| 1. All for Nothing |
| 2. Manifest Destiny |
| 3. Gone Too Long |
| 4. Do the Dream |
| 5. Shut-Up! |
| 6. Modern World |
| 7. Think for Yourself |
| 8. Slumlord |
| 9. Dead in a Ditch |
| 10. Suit and Tie Guy |
| 11. Man Unkind |
Four of a Kind,D.R.I.,Restless Records,American Underground,Hardcore Punk,Heavy Metal,Pop,Popular Music,Punk Metal,Rock,Thrash
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Songs of Free Men/ A Paul Robeson Recital
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000029YJ Release Date: 1997-12-09 |
Tracks:
- Balm in Gilead
- Chassidic Chant
- Quiet Flows The Don: From Border To Border
- Quiet Flows The Don: Oh, How Proud Our Quiet Don
- Elijah, Op. 70: The Lord God Of Abraham
- The Purest Kind Of Guy
- Joe Hill
- The Peat-Bog Soldiers
- The Four Insurgent Generals
- Native Land
- Song Of The Plains
- Cradle Song
- Within Four Walls
- By An' By
- Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child
- John Henry
- Water Boy
- My Curly Headed Baby
- Mah Lindy Lou
- Wagon Wheels
- The House I Live In
- Showboat: I Still Suits Me
- Sylvia
- Showboat: Ol' Man River
- Porgy And Bess: It Ain't Necessarily So
Amazon.com
There was nothing like the Robeson sound, ever. To describe his deep, rich, perfectly equalized instrument is futile. Go instead to "Balm in Gilead," the opening track, and see if you can listen to the last pianissimo phrase without falling to pieces. Robeson was at his best when the music was slow and the words contained spiritual or social messages. Faster, lighter fare like Kern's "I Still Suits Me" or Gershwin's "It Ain't Necessarily So" find the serious-minded singer out of his element, lacking irony and swing. "Old Man River," though, gets a simple, dignified treatment. It's Songs of Free Men, though, that will just keep Robeson's artistry rolling along, especially in Sony's astonishing transfers. --Jed DistlerCustomer Reviews:
Robeson on wax.......2007-06-19
The voice, the sound quality and the interpretation.......2004-09-24
A Voice from the 40s, often dated, often moving.......2002-09-01
No one need have any fears about the mono sound quality. The orchestra in the second half of the program is at times a little dwarfed by Robeson's voice, but it generally sounds clean and colorful, and the great artist's voice rings like no other.
Robeson at his best.......2000-05-12
In response to a previous question: Robeson's performance of Danny Boy (Londonderry Air) can be found on the Vanguard LP entitled "Robeson" (VRS-9037).
some of the greatest songs of the last century.......2000-05-05
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Strauss: Four Last Songs/12 Orchestral Songs
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000GCAE Release Date: 1999-01-12 |
Tracks:
- Four Last Songs, Op. Posth.: Fruhling
- Four Last Songs, Op. Posth.: September
- Four Last Songs, Op. Posth.: Beim Schlafengehem
- Four Last Songs, Op. Posth.: Im Abendrot
- 12 Songs: Mutterandelei, Op. 43, No. 2
- 12 Songs: Waldseligkeit, Op. 49, No. 1
- 12 Songs: Zueignung, Op. 10, No. 1
- 12 Songs: Freundliche Vision, Op. 48, No. 1
- 12 Songs: Die Heiligen Drei Konige, Op. 56, No. 6
- 12 Songs: Rube, Meine Seele, Op. 27, No. 1
- 12 Songs: Meinem Kinde, Op. 37, No. 3
- 12 Songs: Wiegenlied, Op. 41, No. 1
- 12 Songs: Morgen, Op. 27, No. 4
- 12 Songs: Das Bachlein, Op. 88, No. 1
- 12 Songs: Die Rosenbande, Op. 36, No. 1
- 12 Songs: Winterweihe, Op. 48, No. 4
Amazon.com
Elisabeth Schwarzkopf was one of those singers whom one either loves or hates. She was a "stylist," who inflected every phrase, every note in her urge to communicate what she considered to be the meaning of the text. Others feel that the only thing she communicated was her own need to impress people with her ability to communicate, and I believe she often forgot the difference between art and artfulness. Be that as it may, she was an outstanding Strauss singer, and her performance of the Four Last Songs, in particular, is legendary. Of course, having George Szell on the podium doesn't hurt either. He insures that the music shows the singer in the best possible light. --David HurwitzCustomer Reviews:
This is just a review of the transfer and booklet.......2007-03-30
I think the transfer is excellent, removing a surprising amount of murk from a 1991 version (I think). In fact, I'm wondering if some distortion hasn't been removed as well, at least in the voice. As for Szell & his orchestras, their playing sounds fresher and lovelier than ever. Instrumental placement in the sound image seems more firm, and details are more clear.
As for the booklet, well, EMI is not one for documentation, and it should be ashamed of itself for wasting our time in the middle of the song texts with ads for their other recordings. However, yes, the texts for these songs are all there, and that is a minor miracle.
So yes, this is a no-brainer purchase. In my view, the improved sound quality does merit purchasing it if one's transfer is prior to 1997.
A wiser Schwarzkopf in one of her best latter recordings.......2006-11-04
Schwarzkopf was in her fifties when she recorded these works, and there is a lot to be said for the mature, knowing performance from a soprano voice of that age. It speaks of life's joys and heartaches, and a heart still longing for youthful romance. I seriously doubt that anyone will ever fully eclipse Elisabeth's sheer dramatic intensity in this recording. She transforms herself back into a young girl, yet still retains the dramatic use of her maturity.
This recording has been remastered using Abbey Road's Prism SNS system, which gives the recording a natural soundscape, free of annoying echo or reverb, allowing Schwarzkopf's voice to come forth with astonishing clarity. Simply, it's the best this recording has ever sounded. A bargain price too.
