte'
  9. La Traviata: 'Di Provenza il mar, il suol'
  10. The Marriage Of Figaro: 'Voi che sapete'
  11. Aida: 'Se quel guerrier io fossi...Celeste Aida'
  12. Madama Butterfly: 'Un bel di vedremo'
  13. La Gioconda: 'Cielo e mar'
  14. Lucia di Lammernoor: 'Ardon gl' incesi'

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great Stuff.......2007-07-22

The sound quality of this disc is surprisingly good, very good for an ADD. All the selections captured each singer in his/her top form. It is a real treat that this disc contains many work that were not normally in certain singer's repertoire. Gedda's Aida, Moffo's Rossini-Rosina and Cherobino, for example, all were superbly sung. Even Moffo's Lucia sounds much better than I have ever heard in other places.

4 out of 5 stars A Great Introduction to Italian Opera.......2005-05-01

The artists on this CD succeed in their goal to create a CD that displays great Italian opera. Carlo del Monte and Victoria de los Angeles open the disc with the Brindisi from La Traviata. Victoria de los Angeles is not the best Violetta, but she does the job, along with her parner Carlo del Monte, an underappreciated tenor. Victoria de los Angeles also appears on the CD in "Un bel di vedremo" from Madama Butterfly, a role she was well known for. Swedish tenor Nicolai Gedda appears on the disc twice. His first appearence is a superb rendition of "La donna e mobile" from Rigoletto. His final performance on this disc is in the heroric aria "Celeste Aida", a performance in a role that was not in his voice range. Anna Moffo is the star on this CD, appearing three times in three very different roles. First is her beautiful "Una voce poco fa", normally a role that calls for a mezzo-soprano. Her second is "Voi che sapete" from Le Nozze di Figaro, another mezzo-soprano role. Her final appearence is her best, "The Mad Scene" from Lucia di Lammermoor. Underrated tenor Giuseppe Campora performs "Che gelida manina" with a great tenor voice. Soprano Reri Girst is excellent in her performance of "Caro nome" from Rigoletto. One of my favorite baritones appears on this CD. Robert Merrill is a perfect Count di Luna, and it is evident in his rendition of "Il balen del suo sorriso". Another baritone appears on this CD: mario Sereni. He is not a world famous baritone, but he should have been. Overall, this is an excellent introduction to the world of Italian opera.

5 out of 5 stars Best of the best!.......2003-01-11

The performers, the selections, the quality... almost divine!

5 out of 5 stars Fabulous bargain for anyone.......2002-11-24

I would recommend this CD to anyone, from opera novice to experienced listener...

These are older recordings -- I would guess mostly from the 1960's. The recording quality is exceptional for the day and, while not the equivalent of modern engineering, is sufficient to allow sheer physical pleasure from the music and an immediate appreciation of the vocal qualities of the artists. The sound quality is the only mild drawback...

The performances are magnificent! The voices are almost entirely lighter and more agile than the great voices of the 80's and 90's. In fact, the ear of the editor is apparent in his preference for lighter and more agile voices.

For example, there is a beautiful rendition of "Che Gelida Manina" from someone I had never heard before, Guiseppe Campora. He does not have the weight or volume of Pavarotti or Domingo, but has more elegance and a pure, charming tone. A connoisseur performance, but nevertheless a true operatic rendition by a tenor who can hit the high C with authority -- as good for a newcomer to opera who wants to hear the real thing, as for an opera lover who would like to hear something a bit different.

Some of the artists were among the most famous singers of their day: Moffo, de los Angeles, Gedda.

Anna Moffo, one of the greatest sopranos of her day (and all time), is in magnificent voice in famous blockbusters from Rossini's Barber of Seville, Mozart's Marriage of Figaro, and the Mad Scene from Lucia di Lammermoor.

De Los Angeles is at her best in "Libiamo" from La Traviata, but the recording quality (the one inadequately engineered track on the CD) and her lack of oomph make for a second-rate version of "Un bel di".

In keeping with the light and lyrical orientation of the selections, Moffo -- a famous Gilda and hardly a dramatic voice -- is bypassed for the even lighter, sweeter and more agile colatura Reri Grist (while she still had her voice), in a lovely "Caro Nome".

Another nice selection is Mario Sereni performing "Di provenza, il mar". Both this and "Libiamo" are taken from one of my favorite recordings of Traviata -- also a great chance to hear Serafin at the helm of the Rome Opera House orchestra. (The 2-CD version of this is still available from EMI, I think.) Newcomers will love this pretty tune, and Sereni's archtypal Verdi baritone is good, although hardly the best ever.

Franco Corelli has never been a favorite of mine, but he sounds the best I've ever heard him in his rendition of "Cielo et mar".

Anyway, I didn't intend to list every cut. Whether you are an opera lover who would like to hear some of opera's most famous arias performed in a new light, or an opera lover who would like to hear great performances at a cut-rate price, this CD gets my unqualified approval.

4 out of 5 stars Great songs for a low price........2001-08-16

Ranging from selections of La Traviata, Il Trovatore and other popular Italian operas, this is a great cd for under four bucks. The singers may not be well recognized, but they do possess powerful voices.
The Most Famous Opera Duets
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Can't go wrong
  • Most Famous???
  • Only one song knew well
  • The Most Famous Opera Duets
  • Good selection of opera highlights
The Most Famous Opera Duets

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Delibes, Léo | ( D ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
All Works by DonizettiAll Works by Donizetti | Donizetti, Gaetano | ( D ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
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  1. The Most Famous Opera Arias
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  5. Rapture: Opera's Most Heavenly Moments

ASIN: B000002SCA
Release Date: 1994-04-12

Tracks:

  1. Les Peurs des perles Act 1 - Au fond du temple saint
  2. Madama Butterfly Act 1- Vogliatemi bene, un bene piccolino
  3. Le Nozze di Figaro Act III - Sull'aria - Le Nozze di Figaro
  4. La Traviata Act I - Un di, felice, eterea
  5. Lucia Di Lammermoor Act I - Ah! Verranna a te sull'aure
  6. Tristan und Isolde Act II - O sink hernieder, Nacht der Liebe
  7. Carmen Act I - Parle-moi de m
  8. Die ZauberflAct I - Bei Mern, welche Liebe F
  9. Lakmct I - Viens, Mallika
  10. Rigoletto Act I - il sol dell'anima
  11. Der Rosenkavalier Act II - Mir ist die Ehre wilderfahren
  12. Don Giovanni Act I - Li darem la mano
  13. La Boh Act IV - O Mimi, tu pi torni
  14. Il Trovatore Act IV - Miserere...Quel suon, quelle preci

Amazon.com

This is a misnomer--not all of these duets are all that famous--but it's a fine compilation nonetheless. You'll hear selections from Bizet's The Pearl Fishers (Nicolai Gedda and Ernest Blanc at their most elegant French), Madama Butterfly (Carlo Bergonzi and Renata Scotto--an impassioned pair), Lucia di Lammermoor (a classy Alfredo Kraus and Edita Gruberova), the lovely Lakme duet, The Presentation of the Silver Rose from Der Rosenkavalier (with the earnest Christa Ludwig and the other-worldly Teresa Stich-Randall), and a fine Trovatore "Miserere" (with Leontyne Price and Franco Bonisolli singing up a storm). There are many others, too--a veritable cornucopia of couplings--and a treat for the opera lover. --Robert Levine

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Can't go wrong.......2007-07-14

This is a really great CD for the price. It has many of the famous Arias on it and although the singers may not be the best out there they are certainly very good. This is cheaper than the price of a take away lunch; you can't go wrong with this CD.

