| 1. Misterioso |
| 2. Festival De Luces |
| 3. Emerald Sea |
| 4. Jaco Y Paco |
| 5. Gardens Of Stone |
| 6. Espiritu |
| 7. Empezar |
| 8. St. Margaret's Tears |
| 9. Luna |
| 10. Chadari |
| 11. El Palenque |
Editorial Reviews
"...a more lilting sound closer to that of Ottmar Liebert, but with more aggressive percussion pizzazz."
Product Description
This album is a re-release of Incendio's debut recording "Misterioso". The music of Incendio is not solely flamenco, classical, Middle-Eastern, Celtic, jazz, rock, trance or pop, but an amalgamation of all of the above. By showcasing the timeless sound of the Spanish guitar in a variety of settings, Incendio takes the listener on a global musical experience while continuing to break new ground.
Misterioso
Misterioso,Incendio featuring Jim Stubblefield,Natural Elements Records,The music of Incendio is not solely flamenco, classical, Middle-Eastern, Celtic, jazz, rock, trance or pop, but an amalgamation of all of the above.
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Famous Ballet Music ~ Gaîté Parisienne, The Sleeping Beauty, Coppélia, Les Sylphides / von Karajan, Berlin PO
Jacques Offenbach , Léo Delibes , Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky , Charles Gounod , Fryderyk Chopin , Amilcare Ponchielli , Berliner Philharmoniker , and Herbert von Karajan Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00001IVO9 Release Date: 1999-09-14 |
Tracks:
- Gaite Parisienne: Ouverture - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 1. Allegro brillante - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 2. Polka - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 6. Allegro - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 8. Valse: Lento - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 9. Marche (Without Tempo Indication) - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 10. Valse: Moderato - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 11. Allegro vivo - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 12. Valse - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 13. Allegro vivace - Misterioso - Lento - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 14. Valse: Moderato - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 15. Allegro vivo - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 16. Cancan: Allegro - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 17. Polka - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 18. (Without Tempo Indication) - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 22. Vivo - Herbert von Karajan_
- Gaite Parisienne: 23. Barcarolle: Allegro moderato - Herbert von Karajan_
- Faust: 1. Allegretto: Tempo de valse - Herbert von Karajan_
- Faust: 2. Adagio (Helene et les jeune Troyennes - Cleopatre et les jeunes Nubiennes) - Herbert von Karajan_
- Faust: 3. Allegretto (Entree des jeunes Nubiennes) - Herbert von Karajan_
- Faust: 4. Moderato maestoso (Variation de Cleopatre) - Herbert von Karajan_
- Faust: 5. Moderato con moto (Entree des jeunes Troyennes) - Herbert von Karajan_
- Faust: 6. Allegretto (Variation d'Helene) - Herbert von Karajan_
- Faust: 7. Allegro vivo (Final - Entree de Phryne) - Herbert von Karajan_
- Faust: Valse - Waltz: Tempo di valse - Herbert von Karajan_
- The Sleeping Beauty: Suite From The Ballet Op. 66 - I. Introduction. La Fee des lilas - Allegro vivo - Andantino - Andante sostenuto - Herbert von Karajan_
- The Sleeping Beauty: II. Adagio. Pas d'action - Andante - Adagio maestoso - Tempo I - Molto sostenuto, quasi piu andante - Tempo I - Herbert von Karajan_
- The Sleeping Beauty: III. Pas de caractere. Le Chat Botte et La Chatte Blanche - Allegro moderato - Herbert von Karajan_
- The Sleeping Beauty: IV. Panorama - Andantino - Herbert von Karajan_
- The Sleeping Beauty: V. Valse - Allegro (Tempo di Valse) - Herbert von Karajan_
Tracks:
- Coppelia: Ballet Suite: 1. Prelude et Mazurka - Various Artists
- Coppelia: Ballet Suite: 2. Scene et Valse de Swanhilde - Various Artists
- Coppelia: Ballet Suite: 3. Csardas - Various Artists
- Coppelia: Ballet Suite: 4. Scene et Valse de la Poupee - Various Artists
- Coppelia: Ballet Suite: 5. Ballade - Various Artists
- Coppelia: Ballet Suite: 6. Variation sur un theme slave - Various Artists