[EMI Classics 7243 5 66908 2 0]
HEAVENLY.......2006-09-14
Schwarzkopf and Szell Team Up For An Incandescent Strauss Record.......2006-09-09
There have been plenty of great versions of the Four Last Songs since Schwarzkopf, the likes of Gundula Janowitz with Herbert Von Karajan and especially the spectacular Jessye Norman with Kurt Masur, yet the Schwarzkopf account can still match any other version in the catalogue for sheer beauty, the tender articulation of words and deep understanding of the music. Jessye Norman surpasses Elizabeth Schwarzkopf for operatic splendour and voluptousness of sound so you definitely need to get that version too. Having several performances of this immortal masterwork is a must!
A thing of beauty ..........2006-02-06
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Strauss: Four Last Songs; Songs with Orchestra; Rosenkavalier Suite
Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0001TSWIW Release Date: 2004-04-20 |
Tracks:
- Fruhling
- September
- Beim Schlafengehn
- Im Abendrot
- Befreit, Op. 39 No. 4
- Muttertandelei, Op. 43 No. 2
- Wiegenlied, Op. 41 No. 1
- Waldseligkeit, Op. 49 No. 1
- Cacilie, Op. 27 No. 2
- Der Rosenkavalier, Op. 59: Suite
Customer Reviews:
One of my favorite recordings of Strauss' Four Last Songs.......2005-05-03
Magnificent!!!.......2005-02-04
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The Very Best of Elisabeth Schwarzkopf
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000AF1SC Release Date: 2003-09-02 |
Tracks:
- Ach War Ich Schon (Fidelio)
- Non So Piu (Le Nozze Di Figaro)
- Porgi, Amor (Le Nozze Di Figaro)
- E Susanna Non Vien!...Dove Sono (Le Nozze Di Figaro)
- Mi Tradi Quell'Alma Ingrata (Don Giovanni)
- Come Scoglio (Cosi Fan Tutti)
- Leise, Leise, Fromme Weise (Der Freischutz)
- Dich, Teure Halle (Tannhauser)
- Einsam In Truben Tagen (Lohengrin)
- Wie Fremd Und Tot (Die Verkaufte Braut)
- Bruderchen, Komm, Tanz Mit Mir (Hansel Und Gretel)
- Da Geht Er Hin (Der Rosenkavalier)
- Es Gibt Ein Reich (Ariadne Auf Naxos) - Richard Strauss
- Das War Sehr Gut (Arabella)
Tracks:
- Jauchzet Gott In Allen Landen
- Bist Du Bei Mir
- Ridente La Calma
- An Die Musik
- Der Musensohn
- Nachtviolen
- Der Musensohn
- Auch Kleine Dinge
- Mein Liebster Ist So Klein
- Verschling' Der Abgrund
- Ich Hab' In Penna
- Wiegenlied Im Sommer
- Mausfallenspruchlein
- In Dem Schatten Meiner Locken
- Mignon (Kennst Du Das Land?)
- Gsatzli (Swiss Folksong)
- Fruhling
- Im Abendrot
- Muttertandelei
- Zueignung
- Klange Der Heimat (Die Fledermaus)
- Es Lebt'Eine Vilja (Die Lustige Witwe)
- Im Chambre Separee (Der Opemball)
- Wien, Du Stadt Meiner Traume
Amazon.com
Elisabeth Schwarzkopf was certainly one of the greatest singers of her own, or indeed any other time. An obsessive perfectionist, her flawless technique and intonation over a huge range, vocal flexibility, breath control, phrasing, stylistic versatility, and above all her focused, radiantly beautiful sound were matchless and incomparable. All these are on full display on this generous 2-CD set, which features over a dozen arias, songs by Schubert, Wolf and Richard Strauss, and some lighter fare. The recordings were made between 1950 and 1967, and the singing becomes better and better, the voice richer and more varied, the expression deeper and more immediate. Not surprisingly, the peaks come in the arias from her signature roles in Mozart's Figaro, Don Giovanni, and Cosi fan tutte; Richard Strauss' Ariadne, Rosenkavalier, and Arabella, which rise to real ecstasy; and arias from Weber's Freischütz and Smetana's Bartered Bride, which are wonderfully intimate and touching. She is less convincing in roles she never sang on stage, and the "childish" voice she cultivated especially for Hänsel and Gretel is unnatural and contrived. The same is true of the last two "popular" numbers, which sound condescending and artificial. The songs, however, have all her customary finesse and inwardness; the Wolf group, perhaps chosen for its gentle humor, is charming, while Strauss' "Four Last Songs" (represented by two) shimmer and soar. Schwarzkopf's singing had instantly recognizable characteristics: a tendency to hold back both vocally and emotionally, giving a sense of noble restraint, but also of cool detachment; excessive use of color and nuance, creating a fussy, calculated and somewhat artificial air. Only rarely does she "let go" with full voice and spontaneous feeling. However, as these recordings show, she invariably inspires admiration and captures ear and heart through the inimitable, glorious beauty of her voice. --Edith EislerCustomer Reviews:
Fine anthology but still prefer her "Four Last Songs" recording.......2006-11-06
RIP DAME ELIZABETH (1915-2006).......2006-08-04
SCHWARZKOPF ----- ONE OF THE GREATS OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY.......2006-01-29
¡PERFECT!.......2005-02-10
PERFECTA INTERPRETACIÓN.......2005-02-09
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Four of a Kind, Music for Trombone Quartet
Manufacturer: Summit(Classical) ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000038IV Release Date: 1994-01-06 |
Tracks:
- Achieved Is The Glorious Work
- Fugue In D Minor
- Andante
- Poco Adagio
- Poco Sostenuto
- Intrada
- Canone
- Interludium
- Corale
- Intermezzo
- Arietta
- Toccatina
- Ave Maria
- Part I
- Part II
- Part III
- Canzona
- Dieu! Qu'il La Fait Bon Regarder!