3 out of 5 stars Most Famous???.......2007-05-14

The title of this cd is misleading and I found myself wondering whose list did they use. That is not to say that there aren't some real treasures included here. The duet from Lakme is lovely in every way, Mady Mesple in particular, very beautful and very french, and far superior to Sutherlands hooty approach. Scotto and Bergonzi are superb, the Tristan and Isolde of Vickers and Dernesch truly other worldly, and the presentation of the rose duet with the young Ludwig and the astonishing Teresa Stich- Randell had me playing it over and over and I still can't believe it, but the most famous??? This cd is definitly worth buying, and I hated giving it only 3 stars but if you're talking most famous you could fill a couple of cd's with Puccini, not to mention Verdi, Mozart, etc. before Bizet's Les Pecheurs des perles, beautiful as it is, made the most famous list.

3 out of 5 stars Only one song knew well.......2007-05-14

I should have done more research. The last song is the only one I could easily recognize. Live and learn.

5 out of 5 stars The Most Famous Opera Duets.......2007-01-05

This seller truly makes a purchaser confident in the product as well the time in which is promised.

Thanks again!!!!!

5 out of 5 stars Good selection of opera highlights.......2006-11-04

Super performances by famous opera artists of the 20th century, most of them no longer performing and some of them deceased. I enjoy having their voices available at home.
The Very Best Of Maria Callas
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Audio beauty and magnificence, Maria Callas
  • sublime
  • Good "Best Of"
  • The Very Best of Maria Callas
  • Classic Callas
The Very Best Of Maria Callas
Maria Callas
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Maria Callas, the Voice of the Century
  2. The Most Famous Opera Arias
  3. The Best of Italian Opera
  4. The Most Famous Opera Duets
  5. The #1 Opera Album

ASIN: B00005Y1YQ
Release Date: 2002-02-12

Tracks:

  1. Carmen: L'Amour Est Un Oiseau Rebelle
  2. Gianni Schicchi: O Mio Babbino Caro
  3. La Wally: Ebben? Ne Andro Lontana
  4. Samson Et Dalila: Mon Coeur S'ouvre A Ta Voix
  5. Tosca: Vissi D'arte, Vissi D'amore
  6. Andrea Chenier: La Mamma Morta
  7. Le Nozze Di Figaro: Porgi Amor
  8. Orphee Et Eurydice: J'ai Perdu Mon Eurydice
  9. Aida: Ritorna Vincitor!
  10. Adriana Lecouvreur: Respiro Appena... Lo So L'Umile Ancella
  11. Madama Butterfly: Un Bel Di Vedremo
  12. Norma: Casta Diva
  13. Turandot: Signore, Ascolta!
  14. Louise: Depuis Le Jour
  15. La Boheme: Si. Mi Chiamano Mimi
  16. La Gioconda: Suicidio
  17. La Forza Del Destino: Pace, Pace Mio Dio!

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Audio beauty and magnificence, Maria Callas.......2007-03-31

There are moments on this recording that are virtually audio heaven.
Ms. Callas' voice goes beyond the normal concept of beauty.

5 out of 5 stars sublime.......2007-02-14

she is an angel , a voice without parallel , a collection very interesting of arias from different masters.

4 out of 5 stars Good "Best Of".......2007-02-09

Maira Callas was never a favorite of mine, but she is notable as a passionate, (but sometime shrill to my ears) performer. This collection is a good single record tribute to her operatic legacy.

4 out of 5 stars The Very Best of Maria Callas.......2006-08-20

Second on my list for CDs that should be recommended for people who want to start on a long trail of Callas to the Carmen with Gedda and Prétre. This has perhaps the best excerpts of all time from Maria Callas. The 'Ritorna vincitor' and 'Una voce poco fa' are to be treasured. Any long-time Callas fan will find this CD of little to no interest, because anything they haven't heard before, there's a better, low-audio-quality version of somewhere. 4 stars for that reason.

4 out of 5 stars Classic Callas.......2006-07-11

Countless assessments of Maria Callas' life and career, as well as re-issues of some of her definitive recorded performances have been fueled by the 25th anniversaary of her tragic and prophetic death alone in her Paris flat on September 16, 1977. One of those such discs, this 17 track retrospective compilation from the archives of EMI is among the best. Every character she portrays is bought to life by her incomparible ability both vocally and emotionally. Enjoy!
25 Thunderous Classics
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Good selection
  • thunderous applause
  • Good Music at a Great Price
  • You will like this!
  • Good for the novice
25 Thunderous Classics

Manufacturer: Vox (Classical)
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  1. 25 Classical Favorites
  2. Symphony (25) Favorites
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  5. 25 Beethoven Favorites

ASIN: B00004Y6SQ
Release Date: 2000-09-05

Tracks:

  1. Also Sprach Zarathustra (Sunrise) - R. Strauss
  2. Mars (The Planets) - Holst
  3. Overture 1812 - Tchaikovsky
  4. Entry Of The Gladiadtors - Fucik
  5. Sabre Dance - Khachaturian
  6. Procession Of The Sardar - Ippolitov Ivanov
  7. Night On Bald Mountain - Mussorgsky
  8. Anvil Chor (II Trovatore) - Verdi
  9. The Thunderer March - Sousa
  10. Thunder & Lightening Polka - J. Strauss
  11. Prelude To Act III : Lohengrin - Wagner
  12. The Ride Of The Valkryies - Wagner
  13. Montagues & Capulets (Romeo & Juliet Ballet Suite) - Prokofiev
  14. The Storm: Symphony No. 6 In F Major, 'Pastorale' - Beethoven
  15. Rondeau - Edward Carroll
  16. Overture: Fireworks Music - Handel
  17. March To The Scaffold: Symphonie Fantastique - Berlioz
  18. LesToreadors - Bizet
  19. William Tell Overture: Finale - Rossini
  20. Revolutionary Study - Abbey Simon
  21. Fanfare For The Common Man - Copland
  22. Sym No. 1 'Titan' IV Sturmisch Bewegt (Excerpt) - Mahler
  23. Augurs Of Spring From Rite Of Spring - Stravinsky
  24. Russian Dance From Petrouchka - Stravinsky
  25. The Great Gate At Kiev From Pictures At An Exhibition - Mussorgsky

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Good selection.......2005-10-02

I bought this CD to use in my classroom as listening examples. I'm not just a super big fan of some of the performances, but they are all good and for the price you can't beat it. That's why I gave it 5 stars. It's worth more than it costs by far.

5 out of 5 stars 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!

5 out of 5 stars Good Music at a Great Price.......2004-03-06

I bought this CD mostly for "Entry of the Gladiators," which everyone will recognize as classic circus music. The performance on this CD (by Erich Kunzel and the Cincinnati Pops) is the best available version of Entry of the Gladiators. The rest of the CD offers mostly excerpts of classical music.

5 out of 5 stars You will like this!.......2004-02-19

I had purchased an abundance of the "Favorites" collection and some were better than others.

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!