- Les Sylphides: 1. Prelude - Various Artists
- Les Sylphides: 2. Nocturne - Various Artists
- Les Sylphides: 3. Valse - Various Artists
- Les Sylphides: 4. Mazurka - Various Artists
- Les Sylphides: 5. Mazurka - Various Artists
- Les Sylphides: 6. Prelude - Various Artists
- Les Sylphides: 7. Valse - Various Artists
- Les Sylphides: 8. Valse - Various Artists
- La Gioconda: Dance Of The Hours - Various Artists
Customer Reviews:
Ballet .......2007-07-01
Masterful recording of masterful compositions.......2007-01-19
Ballet bon bons German style.......2004-06-26
First-Rate Ballet Music.......2003-11-14
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Kurt Weill: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 2; Lady in the Dark - Symphonic Nocturne
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000A17GFQ Release Date: 2005-08-16 |
Tracks:
- Sostenuto - Allegro Molto - Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
- Largo - Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
- Allegro Vivace - Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
- Symphony No.1 - Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
- Andante Misterioso 'My Ship' - Robert Russell Bennett
- 'Girl Of The Moment' - Robert Russell Bennett
- Bolero 'This Is New' - Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
- Allegro Alla Marcia - Robert Russell Bennett
- 'Dance Of The Tumblers' - Robert Russell Bennett
- 'The Saga Of Jenny' - Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
Amazon.com
About nine minutes into the second track of this disc, you seem to hear the composer reminding himself: "Hey, I'm Kurt Weill! This is what my music sounds like!" Most of us know only Weill's theater music, but he began his career writing concert pieces. The First Symphony was written under the tutelage of the great composer and pianist Ferruccio Busoni. Both symphonies belong to the European mainstream of the early 1920s, but Weill's characteristic style infiltrates only the Second (placed first on the CD), his last pure concert work, composed after the famous Threepenny Opera. These symphonies may not compete with Stravinsky and Bartók in their importance, but they are both satisfying pieces and will interest both lovers of 20th-century symphonies and fans of Weill's later music--of which we get a nice chunk as an encore. The Weill Symphonies have been scarce on recordings. Here they are performed with great energy and purpose by an excellent conductor and orchestra, vividly recorded, at a price which encourages exploration. --Leslie GerberCustomer Reviews:
weilling away hours to sweet sounds.......2007-05-11
the interpretation by martin alsop and the bso, however, leaves something to be desired. it's very much by the book and lacking in texture and dynamic.
i'm sure that there is a better performance out there in the world, maybe even one conducted by a contemporary of weill's like maurice abravanel(sp?). that okay; i needed to start this collection weill's orchestral stuffs somewhere.
5 Stars for the Weill 1st sym.......2006-04-09
My first choice might be the Prausnitz/New Philharmonia/EMI which is OOP, but worth the looking for.
Next choice might be the Baden/Kracow/Koch, OOP
3rd choice maight be the Swierczewski/Gulbenkian SO/Nimbus , still in print.
Next comes the Alsop/Bournemouth, as David Bryson wrote, "while not spectacular, still a worthy recording"
But then David goes on to write "Superbly realized".
Now here I have to diasgree. As the other 3 recordings mentioned deliver a greater depth and tonal phrasing.
Still hats off to Miss Alsop for recording a neglected masterpiece. She is still young in her caree and we expect other good things as well in the near future.
I can just hear the ol George Szell fans right now,
But she's no where as great as was our glorious Szell:.
Well I don't own any szell recordings, I've always found Szell to be good, but never excellent.
Except in the Strauss last 4 songs with Schwartkopf with the BERLIN RADIO SO.
Szell's Cleveland recordings were always average as far as I'm concerned.
I'm just comming around to Weill's 2nd sym, and good as it is, his 1st is superior. The 2nd seems to borrow too many ideas from the 1st, thus the 1st is more original.
The Lady in the dark work are a series of light broadway style music.