- Quant J'Ai Ouy Le Tabourin
- Yver, Vous N'estes Qu'un Villain
- Die Nachtigall
- Langsamer Satz
- Moderato Maestoso
- Andantino
- Minuetto
- Choral
- Scherzo
- No More Blues
Customer Reviews:
A must-have album for trombonists.......2002-12-27
Definitely worth buying........2000-05-05
These guys are trombone studs!.......1999-11-21
A must-buy for any trombone or brass enthusiast!.......1999-09-23
Superb! Fantastic! Perfect!.......1999-03-12
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Gwendolyn and the Good Time Gang
Gwendolyn & The Good Time Gang Manufacturer: Whispersquish ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00009VPH1 Release Date: 2003-05-27 |
Tracks:
- Farm Animal Friends
- Please
- The Selfish Shellfish
- You Can Be Anything
- Freedom Of The Heart (Ooodily, Ooodily)
- Scrub, Scrub, Scrub
- Come Join Hands
- Anatomy
- I Don't Think I Like It
- Wee Wee Beastie
- Little Monkey
- Beddie Bye
Album Description
Gwendolyn imagined what kind of music she'd like to hear if she was four again and out came the nutty, irresistibly playful tunes of Gwendolyn and the Good Time Gang!The Good Time Gang sounds different than most children's music due to Gwendolyn's refreshing anything-goes attitude towards music. This approach allows her to break through the standard nursery rhyme formula, and create a new sound kids respond to immediately. Using her natural ability to do voices, she developed a variety of characters who help sing along. Together, they take their listeners on a silly-willy adventure through music learning and childhood fun. The mood is both nurturing and spontaneous as well as goofy and sweet. Best of all, the songs help children learn more about the world around them. "The Selfish Shellfish," for example, tells a tale of why sharing is important. "Farm Animal Friends" imitates the crazy noises of barnyard critters like roosters, cows, ducks, hens, sheep, pigs and horses. Other songs include lessons in manners, making new friends, and the tune "Scrub, Scrub, Scrub" even makes taking a bath seem like a whooping good time!
Music is an ideal outlet for children and Gwendolyn and the Good Time Gang is a perfect way to entertain children ages 2 through 6 while teaching them valuable skills. Better yet, the songs are performed in a manner parents can enjoy with their children! Whatever age you are, Gwendolyn and the Good Time Gang is sure to put a smile on your face.
Customer Reviews:
My kids LOVE, LOVE, LOVE Gwendolyn.......2006-01-28
Very cute!.......2005-09-06
My kids liked this CD.......2005-07-24
*GREAT* music for kids!.......2005-06-25
just magical.......2005-06-23
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Wagner: The Best of the Ring
Manufacturer: Philips ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000041EJ Release Date: 1996-04-09 |
Tracks:
- Das Rheingold: Prelude
- Das Rheingold - Scene One: Weia! Waga! Woge, du Welle!
- Das Rheingold - Scene One: Garstig glatter glitschriger Glimmer
- Das Rheingold - Scene One: Wallala! Lalaleia! Leialei!
- Das Rheingold - Scene Four: Bin ich nun frei?
- Das Rheingold - Scene Four: Schwules Gedunst schwebt In der Luft
- Das Rheingold - Scene Four: Zur Burg Fuhrt die Brucke
- Das Rheingold - Scene Four: Rheingold! Rheingold!
- Die Walkure - Act One: Prelude
- Die Walkure - Act One, Scene 3: Wintersturme wichen dem Wonnemond
- Die Walkure - Act One, Scene Three: Wehwalt heisst du furwahr? Siegmund heiss ich
- Die Walkure - Act II: Prelude to Act II
- Die Walkure - Act II, Scene Four: Siegmund! sieh auf mich!
- Die Walkure - Act II, Scene Four: Du sahest der Walkure sehrenden Blick
- Die Walkure - Act III, Scene One: Hojotoho! Heiaha!
Tracks:
- Die Walkure - Act III, Scene Three: Leb wohl, du k herrliches Kind!
- Die Walkure - Act III, Scene 3: Loge, hLausche hieher!
- Siegfried - Act I, Scene 3: Hoho! Hoho! Hohei!
- Siegfried - Act I, Scene 3: Den der Bruder schuf, den schimmernden Reif!
- Siegfried - Act II, Scene 2: Aber, wie sah meine Mutter wohl aus?
- Siegfried - Act II, Scene 2: Du holdes Vin! Dich hort' ich noch nie
- Siegfried - Act II, Scene 2: Es schweigt und lauscht
- Siegfried - Act II, Scene 2: Siegfrieds Horn-call
- Die Walkure - Act III, Scene 3: Ewig war ich, ewig bin ich
- Gotterdammerung - Prologue: Orchestral Interlude
- Gotterdammerung - Act III, Scene 2: Brde, heilige Braut
- Gotterdammerung - Act III, Scene 2: Orchestral Interlude: Funeral March
- Gotterdammerung - Act III, Scene 3: Starke Scheite schichtet mir dort
- Gotterdammerung - Act III, Scene 3: Mein Erbe nun nehm ich zu eigen
- Gotterdammerung - Act III, Scene 3: Grane, mein Ross, sei mir gegr
- Gotterdammerung - Act III, Scene 3: Zurm Ring
Customer Reviews:
The Best Ring Intro and Highlights Recording.......2006-03-23
Gustav Neidlinger (baritone, Alberich) Theo Adam (baritone, Wotan) Wolfgang Windgassen (tenor, Loge) Annelies Burmeister (mezzo-soprano, Fricka) Hermin Esser (soprano Froh) Ruth Hesse (soprano Flosshilde) Helga Dernesch (soprano Wellgunde) Dorothea Siebert (soprano, Woglinde)
DIE WALKURE: James King (tenor, Siegmund) Leonie Rysanek (soprano, Sieglende) Theo Adam (Wotan) Birgit Nilsson (soprano, Brunhilde) Danica Mastilovic (soprano, Fricka) Sieglende Wagner (soprano, Schwertleite) Liane Synek (soprano, Helmwige) and the Valkyries Elisabeth Schartel (Grimgerde) and Anneliese Burmister (Siegrunde)
SIEGFRIED: Wolgang Windgassen (Siegfried) Birgit Nilsson (Brunhilde) Erwin Wohlfahrt (Mime)
GOTTERDAMMERUNG: Wolfgang Windgassen (Siegfried) Birgit Nilsson (Brunhilde) Josef Greindl (bass-baritone, Hagen)...* Conductor Karl Bohm, Bayreuth Festival Orchestra