3 out of 5 stars Good for the novice.......2002-06-08

The recordings on this disc are pretty good. However, the editors selected only the *loud* parts, as indicated by the title. I was pretty disappointed to find that the pieces are, in many cases, edited to reflect the most famous themes, etc, instead of including the whole work. In general, I would recommend this to the classical music novice, or someone who wants to expand their knowledge of classical music in general. Those who already are familiar with these pieces will probably feel gypped.
Brahms: Ein deutsches Requiem [A German Requiem]
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Real Brahms
  • Glorious Music
  • A "Regular People" Review
  • Brahms: Ein Deutsches Requiem
  • Very good
Brahms: Ein deutsches Requiem [A German Requiem]

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Great Recordings Of The Century - Beethoven: Symphony no 9 / Furtwangler, Schwarzkopf
  2. Great Recordings Of The Century - Brahms: Violin Sonatas nos 1 - 3 / Perlman, Ashkenazy
  3. Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde
  4. Dvorák: Cello Concerto; Tchaikovsky / Karajan, Rostropovich,
  5. Great Recordings Of The Century - Beethoven: Triple Concerto; Brahms: Double Concerto / Oistrakh, Rostropovich, Richter

ASIN: B00000GCA3
Release Date: 1999-01-12

Tracks:

  1. A German Requiem Op.45: Selig sind, die da Leid tragen
  2. A German Requiem Op.45: Denn alles Fleisch es ist wie Gras
  3. A German Requiem Op.45: Herr, lehre doch mich
  4. A German Requiem Op.45: Wie lieblich sind deine Wohnungen
  5. A German Requiem Op.45: Ihr habt nun Traurigkeit
  6. A German Requiem Op.45: Denn wir haben hie keine bleibende Stadt
  7. A German Requiem Op.45: Selig sind die Toten

Amazon.com essential recording

This account of the German Requiem really is one of the great recordings of the century. Even today, Otto Klemperer's monumental interpretation with the Philharmonia Orchestra and Chorus, recorded in 1961, remains unmatched among readings that emphasize the spirituality of the score. Sober and sustained, but not unduly slow, it places Brahms on the continuum of German sacred music going back through Beethoven to Handel, Bach, and Schütz. Drawing committed playing and singing from his forces, Klemperer opens the door to the beauties of the music without fuss or fanfare. Both soloists are exemplary: Schwarzkopf's expressive portamento now sounds a bit dated in style, but her singing is characterful, while Fischer-Dieskau is a paragon of restrained expressiveness. The singing of the Philharmonia Chorus is especially beautiful. EMI has done a superior job of remastering the original recording. Balances and tone quality are quite fine, and the spacious Kingsway Hall ambience conveys with lifelike immediacy. Compared with previous CD incarnations, there is new depth to the image and better resolution of detail--the weight of the organ can really be felt, as can the timpani strokes in "Denn alles fleisch es ist wie gras," and one finds greater presence and definition in the chorus and considerably more richness of tone in the orchestra. There is still some distortion in the climactic moments; for example, what sounds like tape saturation frizzes a couple of the big Beethovenian choral proclamations at the end of "Denn alles fleisch es ist wie gras." Such things are but a small blemish on what is an absolutely ravishing restoration of one of the most valuable recordings of the stereo era. --Ted Libbey

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Real Brahms.......2007-06-24

He understand Brahms and the performances are superb. Buy this recording and you will be very happy.

5 out of 5 stars Glorious Music.......2007-03-29

I purchased this CD for practicing the Requiem for a concert that will be performed this weekend. I am a soprano. It is wonderful for any of you who need to choose from other CDs of this piece for this purpose. For any who do not either play or sing, you will still be transported by the beautiful sound! While most requiems point to sorrow. This one by Brahms shows us the joy of life.

5 out of 5 stars A "Regular People" Review.......2007-01-31

Brahms German Requiem is a great piece of music, this isn't nearly as intense as Verdi or Mozart's Requiems and not as tame at Faure's. It fits nicely in between. I can't say anything about the recording because this is the only one I've ever heard, but there are no complaints here. If you like semi dramatic choral music, (if you want super dramatic go for Verdi's Requiem!) give it a try....and keep me updated!

5 out of 5 stars Brahms: Ein Deutsches Requiem.......2006-08-23

Brahms was a fabulous composer. I think his Requiem is a very musical piece including the beautiful voices.

I would recommend to anyone who loves good classical music.

4 out of 5 stars Very good.......2006-08-03

First of all, it bothers me when people say Brahms "looks good on the page, but...". What does that mean, "looks good on the page"? Who are these people that own the scores to his music and are capable of instantaneously transposing several instruments in different clefs as well as different key signatures, know the timbres of each instrument at different volumes and marked styles of playing, and have the knowledge of harmony to know what these combinations of notes will sound like? Why aren't they conducting orchestras? Or do the notes somehow form the shape of a pretty little bird or something, and that's what they mean by the notes looking good on the page?
Anyway, the slower movements are great on this recording. 1st movement, 2nd, 4th, 7th. I would include the 5th, but something about Schwarzkopf's enunciation bothers me in this performance, although at times she hits a high note very subtly and perfectly. As for the more epic 3rd and 6th movements, they are impressive except for a few annoying problems. The fugue in the 3rd movement drag in the choral department, possibly because of the hall, and also sometimes I would like to hear the strings brought out a little more. The 6th movement is both wonderful and disappointing: the brass sounds amazing, and Klemperer really uses them to build tension with those high clustered dissonant notes. However, for some reason he builds up to these intense sections, and then cuts the tempo right as the sections begin. I can't think of any reason why he would have done this, but it sounds very strange and anti-climactic and it's a shame because otherwise it is amazing.
I would purchase this and Abbado's. I also have Karajan- ridiculously slow and lacking in emotion (strange, because I consider him to be the best interpreter of Brahms' symphonies), Walter- ludicrously fast, and Gardiner- pretty good. I would like to hear Shaw's but right now I'm torn between Abbado and this recording, neither of which are perfect. The woodwinds and brass are very much overpowered by the strings in Abbado's and, although it sounds great, you realize which sonorities are missing when you listen to this Klemperer recording.
As for the requiem itself, it really is beautiful. Brahms had an immense harmonic palette and he knew exactly how to use it, and that is very evident in this work. He was as harmonically audacious as Wagner, but he used his powers more prudently. The first movement is a perfect example of this: interesting resolutions, delayed resolutions, dissonant suspensions. Listen to the way the chorus and orchestra play off of one another, surprise each other, and then work together. This is what really makes music sound beautiful to me. And the texts Brahms chose to set to this piece are very touching.
One reviewer claims that Brahms didn't have a penchant for melodies. I don't see how he could be one of the most revered writers of lieder if this were the case. Maybe the reviewer's mother didn't sing him Brahms' lullaby when he was a baby, as the rest of ours did. His violin concerto adagio has been called the greatest melody ever written, the clarinet quintet is a favorite among chamber works, and he wrote 21 Hungarian dances that are immensely popular. Some movements in this piece are not meant to be sweepingly melodic; I would consider the first movement to be attractive mostly because of the harmony, which usually carries most of the emotion in music anyway. But the melodies of the 4th, 5th, and 7th movement are incredibly sweet and beautiful, and the 2nd movement's melodies are very memorable. For some reason people find it fashionable to call Brahms' music dry and academic, but these people must not be listening to the same music as the rest of us, or else they themselves are too academic and dry. This is lush, romantic music. Appropriately heavy and pensive at times, but those are the most powerful moments of the piece. It's about struggling with mortality, and comforting those who are left behind after a death. The full text that he chose for his 5th movement:
"And ye now therefore have sorrow: but I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice, and your joy no man taketh from you.
Ye see how for a little while I labor and toil, yet have I found much rest.
As one whom his mother comforteth, so will I comfort you. . ."
This isn't really a requiem, more of an existential dilemma set to music. So much more interesting and personal than "Kyrie Eleison," "Dona Eis Requiem," and "Pie Jesu Domine," I think. There are reasons why this work is so popular; that it is very beautiful and affecting, and that it touches a universal concern of all humanity are not the least of these reasons. I think people's perceptions of Brahms as being so academic and unemotional have been influenced by extreme political reviews by influential Wagnerites. George Bernard Shaw, for example, who attacked the requiem in particular, and thought that Brahms represented a musical regression. People seem to be unaware of how these reviews tainted Brahms' name, and also that Shaw later admitted that he was very wrong.
Bruckner: The Complete Symphonies
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • One of two Jochum sets of Bruckner
  • Bruckner by Jochum
  • The Best Complete Bruckner Symphonies
  • A good, but not great, Bruckner cycle.
  • Outstanding set!
Bruckner: The Complete Symphonies

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
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ASIN: B00004YA0T
Release Date: 2000-11-07

Tracks:

  1. Sym No.1 in c: I. Allegro
  2. Sym No.1 in c: II. Adagio
  3. Sym No.1 in c: III. Scherzo: Schnell
  4. Sym No.1 in c: IV. Finale: Bewegt, Feurig

Tracks:

  1. Sym No.2 in c: I. Moderato
  2. Sym No.2 in c: II. Andante
  3. Sym No.2 in c: III. Scherzo: Massig Schnell
  4. Sym No.2 in c: IV. Finale: Mehr Schnell

Tracks:

  1. Sym No.3 in d: I. Mehr Langsam, Misterioso
  2. Sym No.3 in d: II. Adagio (Bewegt) Quasi Andante
  3. Sym No.3 in d: III. Ziemlich Bewegt
  4. Sym No.3 in d: IV. Allegro

Tracks:

  1. Sym No.4 in E flat 'Romantic': I. Bewegt, Nicht Zu Schnell
  2. Sym No.4 in E flat 'Romantic': II. Andante Quasi Allegretto
  3. Sym No.4 in E flat 'Romantic': III. Scherzo: Bewegt - Trio: Nicht Zu Schnell
  4. Sym No.4 in E flat 'Romantic': IV. Finale: Bewegt, Doch Nicht Zu Schnell

Tracks:

  1. Sym No.5 in B flat: I. Intro: Adagio - Allegro
  2. Sym No.5 in B flat: II. Adagio - Sehr Langsam
  3. Sym No.5 in B flat: III. Scherzo: Molto Vivace - Schnell
  4. Sym No.5 in B flat: IV. Finale: Allegro Moderato

Tracks:

  1. Sym No.6 in A: I. Maestoso
  2. Sym No.6 in A: II. Adagio: Sehr Feierlich
  3. Sym No.6 in A: III. Scherzo: Nicht Schnell - Trio: Langsam
  4. Sym No.6 in A: IV. Finale: Bewegt, Doch Nicht Zu Schnell

Tracks:

  1. Sym No.7 in E: I. Allegro Moderato
  2. Sym No.7 in E: II. Adagio: Sehr Feierlich Und Sehr Langsam
  3. Sym No.7 in E: III. Scherzo: Sehr Schnell - Trio: Etwas Langsamer
  4. Sym No.7 in E: IV. Finale: Bewegt, Doch Nicht Zu Schnell

Tracks:

  1. Sym No.8 in c: I. Allegro Moderato
  2. Sym No.8 in c: II. Scherzo: Allegro Moderato
  3. Sym No.8 in c: III. Adagio: Fierelich Langsam, Doch Nicht Schleppend
  4. Sym No.8 in c: IV. Finale: Feierlich, Nicht Schnell

Tracks:

  1. Sym No.9 in d: I. Feierlich, Misterioso
  2. Sym No.9 in d: II. Scherzo: Bewegt, Lebhaft - Trio: Schnell
  3. Sym No.9 in d: III. Adagio - Langsam, Feierlich

Amazon.com

Here's a welcome box of all Bruckner's numbered symphonies led by a distinguished specialist renowned during his lifetime for his identification with the composer. Neatly laid out with each symphony on a disc of its own (no annoying midsymphony changeovers) and in top-quality late-1970s sound, this is an irresistible bargain for such superb performances. Jochum's Bruckner was spontaneous-sounding, with generally swift tempos tempered by flexible rhythms and slow movements that squeeze all the juice from this heartfelt music. The Dresden orchestra is a marvelous instrument for these works, with a beefy, warm sound and brass players that can whip up the excitement in the grand climaxes. Individual conductors, whether vintage greats like Furtwängler or more recent Brucknerians such as Wand on RCA and Tintner on Naxos, may equal or better Jochum in individual works, but taken as a complete traversal of these massive scores, Jochum's is second to none. --Dan Davis

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars One of two Jochum sets of Bruckner.......2007-04-22

The other complete set of Eugen Jochum conducting Bruckner's symphonies, of course, is the series he recorded for DG in stereo between 1958 and 1967 with the Bavarian RSO or (in Symphonies 1, 4, and 7-9) the Berlin Philharmonic, following a number of recordings of individual symphonies he made in the pre-LP days. Although Jochum's basic conceptions remained consistent over the years, that earlier set finds Jochum more consistently alert and a shade more vibrant than in this valedictory go-round with the canonical Bruckner symphonies, taped in the late 1970s. By comparison, the overall impression here is of slightly lower voltage, although the flip side is that this cycle is also just that much more serene, and aptly so (Bruckner's music has been described as "blazing calm").

Even so, this boxed set has a lot to recommend it, whether or not in preference to the DG cycle. There is the burnished and responsive delivery of the great Dresden orchestra, perhaps the oldest in Europe. There is EMI's warm and atmospheric sound, which in this remastering is considerably better focused and more detailed than in the first CD incarnation of this cycle. This cycle's Seventh and Ninth Symphonies arguably make a deeper impression than their counterparts in the DG series--even if the DG cycle compensates with more successful readings of the Fourth and Eighth. Above all, there is Jochum's lifelong identification with Bruckner's music (but NOT, as another reviewer suggested, due to a personal relationship between the conductor and the composer, who had died six years before Jochum was born!). Personal preference will dictate whether you go for the DG or EMI cycle; either way, you will hear Bruckner via one of the last exponents of a more flexible, less "monumental" (and also less stolid) approach to this composer's music.

4 out of 5 stars Bruckner by Jochum.......2005-10-03

These CDs contain performances of the nine Bruckner symphonies.
Of these 3,4,7,8,9 are remarkable, with 4, 8 and 9 being
masterpieces. The performances by Eugen Jocum and the Dresden
Staatskapelle orchsetra are well-designed, and played at tempi
that seem to represent the composer's intentions. The recording
quality is good, except for dynamics: the sound volume is
on the low side. One needs a high grade system for adequate
reproduction, especially given the wide dynamic range and
timbral subtlety characteristic of Bruckner.

5 out of 5 stars The Best Complete Bruckner Symphonies.......2005-09-25

The reason that this is the best complete symphony recordings of Bruckner is that conductor Eugene Jochum had a close relationship with Bruckner himself and knew the music like the palm of his hand. despite any negative commentary or the fact the preferred editions are conducted by the eminent Herbert Von Karajan, this box set is by far the best. All the symphonie sound great, polished, romantic, idealized, spiritual, energetic, passionate and mysterious, especially the opening movement of the final 9th, which comes in both versions here. This is a true winner for a recording box set. Your other choice should be Karajan though. But Jochum masters the music with great affinity and brilliant technical musicianship. In this recording, particularly impressive are the 7-9th. The early symphonies are German-Romantic Wagner/Mahler style but entirely Bruckner's individualized style. It is music that is heavy, and not music for a beginner to hear. It is deep, highly emotional, music to meditate by. It's slow-moving, dream-like and powerful, horns and brasses sounding fatalistic at times, while the winds and strings evoking either intensity or quietness. Bruckner himself would love this set. He certainly approved of Jochum conducting.

3 out of 5 stars A good, but not great, Bruckner cycle........2005-02-18

Ideally, I wanted to review the DG Jochum cycle, since I actually prefer that one, but it's NLA as of this posting, so I'll just make some comments about both cycles here.

Eugen Jochum may have been the greatest advocate of Bruckner, of the 20th Century. However, I have lived with this cycle, and especially the DG one, for many years now, and I have come to view his Bruckner interpretations as somewhat overrated, even in comparison with his "old school Bruckner" colleagues. Perhaps my opinion is a little skewed by overexposure, but I have other recordings I turn to more frequently that have not started to "wear" on me as much as some of Jochums. For one example, I am not, by any means, a "Karajan freak" (I have also come to view his last VPO Eighth, over which most people seem to be "ga ga," a bit overrated, as well) but I find his full DG cycle from the 70's and early 80's, for one, to be more consistently satisfying, with the exception of the first, fourth, and sixth, in all of which Jochum is clearly better, imo. I must say I do get tired of the cliches' about Karajan's performances being too "cool, polished, and sterile," and Haitink's being too "light," etc. These preconceptions, often based on preconcieved opinions about the conductors themselves, precludes people from really having to seriously consider their recordings, just as the opposite preconception that Jochum is THE Brucknerian of the century tends to make his recorded preformances somehow beyond reproach.