Three Wondrous Weill Works Given Star Treatment by Alsop's Supremely Assured Direction.......2006-01-04
Yet, it is really the Symphonic Nocturne for his Broadway classic, "Lady in the Dark", that provides the most vivid impression. Arranged by Robert Russell Bennett, it's an elegant suite of six movements, each familiar melody highlighting a different dramatic element of the show. It begins with the touching Andante misterioso "My Ship", which builds gradually into a swooning work, and then lights into the splendidly evocative "Girl of the Moment", the boldly colored bolero, "This Is New", and the all-out dramatic pizzazz of "Dance of the Tumblers". The work ends with a sassy, insinuating and ultimately stentorian version of "The Saga of Jenny". It's a wondrous work given its due by Alsop, who seems to understand Weill's Tin Pan Alley sensibilities as much as his earlier orchestral ones. This is yet another of Naxos's bargain-priced CDs, and like her recent interpretations of John Adams and Philip Glass, it is beautifully recorded at the Concert Hall, Lighthouse in Dorset, UK. This recording verifies Weill's versatility and Alsop's talent in bringing them to the fore in all their glorious purity.
The Other Kurt Weill.......2005-12-01
This is austere music, stripped to the bare essentials, employing a relatively small orchestra without percussion save for timpani. It does have a restless energy in the outer movements, both of which are well argued and very listenable, the last movement bustling along to sardonic march tempo that's strangely infectious. Does Weill foresee a mania for marching in Germany's future? (By the time of the Symphony's completion, he was in exile in Paris.) But the most remarkable movement is the long central Largo. It manages at once to be mordant and melancholy--not an easy proposition--reminding me of the slow movements from Suk's Asrael Symphony and Barber's Symphony No. 2 of a decade later. All these slow movements have the same oddly chilly dignity.
Weill's Symphony No. 1 could almost be considered an apprentice work. Written in 1921 when the composer was 21, it is in a single movement but falls into three distinct sections: fast, slow, fast. The fast sections are spiky and somewhat amorphous, the slow movement troubled and anxious, with a marching ground bass and a weird, discordant canon that leads to a semi-sweet solo for the violin, the orchestra still rumbling and grumbling underneath. Things are hardly leavened by the finale, which unfolds like a series of angular variations on a chorale theme. The work ends with a percussion-heavy bang, then a whimper. Odd music this--not entirely successful but definitely interesting; you want to hear it again just to see if you can dope it all out.
After this hard-bitten modernism, the "Symphonic Nocturne" based on Weill's 1940 Broadway musical "Lady in the Dark" seems a weird choice. Since there isn't very much purely orchestral Weill, I guess the producers were hard-pressed for filler, but even the ubiquitous Dreigroschenmusik would have been better than this fluff. Orchestrated by Robert Russell Bennett, it sounds like Gershwin without the moxie--or the melodies. Oh well, you can choose not to come back for more. But you will want to return to the symphonies, especially the fascinating Second.
Marin Alsop is proving herself a force to be reckoned with in modern music. She and the Bournemouth Symphony give Weill their all, and Naxos contributes fine, full sound with lots of color and presence. I may be cool about the "Nocturne," but the rest of this CD is decidedly hot.
REVERSE THRUST.......2005-11-11
I found the whole experience utterly intriguing. Weill's second symphony was composed in Paris to commission after he fled the new regime of gangsters in Germany. It seems to have had a dim reception and then to have been palely loitering unperformed for several decades. I for one had never heard it until I bought this disc, and I think it is something that would get me to bestir myself out to a concert if I saw it scheduled. Indeed I think the first symphony might well do that too. What its composer really thought of it I don't know, but it doesn't have any apprentice feel to it, and its single fantasia-like movement is nearly as long as the three movements of the second added up. Weill in his symphonic guise, particularly his early symphonic guise, is not entirely the man we might expect from the familiar stuff, but the genius and originality are still there. His second symphony is a far more serious bit of work than are the symphonies of Weber, but I felt all the same that it stands in some similar relation to the heavier masterpieces of its period, the symphonies of Mahler, Sibelius and Elgar, as Weber's do to Beethoven's.