If you're already an opera fan but have not yet discovered Wagner and wish to be introduced to his biggest most famous opera cycle- Der Ring Des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelungs) then this CD is one you should definately own. From live performances at Bayreuth on July of 1967, these same operas are available on seperate CD's and on a box set from the Phillips label. With a cast of brilliant, experienced Wagnerian singers such as baritone Theo Adam (Odin) soprano Birgit Nilsson (Brunhilde) and tenor Wolfgang Windgassen (Siegfried) you can't go wrong with this set. These singers represent a style of Wagnerian singing that no singer alive today can measure up to. Powerful, invective yet lyrical, passionate voices are equally in balance with dramatic acting. They lived their roles so that everytime I hear the Ring operas, I can't think of a greater Brunhilde than the unbeatable Birgit Nilsson or a greater Odin than that of Theo Adam. Maestro Karl Bohm was a prominent Wagner conductor and a Bayreuth icon in the 60's. He allowed enough natural "fresh air" for his singers, and the orchestra never truly drowns out their voices nor becomes overpowering. Nevertheless, Bohm provides the score, layered with dozens of leitmotifs, with spirituality, grandeur, nobility and the typical Wagnerian fatalism. Bohm understood Wagner more than any other conductor of his time. Although the George Solti studio Ring set is largely considered the greatest, I think this set is possibly better. There is more of a sense of tradition in this recording, since, after all, these are Bayreuth performances. The music and singingremains true to Wagner's original concept and this is not a "conductor's Ring" it is truly Wagner's Ring. The Ring of the Nibelung can become a complex, overanalyzed work of music but beneath its many layers it is an epic panorama of heroes, gods and villains. Its theme is the folly of man in his greedy lust for power, as represented by the titular ring.
Das Rheingold: The first opera deals with the greedy, deformed dwarf Alberich, who foresaking any chance of ever finding love, steals the Gold of the Rhine River from the Rhinemaidens. Baritone Gustav Neidlinger is possibly the greatest interpretor of Albrecht. This is a baritone role that is not in any way meant to be sung beautifully. Neidlinger sounds harsh and ugly, he is in full character. The music for Alberich is equally ugly and dissonant. In contrast, the Rhinemaidens are sung by beautiful, lyric sopranos who must evoke youthfulness, playfulness and a slight sexual flirtation. Their music is at first playful and flirty but after the gold is stolen, their song becomes a lament and remains melancholy in consequent motifs even up to Gotterdammerung when they reappear to reclaim their stolen gold from "the ashes of Brunhilde's Immolation". Donner, the Bridge Keeper of Valhalla, is a high bass who must step up to the exclamations of "Heda! Heda Hedo!", one of the great scenes in this opera, in which the gods enter the newly built glittering palace called Valhalla. But Odin, king of the gods, and suposed god of oaths, has broken his own oath (he promised the spring goddess Freya to the Giants who built Valhalla but didn't keep his word) And the tragedy is set in motion......
Die Walkure: In tenor and soprano James King and Leonie Rysanek, we get the most dramatic and golden Siegmund and Sieglende. More than others who have sung this romantic pair, King and Rysanek become involved, even lost in the music of their characters and are by far the most passionate interpretors. First of all, James King was endowed with a huge, heroic voice so perfect for Wagner. He is also featured in the Solti studio Ring recording but here, he is in better shape and sings with intensity, vocal heft and dramatic prowess. Also, his Siegmund is romantically sung, as if he could just as easily be a Verdi hero. His German diction never falters and he has command of the voice and melodic line. He passed away recently and left behind numerous recordings, including a Parsifal he recorded late in his career, which is still quite amazing. Leonie Rysanek actually screams out during the Love Duet in which Siegmund shows her his great sword Nothung. She was made famous not only for that hair-raising scream but for her powerful, dramatic voice and her first-rate performances as Strauss' Salome (also under Karl Bohm) Elektra and Verdi's Lady Macbeth which she first sang as a replacement to an ill and indisposed Maria Callas. Rysanek died of cancer in the mid 90's, and she was still singing then. In Die Walkure, we are first introduced to Odin's daughter, the lead Valkyrie goddess Brunhilde (she's the gal in the winged helmet, wielding a spear and flying on a horse). Birgit Nilsson owned this role, no doubt about it. Long after she had retired, she could still belt out the Hojo-to-hos (Valkyrie War Cries). She identified with Brunhilde's Nordic roots (Nilsson was born in Sweden) and she understood Wagner and dramatic German opera. All her huge successes were in German opera- Salome, Elektra most notably. She is also the Brunhilde of Solti's ring but here she is singing a hell of a lot better and she isn't overpowered by the Vienna Phil and its gargantuan musical forces. At the end of the opera, Odin punishes Brunhilde for sympathizing with the lovers Siegmund and Sieglende and saving Sieglende (pregnant with Siegfried). She is to sleep inside a ring of fire on a mountain or rock and only a great hero can awaken her and claim her as his bride. Theo Adam as Wotan is by far the best. He has a huge voice and is able to stir our emotions as he bids his daughter farewell in that great final scene.