Based on Jochum's reputation, I eagerly awaited the DG cycle, back at a time in the late 80's when I was first getting into Bruckner when there were relatively few Bruckner recordings in print. Even on first listening, there were certain things about his interpretations that didn't sound right to me. Admittedly, at that time, I knew virtually nothing of the "old school," with its more flexible tempi, dynamics, and more dramatic approach, to Bruckner. Since then, I have become very well acquainted with recordings of the "old school" Bruckner conductors such as Schuricht (his 1943 Ninth is one of my ten favorites), Furtwangler (his 1944 Ninth might BE my favorite), Hausegger, Kabasta, Abendroth, Matacic; Walter and Horenstein's mono recordings, etc. etc...and I still don't find many of Jochum's interpretations to compare all that favorably.

One thing you can say with some degree of confidence about Jochum is that most of his interpretations are amazingly consistent over a half century of recordings. Compare his recordings of the Fourth and Seventh from the late 1930's to those from his later DG and EMI cycles, and they are remarkably similar, both in terms of timings, tempos, and phrasing. Two examples of "Jochumisms" that have come to grate on me a bit over time are: 1) As much as I love most of his Fourth, esp. the finale, which I think he "nails" better than any other conductor, I feel that he turns the andante quasi allegretto into an adagio (in general, I can never understand why many conductors insist upon turning this flowing movement into a dirge); 2) The slow tempo he chooses for the lovely "enchanted forest" motif (as I call it) that flows out of the beautiful intro of the Seventh, which ultimately steers the whole first movement toward a slow and stodgy tempo. Jochum's Seventh almost sounds like it starts out with two adagios. His first movement isn't excessively slow in terms of it's total timing (and I've noticed that many listeners pay too much attention to timings anyway), but in terms of it's lack of flexibility and flow: there are readings of this movement a minute of two longer (like Chailly, for example, although I think his Seventh is a bit overrated) that still have a better sense of ebb and flow to them. Some examples of sevenths I prefer to Jochum's are Sinopoli's; Karajan 70's DG; Inbal's; Wand's 70's Cologne recording; Furtwangler's 1951 BPO (Rome); Abendroth's 1956 recording; and Haitink's 70's recording.

Jochum's Fifth was one of the biggest disappointments of my Bruckner collection, esp. after all of the things I had heard about it's legendary status. Although I think his inner movements are just fine (except the slow movement of his 1938 Fifth, which I found a little too slow), I think he is too slow--and even more importantly not flexible enough--in the all important outer movements. But the "Jochumism" that grates on me the most, in ALL of his recordings, is his excessive stretching out of the coda of the finale, made even less convincing by the lack of a strong underpinning of timpani. Karajan (whose DG Fifth was my first, and is still my favorite, followed by Horenstein, Welser-Most, and Gielen) augmented this thrilling coda--Bruckner's best, even better than the Eighth's, if it's done properly--with an extra set of timpani, and very effectively. If any of you are rolling your eyes (esp. you "Karajan-bashers") at Karajan's use of extra timpani, remember that Jocum augmented the brass section for the famous chorale of the Fifth's finale...this is part of what the vanishing art of interpretation is all about. On the subject of timpani, one of the characteristics of the Bruckner "old school" was the ideal that the Bruckner orchestra started from the ground (bass) up, and needed a strong underpinning of timpani (too often missing in recent recordings), esp. in climactic moments: Furtwangler's recordings provided the best example of this; most of Jochum's recordings are surprisingly lacking in powerful timpani, and this is particularly exposed in his somewhat melodramatic lengthening of the Fifth's final coda.

In general, I find Jochum's Eighth and Ninth to be a bit terse, except for his readings of the third movement of the Ninth, which was consistently one of his best movements, esp. his Dresden recording. If his readings of 1-7--except, again, his 1,4, and 6, which I find generally excellent--tended to lack flexibility on the slow side, the outer movements of his Eighth and the first movement of his Ninths tended to lack flexibility on the fast side. One very notable exception, however, is his 1949 Hamburg Eighth, which is my very favorite Jochum recording, and perhaps one of my ten favorite Eighths overall. He gets everything right here, with a good amount of flexibility...which makes it even more puzzling to me that the outer movements of his later recordings of the Eighth were so terse by comparison.

As far as the merits of the DG cycle versus the EMI, again, there is very little to choose as far as interpretations: they are remarkably similar. The only difference that really jumped out at me was that the first movement of the Dresden Ninth was not only a little too terse, but strangely "herky jerky" in terms of some awkward tempo relations, which create more distraction than tension. Although I feel that the adagio of the Dresden Ninth is Jochum's most searching account of this movement, I still like the Ninth from the DG set a bit better.

In terms of recorded sound, again I'd have to give the nod to the DG cycle. The older DG recordings sound more natural to me, whereas the late analog EMI recordings are a bit too brightly lit, almost sounding like early digital in places. The seemingly endless permutations of packaging, repackaging, and recoupling of both of these cycles, and the individual recordings from them, has become a bit absurd, but at least it has made it very easy to pick up most of these recordings in used CD bins.

5 out of 5 stars Outstanding set!.......2004-08-07

To win conducting Bruckner demands from a director several issues . You must have a first order orchestra ; second your rapport with the orchestra ; third Bruckner symphonies are a real challenge they are real difficult works because you have to maintain the sound all along the work ; fourth: the different mood changes and the running time of every symphony demands a serious analysis and commitment with the inspired and rapture melodic lines inmersed ; fifth : to underline and emphasize the sforzandos , the dramatic accents are almost an epic achievement ; sixth : since the undeniable influenc of Wagner in Bruckner you have to keep the balance and obviously to have studied Wagner in every work and consider the fact if Wagner would have lived twenty years more Would it sound in the brucknerian mood? and if all the previous factors were not enough , you have to consider the giant directors in Bruckner : Wilhelm Furtwangler , Hans Knappersbutch , Jasha Horenstein ,Carl Suricht , Horst Stein and obviously Eugene Jochum and the most remarkable Bruckner conductor in the actual times : Daniel Barenboim .
Jochum was a noble man and he had another important point to his favour : the orchestra : placed in the East Germany kept his sound due the isolation in the thirties forties and fifties . I underline this because the character and presence of similar orchestras as the Gewandhaus of Leipzig let obtain a pure sound ; and not a traditional vision .
This set is relevant in your collection because the standard level of every work is very high and often inspired . So it is easier for you to make a musical journey all the way.
I really recommend to you .
Wagner: Tristan und Isolde
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Hey this set was $60 for almost 20 years!
  • The BEST Tristan to date. Furtwangler's magic!
  • I don't have 10 stars!
  • A Great Reading... A Great Recording!
  • Twilight of the god and goddess
Wagner: Tristan und Isolde

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Wagner: Lohengrin
  2. Beethoven: Fidelio
  3. Tristan Und Isolde
  4. Wagner - Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg / Kollo · Donath · Adam · G. Evans · Schreier · Hesse· Riderbusch · Karajan
  5. Wagner: Der fliegende Holländer

ASIN: B00005NW0D
Release Date: 2001-09-11

Tracks:

  1. Act I: Prld - Wilhelm Furtwangler
  2. Act I, Scene 1: Westwarts Schweift Der Blick
  3. Act I, Scene 1: Brangane, Du? Sag - Wo Sind Wir?
  4. Act I, Scene 1: O Weh! Ach! Ach, Des Ubels, Das Ich Geahnt!
  5. Act I, Scene 2: Frisch Weht Der Wind Der Heimat Zu - Rudolf Schock
  6. Act I, Scene 2: Mir Erkoren, Mir Verloren
  7. Act I, Scene 2: Hab Acht, Tristan! Botschaft Von Isolde - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
  8. Act I, Scene 2: Darf Ich Die Antwort Sagen? - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
  9. Act I, Scene 3: Weh, Ach Wehe! Dies Zu Dulden!
  10. Act I, Scene 3: Wie Lachend Sie Mir Lieder Singen
  11. Act I, Scene 3: Von Seinem Lager Blickt' Er Her
  12. Act I, Scene 3: O Wunder! Wo Hatt' Ich Die Augen?
  13. Act I, Scene 3: Da Friede, Suhn' Und Freundschaft
  14. Act I, Scene 3: O Susse, Traute! Teure! Holde! Goldne Herrin! - Blanche Thebom
  15. Act I, Scene 3: Ungeminnt Den Hehrsten Mann
  16. Act I, Scene 3: Kennst Du Der Mutter Kusnte Night?
  17. Act I, Scene 4: Auf! Auf! Ihr Frauen! - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
  18. Act I, Scene 4: Herrn Tristan Bringe Meinen Gruss
  19. Act I, Scene 4: Nun Leb Wohl, Brangane!
  20. Act I, Scene 5: Langsam - Wilhelm Furtwangler
  21. Act I, Scene 5: Begehrt, Herrin, Was Ihr Wunscht
  22. Act I, Scene 5: Da Du So Sittsam, Mein Herr Tristan
  23. Act I, Scene 5: Nun Will Ich Des Eides Walten

Tracks:

  1. Act I, Scene 5: War Morold Dir So Wert
  2. Act I, Scene 5: Ho! He! Ha! Am Obermast Die Segel Ein!
  3. Act I, Scene 5: Du Horst Den Rut?
  4. Act I, Scene 5: Auf Das Tau! Anker Los!
  5. Act I, Scene 5: Tristan!...Isolde!
  6. Act I, Scene 5: Was Traumte Mir Von Tristans Ehre?
  7. Act I, Scene 5: Schnell, Den Mantel, Den Konigsschmuck!
  8. Act II: Prld - Wilhelm Furtwangler
  9. Act II, Scene 1: Horst Du Sie Noch?
  10. Act II, Scene 1: Der Deiner Harrt - O Hor Mein Warren!
  11. Act II, Scene 1: O Lass Die Warnende Zunde
  12. Act II, Scene 1: Und Musste Der Minne Tuckischer Trank
  13. Act II, Scene 2: Isolde! Geliebte!...Tristan! Geliebter!
  14. Act II, Scene 2: Das Licht! Das Licht!
  15. Act II, Scene 2: Der Tag! Der Tag!
  16. Act II, Scene 2: O Eitler Tagesknecht!
  17. Act II, Scene 2: In Deiner Hand Dne Sussen Tod
  18. Act II, Scene 2: O Nun Maren Wir Nacht-Geweihte! - Ludwig Suthaus
  19. Act II, Scene 2: O Sink Hernieder, Nacht Der Liebe
  20. Act II, Scene 2: Einsam, Wachend In Der Nacht - Blanche Thebom
  21. Act II, Scene 2: Lausch, Geliebter!
  22. Act II, Scene 2: Unsre Liebe? Tristans Liebe? - Ludwig Suthaus

Tracks:

  1. Act II, Scene 2: Doch Unsre Liebe
  2. Act II, Scene 2: So Sturben Wir, Un Ungetrennt
  3. Act II, Scene 2: Habet Acht! Habet Acht!
  4. Act II, Scene 2: O Ew'ge Nacht, Susse nacht!
  5. Act II, Scene 3: Rette Dich, Tristan! - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
  6. Act II, Scene 3: Tatest Du's Wirklich? - Josef Greindl
  7. Act II, Scene 3: Wozu Die Dienste Ohne Zahl - Josef Greindl
  8. Act II, Scene 3: Dies Wunderhehre Weib - Josef Greindl
  9. Act II, Scene 3: Nun, Da Durch Solchen Besitz Mein Herz - Josef Greindl
  10. Act II, Scene 3: O Konig, Das Kann Ich dir Nicht Sagen - Ludwig Suthaus
  11. Act II, Scene 3: Wohin Nun Tristan Scheidet, Willst Du, Isold', Ihm Folgen? - Ludwig Suthaus
  12. Act II, Scene 3: Als Fur Ein Fremdes Land - Kirstan Flagstad
  13. Act II, Scene 3: Verrater! Ha! Zur Rache, Konig! - Ludwig Suthaus
  14. Act III: Prld - Wilhelm Furtwangler
  15. Act III, Scene 1: Shepherd's Pipe Song - Wilhelm Furtwangler
  16. Act III, Scene 1: Kurwenal! He! Sag, Kurwenal! - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
  17. Act III, Scene 1: Od' Und Leer Das Meer!.../Shepherd's Pipe Song/Die Alte Weise - Wilhelm Furtwangler
  18. Act III, Scene 1: Wo Du Bist? In Frieden, Sicher Und Frei! - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
  19. Act III, Scene 1: Dunkt Dich Das? Ich Weiss Es Anders - Ludwig Suthaus
  20. Act III, Scene 1: Isolde Noch Im Reich Der Sonne - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau

Tracks:

  1. Act III, Scene 1: Noch Iosch Das Licht Nicht Aus - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
  2. Act III, Scene 1: Mein Kurwenal, Du Trauter Freund! - Ludwig Suthaus
  3. Act III, Scene 1: Shepherd's Pipe Song/Noch Ist Kein Schiff Zu Sehn! - Wilhelm Furtwangler
  4. Act III, Scene 1: Nein! Ach Nein! So Heisst Sie Nicht! - Ludwig Suthaus
  5. Act III, Scene 1: Der Trank! Der Trank! Der Furchtbare Trank! - Ludwig Suthaus
  6. Act III, Scene 1: Mein Herre! Tristan! Schrecklicher Zauber! - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
  7. Act III, Scene 1: Das Schiff? Siehst Du's Noch Nicht? - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
  8. Act III, Scene 1: Wie Sie Selig, Hehr Und Milde - Ludwig Suthaus
  9. Act III, Scene 1: Shepherd's Pipe Song/O Wonne! Freude! Ha! Das Schiff! - Wilhelm Furtwangler
  10. Act III, Scene 2: O Diese Sonne! Ha, Diesser Tag!
  11. Act III, Scene 2: Ich Bin's, Ich Bin's Sussester Freund!
  12. Act III, Scene 2: Die Wunde? Wo? Lass Sie Mich Heilen!
  13. Act III, Scene 3: Kurwenal! Hor! Ein Zweites Schiff - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
  14. Act III, Scene 3: Tot Denn Alles! Alles Tot! - Josef Greindl
  15. Act III, Scene 3: Sie Wacht! Sie Lebt! Isolde! - Josef Greindl
  16. Act III, Scene 3: Mild Und Leise Wir Er Lachelt
  17. Act III, Scene 3: Heller Schallend, Mich Umwallend

Amazon.com essential recording

It's not surprising that this sublime performance of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde has remained on the market for so long: Wilhelm Furtwängler's reading of the tale with Ludwig Suthaus, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, and Kirsten Flagstad is probably definitive. The conductor is peerless at achieving a strong sense of direction throughout the epic length. Carlos Kleiber's controversial version with the Dresden State Orchestra might boast orchestral fireworks (abetted by modern recording technology), but if you're looking for a Tristan in which the singing takes center stage, this is the recording to buy. Newly remastered with Abbey Road Technology as part of EMI's Great Recordings of the Century series. --Joshua Cody

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Hey this set was $60 for almost 20 years!.......2007-06-04

I listened to it at the library in the 80s, but you couldn't turn it up very loud. I'll bet this issue will suppress sales of all other performances!