If the symphonies are a journey of discovery, the Lady in the Dark (about psychoanalysis apparently) is definitely for Weill's fans, of whom I am one. The performances here strike me as just right, with the proper (or improper) seedy tone to them. The Bournemouth Symphony have been a fine orchestra for quite a long time now, at least since Silvestri's day, and Marin Alsop has been steadily advancing in recognition for a number of years too. The recording is very recent, just last year, and while it's not spectacular it is perfectly good by any rational standard. We are given here an hour and a quarter of absolutely fascinating music superbly realised, and even the liner-note, which comes with a German translation, is far better than many I see from the more traditional recording concerns. My notices of Naxos productions tend to finish, or begin, or both, with a panegyric to that fine company and its collaborators, and this one follows the tradition. Long may things be this way.
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Mahler: Symphonies 1-10; Das Lied von der Erde
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000BQ7BX2 Release Date: 2006-01-10 |
Tracks:
- I. Langsam, Schleppend, Wie Ein Naturlaut - Im Anfang Sehr Gemachlich - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- II. Kraftig Bewegt, Doch NIcht Zu Schnell - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- III. Feirlich Und Gemessen, Ohne Zu Schleppen - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- IV. Sturmisch Bewegt - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- I. Allegro Maestoso. Mit Durchaus Ernstem Und Feierlichem Ausdruck - Krisztina Laki
Tracks:
- II. Andante Moderato. Sehr Gemachlich - Krisztina Laki
- II. In Ruhig Fliessender Bewegung - Krisztina Laki
- IV. Urlicht: Sehr Feierlich, Aber Schlicht - Krisztina Laki
- V. Im Tempo Des Scherzo. Wild Herausfahrend - Krisztina Laki
- Wieder Sehr Breit - Krisztina Laki
- Ritardando...Maestoso. Sehr Zuruckhaltend - Krisztina Laki
- Wieder Zuruckhaltend - Krisztina Laki
- Langsam, Misterioso - Krisztina Laki
- Etwas Bewegter - Krisztina Laki
- Mit Aufschwung, Aber Nicht Eilen - Krisztina Laki
Tracks:
- I. Kraftig. Entschieden - Gwendolyn Killebrew
- II. Tempo Di Menuetto - Gwendolyn Killebrew
- III. Comodo. Scherzando - Gwendolyn Killebrew
- IV. Sehr Langsam - Gwendolyn Killebrew
Tracks:
- V. Lustig IM Tempo UNd Keck Im Ausdruck - Gwendolyn Killebrew
- VI. Sehr Langsam - Ruhevoll - Empfunden - Gwendolyn Killebrew
- I. Bed Achtig. Nicht Eilen - Lucia Popp
- II. In Gemachlicher Bewegung. Ohne Hast - Lucia Popp
- III. Ruhevoll - Lucia Popp
Tracks:
- IV. Sehr Behaglich - Lucia Popp
- I. Trauermarsch (Im Gemessenem Schritt - Streng - Wie Ein Kondukt) - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- II. Sturmisch Bewegt, Mit Grosster Vehemenz - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- III. Scherzo (Kraftig, Nicht Zu Schnell) - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- IV. Adagietto (Sehr Langsam) - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- V. Rondo - Finale (Allegro) - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
Tracks:
- I. Langsam - Allegro - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- II. Nachtmusik I - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- III. Scherzo: Schattenhaft - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- IV. Nachtmusik II. Andante Amoroso - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- V. Rondo - Finale - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
Tracks:
- I. Allegro Energico, Ma Non Troppo - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- II. Scherzo. Wuchtig - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- III. Andante Moderato - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
Tracks:
- IV. Finale: Sostenuto - Allegro Moderato - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- I. Andante Comodo - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- II. Im Tempo Eines Gemachlichen Landlers - Etwas Tappisch Und Sehr Derb - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