Siegfried and Gotterdammerung: The son of Siegmund and Sieglende, he grows up not knowing his heritage as a hero. He discovers Nothung, his father's sword, kills Mime, yet another greedy, power-hungry dwarf and slays the dragon Fafner. He is now able to communicate and bond with nature as one of his special powers. He confronts Odin himself and saves Brunhilde from her nearly eternal sleep. Wolfgang Windgassen sang in the old-school Wagnerian tenor style which meant he had the "Bayreuth bark". He could throw his voice high above the big Wagnerian orchestra but it was a voice that was in no way attractive or emotional. It was cold and at times too harsh. But he is the only tenor to truly master the difficult role of Siegfried. Nowadays, some tenors can either sing the Siegfried of Siegfried or the Siegfried in Gotterdammerung, but rarely can they sing both like Windgassen. In addition, Windgassen achieved success in other Wagner heroic roles like Tristan and Tannhauser. In Gotterdammerung (Twilight of the Gods), Wagner's music has never been more fatalistic. Siegfried bids farewell to Brunhilde and sets out on an adventure down the Rhine river. He is captured by the vindictive and evil Gibechung giants, drugged and forced to wed Gutrune. And it gets worse. The Gibechungs also kidnap Brunhilde and force her to marry one of the giants. Eventually, Siegfried is slain by the cruel giant Hagen. The last minutes of singing are left to Brunhilde (it aint over till the fat lady sings). And what great singing it is. In the Immolation Scene, Brunhilde orders for a funeral pyre to be made for Siegfried. She curses the gods for breaking their oaths, declares that the end is near and summons Grane her old Valkyrie horse. Straddling him, she leaps into the funeral pyre and brings about the Ragnarok- the end of the gods. Valhalla is consumed by a firestorm, the Rhine overfloods and the world of man is destroyed. Birgit Nilsson's high, heroic voice has never sounded better in this scene.
Affordable price, great music, great singing. Please don't hesitate to get this recording if you are interested in hearing The Ring the way it should be sung and if you wish to get only chunks and pieces from an otherwise long 4 opera cycle. Enjoy!!
Incredible, even if only highlights.......2004-12-20
This is a masterful choosing of highlights and they work to present the work as a whole in a wonderful way. When one then buys the entire ring, there are going to be many wonderful parts now fully appreciated and loved that will come up and the work will not seen as long.
For those of us who love Wagner, well, there are days we don't wish to get out all the CD's of each opera to listen to the few scenes we want to hear, and this highlight set is great to hear those moments that one would find exciting to hear when not in the mood to listen to the whole. The only scene I would have added, because it is exciting and good to listen to, is the oath scene (trio between Gunther, Hoggan, and Brunhilde) that ends Act 2 of Gotterdammerung. It is quite exciting and makes a wonderful contrast to the orchestra of the Rhine Journey that begins the Gotterdammerung highlights and the death of Siegfried which on the highlights follows the Rhine Journey. I know only so much can fit on a CD, but one could have begun that trio with the words "Siegfried's Todd" sung by Gunther and then the trio would not have been so long.
However, great introduction of a massive work.
Highlights From The Classic Live Performance.......2003-12-30
This classic recording has value, even if it is the highlights and excerpts from the operas. There is a full recording in its entirety with Karl Bohm conducting and with the same singers- Birgit Nilsson as Brunhilde, Wolfgang Windgassen as Siegfried, Leonie Rysanek as Sieglende, James King as Siegmund and Theo Adam as Wotan, king of the gods. These singers were regarded as the best interpretors of their day. Certainly, Birgit Nilsson was born to sing Brunhilde. She has all the drama just in her voice. The inflection is dramatic, her stage presence was commanding, and a voice that even Maria Callas would kill for. Maria Callas sang Brunhilde once in the 40's, but it was never good nor became her signature role. Callas was primarily an Italian singer and she had complications singing German. In Callas' day, Kirsten Flagstad was the reigning Brunhilde interpretor. But Birgit Nilsson's voice far surpasses even Flagstad. Birgit Nilsson has all the heigh notes, the passion, the fire and the Wagnerian touch to a fine art. Theo Adam makes a superb Wotan- imperious, commanding, greedy, regial. His voice was well-trained in German and in the art of Wagner music drama. The same applies to James King, a top-notch German heldentenor who made such roles as Siegfried and Theseus (from Strauss' Ariadne) his own.
To sing Wagner is no walk in the park. Only the best heldentenors and Wagnerian soprano divas are employed in this recording. Among them the diva Leonie Rysanek, whose vocals and theatrics on stage was always to her advantage. Here she sings the role of Sieglende- Siegfried's mother and wife of Siegmund. In her dramatic duet with Siegmund, Leonie Rysanek heightens the drama of the moment by actually SCREAMING. It's brilliant. It was well known that Rysanek would always scream her lines when warranted. She has sung other heavy German repertoire- such as Strauss' Salome.
Karl Bohm has been criticized for overemphasizing the music, for directing at lightning speed and making a "sloppy", disappointing score for Wagner's Ring. Most fans of the Ring favor George Solti, who was the first to produce the first studio recording of the Ring. Still others prefer Furtwangler, who was a native German and who knew the music so well because for a long time he had been associated with Wagner's descendant family who operate the Bayreuth Festival Opera House. But Karl Bohm, despite his failure in some portions, has his moments. His strength lies in conducting Gotterdammerung's final scene- the Immolation and end of the world. Brunhilde, the last bearer of the cursed ring, has lost her beloved Siegfried to death by traitorous murderer- giants, curses the gods and commits suicide by throwing herself into Siegfrie'ds funeral pyre. The curse of the ring is lifted, the palace of the gods in Vallhalla is consumed in a devastating fire and the world is flooded by the overflowing Rhine river.