5 out of 5 stars The BEST Tristan to date. Furtwangler's magic!.......2007-02-05

This is the best version of Tristan I have EVER heard. The sound quality is good but the performances are just thrilling. The duets are stunning. If you buy one Tristan make it this one. For those of us who do not speak German read up on the plot first and then enjoy. Fantastic.

5 out of 5 stars I don't have 10 stars!.......2007-01-20

The maximum! The very best version of all times

5 out of 5 stars A Great Reading... A Great Recording!.......2006-11-22

It's hard to imagine that anything can be better. So don't try. This is the best-recorded version of this amazing opera I have ever heard. A truly unmatched achievement in sound direction and vocal virtuosity.
"Classic" or "Legendary" recordings turn off some people due to the fact that they never know what kind of sound quality they will receive. Let me tell you as an audiophile, conductor, composer, musician and long time music listener: This is not what you think! It is a wonderfully clear, bold and warm recording with great dynamic influx and solid resonance that will fill any room on a good set of speakers. There is no better way to enjoy this great masterpiece! Bravo EMI! Bravo Furtwangler! This is without a doubt one of the 20th century's greatest sound recordings!

5 out of 5 stars Twilight of the god and goddess.......2006-06-29

Certainly one of the greatest opera recordings ever, if not the greatest. It hardly matters that this Tristan and Isolde was recorded circa 1950; this true classic, remastered, its glory intact, is a musical marvel for the ages that is nearly outside of time in its magnificence. Conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler (my all-time favorite conductor name--so Germanic!), was at the height of his conducting powers here, just as the great, legendary soprano Kirsten Flagstad, who also soars. Does she ever! Flagstad is known of course for her 1930s Metropolitan Opera Wagner performances, as well as appearances at Covent Garden in the late 1940s. Isolde was perhaps her greatest role. Usually she was paired with Lauritz Melchior (reportedly replaced at the last minute here by the sublime Ludwig Suthaus as Tristan due to Melchior's illness). Flagstad gave us her greatest Isolde at the twilight of her career. The entire cast and recording crew deserve great praise. Furtwangler delivers no less than the penultimate Tristan and Isolde. Aged and ill he may have been in faltering physical health, but his spirit was obviously never more vibrant. Together he and Flastad created a musical treasure that will live on forever. Five stars? More like a thousand!
Wagner: Overtures & Preludes
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • A well-kept secret
  • Essential Wagner
  • Excellent Wagner from a surprising source ... or maybe not!
  • Go For Boult
  • Memorable and dramatic- A must have for Wagner fans
Wagner: Overtures & Preludes

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Wagner: Tristan und Isolde/Parsifal/Die Meistersinger Von Nürnberg/Lohengrin/Tannhäuser
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  3. Wagner: The "Ring" Without Words
  4. Twilight of the Gods: The Essential Wagner Collection
  5. Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition

ASIN: B000002S08
Release Date: 1992-09-29

Tracks:

  1. Tannher: Overture
  2. Tannher: Grand March
  3. Der Fliegende Holler: Overture
  4. Tristan und Isolde: Prelude to Act 1
  5. Tristan und Isolde: Prelude to Act 3
  6. Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: Overture
  7. Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: Prelude to Act 3
  8. Lohengrin: Prelude to Act 1

Tracks:

  1. Lohengrin: Prelude to Act 3
  2. Parsifal: Prelude to Act 1
  3. Parsifal: Act 1 Transformation scene
  4. Parsifal: Prelude to Act 3
  5. Parsifal: Good Friday Music
  6. Das Rheingold: Entrance of the Gods
  7. Die Walkure: Ride of the Walkyries
  8. Siegfried: Forest murmurs
  9. Gotterdammerung: Siegfried's Rhine Journey
  10. Gotterdammerung: Siegfried's Funeral March

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A well-kept secret.......2007-05-18

Everyone wants to have a crack at the "bleeding chunks" eventually, and while I love the flashier Stoky and Furtwangler approach, I wouldn't want to be without the Boult. He's a great Wagnerian, strange as it may seem. Who could blame him for not wanting to go down in history merely as the finest Holstian? As long as this stays in print, Ormandy will still be considered the least sexy conductor. (I heard CBS researchers found an Ormandy fan once!)

5 out of 5 stars Essential Wagner.......2006-06-17

As a child, this set was my first experience of Wagner's music, and it made quite an impression on me. However, as I grew older and began to collect the full operas I felt I could surely do better than Adrian Boult and the British for a collection of the preludes, overtures, and orchestral music from the operas. I was wrong. I have yet to here any recordings that can match the power and intensity as demonstrated in these discs from Boult and the LSO (and LPO). The Meistersinger prelude alone is worth the price, and the only version of the prelude to Tristan which outdoes the one here is Bohm's live 1966 Tristan. The Solti, Karajan, and Klemperer highlight discs have their moments (and truthfully, I do prefer Solti and Karajan for the "Ring" highlights), but their contributions are greatest in the full operas, and overall, they simply can't muster the power and intensity that Boult brings to these preludes, overtures, etc.

Even if you have other compilations of Wagner's music in "bleeding chunks", I can assure you they don't come close to this one; and with two discs (the second containing mostly music from Parsifal and the "Ring") at 14 bucks, there is absolutely no excuse not to have this essential recording. So go ahead and buy this disc, never buy another Wagner compilation again, and with the money you save get started on the more important task at hand: the full operas.

5 out of 5 stars Excellent Wagner from a surprising source ... or maybe not!.......2004-09-27

Does Sir Adrian Boult conjure up of images of Gustav Holst and Ralph Vaughn Williams, but not Wagner? You're not alone! Nevertheless, this is a double CD set not to be missed! Many years ago, I was listening to a classical radio music station in NYC that was playing the music of Wagner. The performance was so good, that I wouldn't leave the radio until I found out the name of the conductor. When the announcer said the conductor was Sir Adrian Boult, I was quite surprised. I had recordings of English music from Sir Adrian on Angel/EMI, but I never associated that conductor with Wagner. Having been blessed with a friend who had knowledge of classical music way beyond his years, I gave him a call to find out more about the recording. He told me that, Boult had solid expertise in the area of Germanic music, but, in England, had been overshadowed in that repertoire by Otto Klemperer. He told me not to be surprised about Boult's very fine Wagner, it was an excellent recording to purchase and, indeed, search out Sir Adrian's wonderful performance of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony (now available on Vanguard). Fast-forward many years and I find myself browsing through Amazon for a recording of Wagner's Overtures and Preludes. Like everyone else I know, I foolishly jettisoned my LPs in the 1990s and have been "back-filling" ever since. Well, I was able to obtain this splendid set for less than $7 per CD! There are a total of 18 selections covering most of Wagner's operas including five excerpts from the Ring Cycle. The performances are excellent coming from no less than three British orchestras, and the sound is top-shelf EMI. Sir Adrian's pacing is measured and his vision is broad and sensitive, highlighting the beauty and grandeur --rather than just the fire-- of this glorious music. I heartily recommend this two-CD set, and at this price, I think it's a steal.

5 out of 5 stars Go For Boult.......2003-07-08

Sir Adrian Boult is best known for his recordings of the British repertoire, and his performances, particularly of Holst's "The Planets" and Elgar's Symphonies and Orchestral Works, are legendary. But Boult was also an excellent conductor of Beethoven, Brahms and Wagner, and this 2-CD set collects the Overtures and Preludes of the latter German titan. These stereo recordings from the early to mid-1970s with the New Philharmonia Orchestra, and London Philharmonic and Symphony Orchestras are truly first rate. EMI's set compares nicely in terms of price, quality and musical offerings with competing sets by DG (Bohm, Kubelik, et al) and Sony (Ormandy & Szell). You might have reservations about getting German music conducted by a Brit, but you really can't go wrong with Boult.