Tracks:
- III. Rondo Burleske: Allegro Assai. Sehr Trotzig - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- IV. Adagio: Sehr Langsam Und Noch Zuruckhaltend - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
- I. Adagio - Kolner Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester
Tracks:
- Veni, Creator Spiritus - Maria Venuti
- Imple Superna Gratia - Maria Venuti
- Infirma Nostri Corporis - Maria Venuti
- Accende Lumen Sensibus - Maria Venuti
- Veni, Creator Spiritus - Maria Venuti
- Gloria Patri Domino - Maria Venuti
- Poco Adagio: Waldung, Sie Schwankt Heran - Maria Venuti
- Ewiger Wonnebrand - Maria Venuti
- Wie Felsenabgrund Mir Zu Fussen - Maria Venuti
- Gerettet Ist Das Edle Glied - Maria Venuti
- Uns Bleibt Ein Erdenrest - Maria Venuti
- Hier Ist Die Aussicht Frei - Maria Venuti
- Hochste Herrscherin Der Welt - Maria Venuti
- Dir, Der Unberuhrbaren - Maria Venuti
- Bei Der Liebe, Die Den Fussen - Maria Venuti
- Neige, Neige, Du Ohnegleiche - Maria Venuti
- Blicket Suf Zum Retterblick - Maria Venuti
- Alles Vergangliche - Maria Venuti
Tracks:
- I. Das Trinklied Vom Jammer Der Erde - Marjana Lipovsek
- II. Der Einsame Im Herbst - Marjana Lipovsek
- III. Von Der Jugend - Marjana Lipovsek
- IV. Von Der Schonheit - Marjana Lipovsek
- V. Der Trunkene Im Fruhling - Marjana Lipovsek
- VI. Der Abschied - Marjana Lipovsek
Customer Reviews:
Good -- but not great.......2007-07-07
I'm glad I heard this set, but there are better, albeit more expensive. As a complete set there isn't any that is altogether perfect, but Solti/Decca, Haitink/Philips, Kubelik/DG and deWaart/RCA come closer.
Outstanding, yet Affordable Mahler Set.......2007-06-10
The soloists are all excellent too. You have Florence Quivar, Paul Frey, Lucia Popp, Julia Varady, Julia Hamari, and Alan Titus, among others. You must simply hear the alto part that Quivar sings in the Resurrection Symphony!
Included in this already sparkling box set is a Das Lied von der Erde with Marjana Lipovsek and Ben Heppner. While I will always love Klemperer, Ludwig, and Wunderlich, I think this Das Lied von der Erde comes close to being one of the very best recordings of the work. Heppner sings with his usual golden tone and security, and sings the tenor's songs with an abandon and an elan that makes his interpretation very attractive. Lipovsek sings the mezzo parts with a tragically imbued tone that improved over her recording with Solti years earlier. You must listen to what she does in the Abschied. I have never heard a more resentful and reflective understanding of this very complex movement other than Christa Ludwig, Janet Baker, and Kathleen Ferrier.
All in all, a Mahler box set that everyone should get along with Haitink, Chailly, and Kubelik.
Ignore the name(s): Listen to the Music!.......2007-05-07
And along comes a little known conductor, now deceased, with an orchestra I would not rank with those above; and by virtue of their sheer musicianship they belong alongside all the above. Mr. Bertini's performances hew closer to Mr. Kubelik and Mr. Haitink in being moderate in both tempo and phrasing. At the same time, Mr. Bertini still beings a far greater feeling of intensity and passion than either. Mr. Bertini's performances have a sweep and a grandeur that places them on the same plane as Mr. Bernstein's performances without entirely going "over the top" as Mr. B. was inclined to do.
No: Bertini's recording of the Sixth Symphony does not take us emotionally to the depth of Mr. Bernstein's last recording (DG digital). Nor has Mr. Solti's magnificent performance of the Eighth been surpassed. But I were asked to choose one cycle to live with for the rest of my life, it would be this one.
An exceptionally fine bargain.......2007-03-26
Considering that Bertini and the orchestra are not among the obvious "stars", it is an exceptional sleeper. In fact, Bertini was virtually unknown before this cycle made him famous, post mortem.
The cycle combines both live and studio recordings. The live ones were recorded in Japan where the audience knows how to behave. Excellent stereo sound adds to the pleasure.