The theme of the Ring is not too complicated to understand. In much the same vein as J.R.R. Tolkien's "Lord of the Rings" novels, and the recent film adaptations, the curse of a powerful ring is that of corrupted power. Absolute power corrupts absolutely, in the words of philosopher John Locke. The ring, who entitled its beare to total power, was desired by everyone in the opera- from an ugly dwarf (Albrecht) who was willing to sacrifice sexual relations and love for possession of the ring. Albrecht is the instigator. Stealing the gold of the Rhine from the mermaid-like Rhinemaidens, he begins to build a mine and city under the earth. The gods of Valhalla have their own troubles- the giants who built Valhalla want to claim their promised reward- Wotan's wife, the goddess Freya. The powerful god Wotan will not accept the terms. This occurs in the first opera - Das Rhinegold (The Rhinegold). In the second installment, "Die Walkure (The Valkyrie) we are introduced to Siegmund and Sieglende. Because theirs is an illicit romance, Freya convinces Wotan to decree their deaths. But Brunhilde, Wotan's divine daughter opposes the decree and even saves the life of Sieglende who gives birth to the hero Siegfried. Brunhilde is the Valkyrie warrior woman (she is the stereotypical Wagner opera singer wearing a horned helmet , spear, shield, breast plate and battle costume. When Brunhilde's defiance is discovered, Wotan puts a spell over her. She is to sleep inside a ring of fire until the kiss of a demi-god hero awakens her. In this opera, the famous "Ride of the Valkyries" is featured, a dramatic music which has been used time and again in movies and television, most notably in the film "Apocalypse Now". In Siegfried, we follow the quest of Siegfried. He pulls his father's sword from a tree (like King Arthur does in Excalibur only Arthur pulls the sword from a stone and anvil). Siegfried, with the help of the mentor dwarf Mime, journeys into Albrecht's layer, defeats him and slays the vile dragon Falfner. Of course, he kisses Brunhilde and breaks the spell. In the last opera, Gotterdamerung or "Twilight of the Gods", the saga comes to an end when Siegfried is slain by the Gibechung giants. Brunhilde has her famous Immolation Scene and the world of mortals, and even the gods, die during the end of the world. The highlghts here include Siegfried's Rhine Jounrey and Siegfried's Funeral March (this March was used in John Boorman's Excalibur) and the concluding music.
Good introduction to the Ring; good value........2001-09-11
Nevertheless there is a need for a way to approach the Ring, to be introduced to it and to get its flavor, and this generously filled (2 hours 28 minutes of music) 2-disc set fills that requirement reasonably well. These are excerpts from all four Ring operas from live 1966-67 performances (the second Wieland Wagner production) at Bayreuth, the famed Wagner Festspielhaus in Bavaria; they are not studio recordings. They are not great performances, but they are good, capable, workmanlike ones. The sound is not the equal of the better studio recordings (like the Solti and von Karajan cycles), but it is good enough: clear and never objectionable. The conductor, Karl Bohm, was not a great Wagnerian; he gives a competent reading, favoring brisk tempos, generally lacking repose, keeping things moving along in a business-like manner, but the result is that he seems more interested in moving on to the next scene than in shaping the scene at hand to realize its full potential. His performance overall is characterized by persistent, even relentless, forward pressure. Sometimes this works, sometimes not; if he can be accused of insensitivity, of failing to make the most of his opportunities, he can't be accused of lingering, melting, dawdling, going slack. He is certainly not in the class of Solti or Furtwangler as a Wagner conductor. The notes all get played, but there is little magic fire coming from the pit here.
Most of the singers are able and well suited to their roles, and they are all singers who actually sang their roles on the operatic stage (not just in the recording studio). Outstanding are Birgit Nilsson and James King. Here is a chance to hear Nilsson, the greatest Wagnerian soprano of the second half of the twentieth century, "live" in her most celebrated role, Brunnhilde (who figures in the last three Ring operas), and that is an opportunity not to be sneezed at. She offers ringing vocal power, amplitude, stamina, with a brillliant, secure top, an unusual combination that is rarely found in Wagnerian sopranos, and she has no competition in any of the other complete sets except the Solti, where she is competing with herself. When it comes to unleashing her huge voice and letting it soar out over the potent Wagner orchestra, she has no peer, and reminds us of what great Wagnerian singing, heroic singing, used to be all about. James King is the Siegmund in Die Walkure (as he is in the Solti set), and his bright, attractive tenor and musicianly singing are a treat after the ersatz, makeshift Heldentenorizing we've usually had to make do with in Wagner since Melchior retired in 1950. Compare his singing here with the dry, threadbare, underpowered Siegfried of Wolfgang Windgassen--whose creditable performance is a triumph of professional skill over lack of natural resources--and you will see what I mean. Theo Adam as Wotan knows his stuff (he was a well-regarded Wotan) but his vocal endowment is not prepossessing either; he too, like so many Wagner singers of the post-Flagstad-Traubel-Melchior era (i.e., after 1950), is underpowered for the role.
This 2-CD set has direct, head-on competition from a similar (and similarly priced) Deutsche Grammophon 2-CD set of highlights from the Ring. The DG set is from the Karajan/Berlin Philharmonic studio recordings of the Ring operas (1967-1970). Here's how I stack up their pros and cons: The Bohm set has generally superior, more involved singing, including Nilsson as Brunnhilde, by singers who sing the same roles throughout (no switching horses in midstream, as in the Karajan, which has two different Wotans, two different Brunnhildes, and two different Siegfrieds), and who actually sang their roles in the opera house, not just in the recording studio (this is a problem with the more "artificial" Karajan set). Also, since the performances are "live," there is a certain sense of vividness, immediacy, and excitement missing in a studio recording. On the other hand, the Karajan set offers generally superior conducting and orchestral playing; his studio recording can be more note-perfect (with its opportunities for re-takes); and the sound of Karajan's set is better than that of Bohm's live performances (although still not as good as Solti's Ring, or the best more recent opera recordings).
So, between the Karajan and Bohm 2-CD Ring highlights sets, there is not a clearcut winner. To make choosing more difficult, both are priced the same and both offer very generously filled CDs (both have about two and a half hours of music). I marginally prefer the Bohm "live" performances, but I couldn't argue with anyone who listened to them both and preferred the Karajan.
Fire! Fire!.......2000-08-23
Renowned for his performances of Wagner, conductor Karl Bohm evokes fiery playing from the Bayreuth Festival Orchestra. Particularly at the climaxes, his tempi may seem too brisk for those wanting a more langorous Wagner. Nevertheless, Bohm manages to evoke the same white-hot intensity that make many of his other opera recordings riveting, with piercing horns and thunderous percussion. For opera lovers who already own other versions of Wagner's epic, this compilation may whet their appetites for buying the reasonably-priced complete set of Bohm's interpretation.
Average customer rating:
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Four of a Kind
D.R.I. Manufacturer: Restless Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000003BH3 Release Date: 1993-07-01 |
Tracks:
- All For Nothing
- Manifest Destiny
- Gone Too Long
- Do The Dream
- Shut-Up!