4 out of 5 stars Memorable and dramatic- A must have for Wagner fans.......2000-03-20

I bought this cd for the following reasons: 1 I'm a Wagner fan, 2 the cover looks exquisite and 3 I wanted to hear a "prelude" since it sounds fancy and never heard one. The result is great cd. The Tannhauser overture, Tristan and Isolde prelude and Lohengrin Prelude to act 3 are all very excellent. Excerpts from the Ring of the Nibelunge aren't as good as I had anticipated but are still enjoyable. The music speaks the tales of Wagner's operas. Just hear it, as slow and irksome as they maybe, these preludes make you feel the tragic love of Tristan and Isolde, the epic odyssey of Lohengrin and the holy, heavenly spirit in Parsifal as he discovers the Holy Grail. Buy this CD and you won't regret it. Except that one bit from Gotterdammerung, Siegfried's Funeral March. It does'nt quite have the feel of grand disaster as it did in John Boorman's film Excalibur. If you're hoping to find that version(which is better) stick with the Classics Go To The Movies Vol 2 cd. But all the other pieces on this CD are excellent. Go and buy this CD- now !
Richard Strauss: Four Last Songs
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • A Fine addition to the Strauss catalog.
  • Not a desert island recording
  • EUREKA, I've found out what is lacking.....
  • Another one bites the dust
  • Marvellous Salome
Richard Strauss: Four Last Songs

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B000MV93EG
Release Date: 2007-05-08

Tracks:

  1. Letzte Szene: "Ah! Du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund"
  2. Mondscheinmusik
  3. Letzte Szene: "Morgen mittag um elf!"
  4. Frühling (Hermann Hesse)
  5. September (Hermann Hesse)
  6. Beim Schlafengehn (Hermann Hesse)
  7. Im Abendrot (Joseph von Eichendorff)

Amazon.com

This gifted Swedish soprano, rapturously praised internationally in Wagner, is clearly eager to stake a claim in Strauss. She has the necessary vocal strength, wide range, fine musicianship, clear textual delivery, and flexibility. But listen to legendary benchmarks of Strauss singing (Ljuba Welitsch in the Salome scene, Elisabeth Schwarzkopf or Lisa della Casa in the other material on this disc) and you'll hear voices of pristine timbre and absolute steadiness, both of which Stemme lacks; her vibrato might be less intrusive in the theater, but on records it consistently puts her at a disadvantage, especially in Strauss. Even if the Salome finale offers a certainly amount of feverish excitement, throughout the program the singing generally wants variety of color. With the Capriccio Countess, the line-by-line specificity for this demanding characterization - above all, the lady's abundant charm - is conspicuously missing. Likewise, phrase after phrase of the Four Last Songs lacks profile, and here the vibrato prevents Stemme from achieving the serenity so crucial to this sublime music. EMI provides fine supporting singers (but why weren't the Capriccio Majordomo's opening lines included?) and a splendid Strauss orchestra, that of London's Royal Opera House, elegantly led by music director Antonio Pappano. --Roger Pines

Album Description

Tracklisting:

Richard Strauss- Songs & Scenes
Salome
(Hedwig Lachmann after Oscar Wilde)
1. Letzte Szene: "Ah! Du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund"

Capriccio (Clemens Krauss/Richard Strauss)
2. Mondscheinmusik
3. Letzte Szene: "Morgen mittag um elf!"

Four Last Songs
4. Frühling (Hermann Hesse)
5. September (Hermann Hesse)
6. Beim Schlafengehn (Hermann Hesse)
7. Im Abendrot (Joseph von Eichendorff)

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars A Fine addition to the Strauss catalog........2007-07-23

For her debut solo recital disc on the EMI label, dramatic soprano wunderkind chose to record Richard Strauss' "Four Last Songs" along with the final scenes from "Salome" and "Cappricio." Hearing Ms. Stemme perform these is a revelation, and she demonstrates why no one else can do quite what she does. Her performance here is stellar, dramatic, and, perhaps, unmatched by any of her peers. Ms. Stemme is able to move from that bombastic and dramatic final scene from "Salome" to the pensive and stately final scene from "Cappricio" with ease. Moving from a vengeful teenage girl to a wiser, elegant Countess and then into the "Four Last Songs," she uncovers the dramatic tension of each piece with care, allowing each piece to build, as her rich, powerful soprano voice caresses each note. The booklet accompanying the CD includes an introductory essay on Richard Strauss and his music by Michael Tanner, song texts, and translations in German and French. Unfortunately, no artist biographies or notes from Ms. Stemme are included. Considering that these pieces have been recorded so often, this release is a welcome breath of fresh air. Nina Stemme's recording is a more than fine addition to the Strauss catalog that no lover of the soprano voices should be without. (RTS) This review appeared at OperaOnline.us

3 out of 5 stars Not a desert island recording.......2007-07-12

This is not a recording to take to that desert island, if you can only pack the essentials. Nina's voice is okay but with the recordings of Jesse Norman and Kiri Te Kanawa still very much in-print, why bother with this one. Nina sounds like a Bayreuth house soprano and her rendition is in no way startling or original. Just adequate. Skip this recording and buy one of the other two.

4 out of 5 stars EUREKA, I've found out what is lacking............2007-06-24

Timbre is to the voice what French Silk is to chocolate pudding; the difference between rich cream and skim milk, it is texture, depth and perspective, and sheen. Nina Stemme does not have the finer of those qualities, but she is not alone.

She seems to me the hope for tomorrow, so low is her tone, firm her committment, and classic her appearance - even if not on this cover. Her singing is very musical, but I don't hear beauty - the production is too narrow and this works for Wagner but not Strauss. Her phrasing is straight - very little variance and again - Wagnerian, not Strauss. Ideally, the portamento and a floating vibrato free tone (ethereal) are two of the hallmarks of Strauss singing. The most fine singer of these wonderful songs - to me - will always be the late Elizabeth Schwarzkopf but Rene Kollo (tenor) also recorded them. His Abendrot is very touchingly sung. But Nina Stemme brings her own touch that validates this attempt. Any singer who attempts Four Last Songs is brave indeed, not only for attempting the difficult music, but for the grand tradition preceeding them.

Somehow, Nina Stemme seems more serious than the airy prima donnas of the past 10 years - Fleming and Angela Alagna come to mind first -- also this young Russian woman (her name escapes me). Stemme is a classic woman, knowing, practical - she is a prima donna, an authentic opera singer - very far from Church, Bocelli, and those pop-classical people (where are they now?) --- she is the beginning of a new practical era where the Art is the measure of productivity - not the Spin Meister.

Brava Nina!!!

4 out of 5 stars Another one bites the dust.......2007-05-25

I could not believe it when I picked up this disc in my local music store to see my favourite music by Strauss on one CD. The first thing I thought is how is Nina Stemme going to pull off each of these selections. The answer is unfortunately, much to my expectations, she excels in the Salome scene, while the remainder of the CD shows her to a bit of a disadvantage. She sings the Countess's Final Scene music well enough, but just like the 4 Last Songs, she lacks the inner-most feeling and cannot penetrate the music like Fleming or Schwarzkopf. Her vibrato also seems to get in the way of most of the music, although it seems to work better in the Salome Final Scene than anywhere else. Pappano and ROH Orchestra provide worthy accompaniment.

4 out of 5 stars Marvellous Salome.......2007-05-24

Stemme makes a most dramatic, marvellous interpretation, one of the best I have ever heard, of the final scene of Salome. The sheer power in her voice points forward to Elektra and Brünnhilde. And the orchestra is in top form. The reason why I do not give this record five stars is to be found in the final scene from Capriccio. Stemme seems not quite to understand the deeps of this role. The best recording ever made of this scene is done by Elisabeth Söderström, CBE - also on EMI.