But one could note that some of Bertini's tempi are among the slowest on record. The final movement of symphony no. 9 stops at 28:34, which is ten minutes more than Walter's 1939 classic. It's even a few seconds slower than Chailly's very slow account on Decca. The finale of the third is six minutes longer than Tennstedt's on EMI. But the adagietto in the fifth stops at just above 10 minutes, so Bertini is not consistently very slow when Mahler's music may invite sentimental conductors to drag. Unlike such conductors, however, Bertini has the ability to keep tension during a long breath, bringing forth interesting details in contextual balance.
Thus the performances of symphonies 1, 5, 7, 8, 9 and Das Lied von der Erde are outstanding, challenging almost every recording in the current catalogue. The remaining symphonies are also convincingly presented, in perfectly consistent performances.
However, one irritating thing with this set is that the fourth symphony is divided over two discs. That EMI decision was not necessary. The cycle could still fit on 11 CDs with a different editing. The policy for all record companies should be to avoid unnecessary splitting.
At a super-bargain price, this is of course the first choice among boxed sets, especially the contemporary ones. All the recordings in this box have something that attracts repeated listening. This is true of Gielen's outstanding cycle too (Hänssler), but it requires you to pay four times the price. Still, Kubelik (DG) remains my favourite cycle. But Bertini's is better recorded.
Warmly recommended!
best overall cycle.......2006-12-09
Much positive has been written about Gielen's fine Mahler cycle. But his box set doesn't include his recording of the Cooke 10th (Chailly's does!), which is really a very good 10th. It's also more expensive. In addition, getting Gielen's Mahler 6th separately also gives you a really fine performance of Alban Berg's "Three Pieces For Orchestra" - a very natural coupling for that dark work. Better to pick and choose with Gielen, I think. If you want a box, get the Bertini.
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Misterioso
Manufacturer: Ecm Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000GW8OT6 Release Date: 2006-09-26 |
Amazon.com
Lubimov's exploration for ECM of contemporary music from Eastern Europe continues with this fascinating disc featuring chamber works by Ukrainian composer Valentin Silvestrov and Galina Ustvolskaya, the most interesting and inventive of Shostakovich's protégés. An effective clarinet-piano arrangement of Arvo Pärt's popular, brief "Spiegel im Spiegel" separates the main events. Silvestrov's Misterioso is for solo clarinet with assistance from piano bass rumblings. Part nostalgia, part dark despair, it's a moving work that also serves as a test of the clarinet's possibilities and the player's technical prowess. Post Scriptum is a sonata for violin and piano with an attractive melody that, as in much of Silvestrov's music, splinters and fades away. A pair of Ustvolskaya's early works is powerful, especially in such vivid performances and sonics. Her Trio is one of the finest chamber works of the past half-century, melodically seductive and harmonically adventurous. Her Violin Sonata has a reputation as a difficult piece, but in this lucid, expressive performance it, too, emerges as a major work. A disc to treasure. -- Dan DavisCustomer Reviews:
Unique and Provocative.......2007-02-17
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Misterioso
Thelonious Monk Quartet Manufacturer: Ojc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000YBI Release Date: 1991-07-01 |
Tracks:
- Nutty
- Blues Five Spot
- Let's Cool One
- In Walked Bud
- Just A Gigolo
- Misterioso
- 'Round Midnight
- Evidence
Amazon.com
After he was denied club work in New York for years because a marijuana conviction kept him from holding a "cabaret card," Thelonious Monk's late-'50s stays at the Five Spot provided him with a forum through which he could reach an audience and also acted as an intense musical laboratory. Misterioso and its companion disc, Thelonious in Action, were Monk's first professionally recorded live dates, and they feature the excellent 1958 quartet with tenorist Johnny Griffin stretching out on Monk tunes like "In Walked Bud" and "Evidence." Monk could not only find new dissonances, but he could also find new meanings for dissonance, imbuing his sometimes elliptical, even minimalist, compositions with a joyous playfulness. Griffin adds a strong blues flavor and some unlikely quotations that leaven his intense focus. If this nugget tickles the ear enough to drive you toward the completist's deep end, check out Monk's Complete Riverside Recordings mega-box. --Stuart BroomerCustomer Reviews:
Johnny Griffin at his Best.......2005-07-14
Spontaneous Monk at his best !!!.......2005-05-12
Misterioso is amazing.......2004-09-16
Huzzah to Monk & Griffin!.......2004-07-29
Pretty good.......2003-06-30
Thelonious Monk and his band provide very upbeat songs, usually filled with incredible solos (especially the drummer, Roy Haynes, and saxophonist Johnny Griffin), proving that Monk was a great bandleader, and a jazz legend.