- Modern World
- Think For Yourself
- Slumlord
- Dead In A Ditch
- Suit And Tie Guy
- Man Unkind
Customer Reviews:
More for the memories than the music.......2007-04-21
Unassailable.......2007-01-14
This album is so damn good..........2006-06-26
......DRI
.....(_|_)
.......0
(8^\____/)
..MUSIC
Yet another fine Thrash effort from a band whose singer lived in a tree in SF.......2005-10-29
On this album they sped it up a little bit from Crossover's sometimes sluggish tendencies. Unlike the sound they went to on Thrash Zone a year later (they sounded more like Obituary than D.R.I.), this was the album where they still had it all together.
This was also the best tour to see D.R.I. on. I saw them with Kreator and Holy Terror (another excellent lost Thrash band) and the show was nothing but high energy.
You won't regret getting this album.......2005-05-30
I sold my original "4 of a Kind" LP as part of my record collection. Before this album left, I listened to it. The LP is promised so I can't keep it, so now I'm here to get a CD of it.
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The Art Of Itzhak Perlman
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002S4J Release Date: 1993-03-30 |
Tracks:
- Violin Concerto In G MInor, BWV 1056: Allegro
- Violin Concerto In G MInor, BWV 1056: Largo
- Violin Concerto In G MInor, BWV 1056: Presto
- Partita No 3, BW 1006: Preludo
- Partita No 3, BW 1006: Loure
- Partita No 3, BW 1006: Gavotte en Rondeau
- Partita No 3, BW 1006: Menuet I
- Partita No 3, BW 1006: Menuet II
- Partita No 3, BW 1006: Bourree
- Partita No 3, BW 1006: Gique
- Violin Concerto in C minor, RV 199 'Il sospetto': Allegro
- Violin Concerto in C minor, RV 199 'Il sospetto': Andante
- Violin Concerto in C minor, RV 199 'Il sospetto': Allegro
- Oboe Quartet in F, K 370: Allegro
- Oboe Quartet in F, K 370: Adagio
- Oboe Quartet in F, K 370: Rondo (Allegro)
- Violin Sonata No 3 in D minor, Op 108: Allegro
- Violin Sonata No 3 in D minor, Op 108: Adagio
- Violin Sonata No 3 in D minor, Op 108: Un poco presto e con sentimento
- Violin Sonata No 3 in D minor, Op 108: Presto agitato
Tracks:
- Suite for Violin and Orchestra in A minor, Op 10: Presto
- Suite for Violin and Orchestra in A minor, Op 10: Adagio
- Suite for Violin and Orchestra in A minor, Op 10: Temp giusto
- Violin Concerto No 1 in F sharp minor, Op 14: Allegro moderato
- Violin Concerto No 1 in F sharp minor, Op 14: Preghiera (Larghetto)
- Violin Concerto No 1 in F sharp minor, Op 14: Rondo (Allegro giocoso)
- Violin Concerto in D minor, Op 47: Allegro moderato
- Violin Concerto in D minor, Op 47: Adagio di motto
- Violin Concerto in D minor, Op 47: Allegro, ma non tanto
Tracks:
- Violin Concerto in D minor: Allegro con fermezza
- Violin Concerto in D minor: Andante sostenuto
- Violin Concerto in D minor: Allegro vivace
- Violin Concerto in D, Op 35: Moderato nobile
- Violin Concerto in D, Op 35: Romance (Andante)
- Violin Concerto in D, Op 35: Finale (Allegro assai vivace)
- Suite Italienne: I Introduzione
- Suite Italienne: Serenata
- Suite Italienne: Tarantella
- Suite Italienne: Gavotte con due variazioni
- Suite Italienne: Scherzino
- Suite Italienne: Menuetto e Finale
Tracks:
- Doyna: Donya - Various Artists
- My Yiddishe Momma - Various Artists
- The Old Folks at Home - Various Artists
- Estrellita - Various Artists
- The Rag-Time Dance - Various Artists
- Pine Apple Rag - Various Artists
- Z domoviny - Il Andantino - Various Artists
- Liebesfreud - Various Artists
- Liebeslied - Various Artists
- Vocalise, Op 34 No 14 - Various Artists
- Hungarian Dance No 1 in G minor - Various Artists
- Hungarian Dance No 2 in D minor - Various Artists
- Hungarian Dance No 7 in A - Various Artists
- Hungarian Dance No 9 in E minor - Various Artists
- Molly On The Shore - Various Artists
- Look At Him Go - Andre Previn
- Bowing and Scraping - Andre Previn
- Londonderry Air - Various Artists
- Carmen Fantasy, Op 25 - Various Artists
Customer Reviews:
Best Perlman Collection.......2004-02-28
I think this is a very nice Perlman collection...Beautiful works selected from different Musical Eras and different styles...And Mr. Perlman is very succesful in all these types of masterworks...you can easily feel the Bach's crying words...Mozart's fun...Brahms's passion...Sinding's virtuosity...Wienlawski's Romantism...Khachaturian's hurry...and Rachmaninov's sentiments....and many others...
and also Israeli Orchestra did a very good job on this performance...They are like the third hand of Perlman...They work and feel like a family...
If you are a Perlman Fan, you must have been already bought this CD...if you are not or new to this performer it is time to meet him..and it is the way to meet him...go!!!
Plenty of Perlman.......2002-03-11
Our Greatest Living Violinist.......2000-05-11
Great music from a great man........2000-01-06
Not bad. But Hilary Hanh plays Bach more beautifully.......1999-11-16
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The John Adams Earbox: A 10-CD Retrospective
Manufacturer: Nonesuch ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00001SID1 Release Date: 1999-10-19 |
Tracks:
- Lollapalooza
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Judah To Ocean
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Toot Nipple
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Dogjam
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Pavane: She's So Fine
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Rag The Bone
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Habanera
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Stubble Crotchet
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Hammer & Chisel
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Alligator Escalator
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Standchen: The Little Serenade
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances: Judah To Ocean (Reprise)
- Slonimsky's Earbox
Tracks:
- Two Fanfares For Orchestra - Tromba Lontana
- Two Fanfares For Orchestra - Short Ride In A Fast Machine
- Common Tones In Simple Time
- El Dorado - Part I. A Dream Of Gold
- El Dorado - Part II. Soledades
Tracks:
- Harmonielehre - Part I
- Harmonielehre - Part II The Anfortas Wound
- Harmonielehre - Part III Meister Eckhardt And Quackie
- Violin Concerto - Part I
- Violin Concerto - Part II Chaconne:
- Violin Concerto - Part III Toccare
Tracks:
- Chamber Sympony - Mongel Airs
- Chamber Sympony - Aria With Walking Bass
- Chamber Sympony
- Hoodo Zephyr - Tundra
- Hoodo Zephyr - Dissappointment Lake
- Hoodo Zephyr - Hoodo Zephyr
- Gnarly Buttons - The Perilous Shore
- Gnarly Buttons - Hoe-Down (Mad Cow)
- Gnarly Buttons - Put Your Loving Arms Around Me
Tracks:
- Ensemble - I Was Looking At The Ceiling And Then I Saw The Sky
- A Sermon On Romance
- Consuelo's Dream
- Mike's Song About Arresting A Particular Individual
- Tiffany's Solo
- Song About The On-Site Altercation
- Song About The Bad Boys And The News
- Your Honor My Client He's A Young Black Man
- Leila's Song; Alone (Again Or At Last)
- Three Weeks And Still I'm Outta My Mind
- Crushed By The Rock I Been Standing On
- Dewain's Song Of Liberation And Surprise
- !Este Pais! / This Country
- One Last Look At The Angel In Your Eyes
- Finale
Tracks:
- Lollapalooza
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Judah To Ocean
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Toot Nipple
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Dogjam
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Pavane: She's So Fine
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Rag The Bone
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Habenera
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Stubble Crotchet
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Hammer & Chisel
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Alligator Escalator
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Standchen: The Little Serenade
- John's Book Of Alleged Dances - Judah To Ocean (Reprise)
- Slonimsky's Earbox
Tracks:
- Harmonium - Negative Love
- Harmonium - Becuase I Could Not Stop For Death
- Harmonium - Wild Nights
- Shaker Loops - Shaking and Trambling
- Shaker Loops - Hymning Slews
- Shaker Loops - Loops and Verses
- Shaker Loops - A Final Shaking
Tracks:
- The Chairman Dances - Foxtrot For Orchestra
- Grand Pianola Music - First Movement
- Grand Pianola Music - Second Movement
- Grand Pianola Music - Third Movement: On The Dominant Divide
- Fearful Symmetries
Tracks:
- Nixon In China - Opening
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China - Landing Of The Spirit Of '76
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China - Cheers
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China - Opening
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
- Nixon In China -
Tracks:
- The Wound-Dresser
- Christian Zeal And Activity
- Five Songs - Thoreau
- Five Songs - Down East
- Five Songs - Cradle Song
- Five Songs - At The River
- Five Songs - Serenity
- Eros Piano
Amazon.com
Having earned his composing stripes after the 1960s, John Adams had the pioneering work of Steve Reich, Philip Glass, and Terry Riley close at hand as he ventured into his trade. And, while minimalism's historical continuum helps place Adams, he used Reich, Glass, and Riley (among others) only as a starting point. And here's proof: a 10-CD retrospective of nearly all Adams's recorded compositions on Nonesuch Records, the label that also issued Steve Reich 1965-1995 and Kronos Quartet: 25 Years. Adams's Harmonium, a choral work of startling energy and effervescence, appears here in a new recording, as do distillations of both The Death of Klinghoffer and Nixon in China, two path-clearing operas. Over the span of a career covered by Earbox, Adams has returned minimalism to traditional instrumental ensembles as well as to projects that at once advanced a political commentary and took that commentary back to orchestral audiences. And so, in far less time than his predecessors, Adams created works that now play like standard repertoire pieces: The Wound Dresser and Shaker Loops and the Violin Concerto--all of them are here. What these works demonstrate is a fierce creativity on the one hand and perhaps a hunger for commercial advances on the other. Adams may at times be a bustling free thinker, but he sounds ever conscious of what audiences are listening to. As for the works themselves, they remain every bit as daunting as when written.Some may object to particular selections. I Was Looking at the Ceiling and Then I Saw the Sky, for example, hardly ranks with Adams's best work. But this box isn't a mere best-of; it's an almost-all-of. At times terrifically American--especially in the news-aware operas and their narrative pragmatism--Adams well deserves a major box set, and its coverage is appropriate to his varied, stylistically diverse output. As with any large-scale retrospective, Earbox--which fairly bristles with Adams's new composition, Slonimsky's Earbox--has spots where fans might balk at the quality of the composer's writing. But it's got a fantastic accompanying booklet along with its many hours of inarguably modern and thoroughly listener-friendly music. --Andrew Bartlett
Customer Reviews:
Moved to tears.......2004-03-18
Nonesuch delivers.Again.......2002-11-27
harmonia in excelsis.......2001-11-12
Interesting, and likely intentional, is that two names in the extensive liner book fail to mention two great and glaringly obvious precursors: Carl Orff and Raymond Scott. Without "Carmina Burana," there would be no "Harmonium." Orff has his mark all over Adams's gifted and epic compositions. Similarly, though there are glib references to "cartoon music," the polymath engineer/musician Scott is a seminal figure in American music, and casts a large shadow over the witty juxtapositions and sense of play one loves in Adams's work. In all, an excellent career overview.
Our greatest living composer.......2001-07-22
That anyone can use the words "spoiled, overrated" amazes me. I emphatically disagree with "A music fan"'s review.
I don't think it's "mind-numbing"; I think it's spiritual and exciting. To me it's the most substantial music being created in our times.
I'm really sorry that anyone could fail to enjoy it, and really recommend others to listen for themselves.
Wonderful CD.......2000-04-02
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