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Naked Lunch
Manufacturer: Milan Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0007NFL4A Release Date: 2005-03-01 |
Tracks:
- Naked Lunch
- Hauser And O'Brien/Bugpowder
- Mugwumps
- Centipede
- The Black Meat
- Simpatico/Misterioso
- Fadela's Coven
- Interzone Suite
- William Tell
- Mujahaddin
- Intersong
- Dr. Benway
- Clark Nova Dies
- Ballad/Joan
- Cloquet's Parrots/Midnight Sunrise
- Nothing Is True: Everything Is Permitted
- Welcome To Annezia
- Writeman
Album Description
Naked Lunch showcases the collaboration between jazz artist Ornette Coleman and Academy Award winning composer Howard Shore(Lord of the Rings trilogy). This jazz soundtrack includes an ensemble collection of Coleman's musicians including J.J. Edwards, Aziz Bin Salem, David Hartley, Barre Phillips, Denardo Coleman and the London Philharmonic Orchestra.Customer Reviews:
Quite possibly Howard Shore's best work yet..........2006-08-24
With Naked Lunch, I think Shore managed to create a perfect soundscape to go along with director David Cronenberg's crazed adaptation of William Burrough's cult novel. Shore, along with famed saxophonist Ornette Coleman, join together to create a strange hybrid of mood music and frenetic jazz that fits the film perfectly. This isn't typical jazz and is very free form but still, it's definitely one of the best film scores I've ever had the pleasure of listening to. It's not for everyone but if you appreciate a good, moody movie score, look no further for this is one of the absolute best.
Lastly, it reminds me a bit of the score that he did for "The Cell", due to the Middle East sounding bits laced throughout the album and out of all of his scores, I'd say it resembles that one the most. The lonely saxophone also reminds me of the score for "Angel Heart", the sax in which was played by Courtney Pine.
great film,just as great music!.......2005-11-20
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Bruckner: The Nine Symphonies; Helgoland
Manufacturer: Warner Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00076YOQ8 Release Date: 2006-01-10 |
Tracks:
- I. Allegro - Ernst-Senff-Chor
- II. Adagio - Ernst-Senff-Chor
- III. Scherzo: Schnell - Trio: Langsamer - Ernst-Senff-Chor
- IV. Finale: Bewegt, Feurig - Ernst-Senff-Chor
- Helgoland - Ernst-Senff-Chor
Tracks:
- I. Moderato
- II. Andante. Feierlich, Etwas Bewegt
- III. Scherzo: Massig Schnell
- IV. Finale: Mehr Schnell
Tracks:
- I. Gemassigt, Mehr Bewegt, Misterioso
- II. Adagio, Bewegt, Quasi Andante
- III. Scherzo: Ziemlich Schnell
- IV. Finale: Allegro
Tracks:
- I. Bewegt, Nicht Zu Schnell
- II. Andante Quasi Allegretto
- III. Scherzo: Bewegt
- IV. Finale: Bewegt, Doch Nicht Zu Schnell
Tracks:
- I. Adagio - Allegro
- II. Adagio: Sehr Langsam
- III. Scherzo: Molto Vivace (Schnell)
- IV. Finale: Adagio - Allegro Moderato
Tracks:
- I. Majestoso
- II. Adagio: Sehr Feierlich
- III. Scherzo: Nicht Schnell - Trio: Langsam
- IV. Finale: Bewegt, Doch Nicht Zu Schnell
Tracks:
- I. Allegro Moderato
- II. Adagio: Sehr Feierlich Und Sehr Langsam
- III. Scherzo: Sehr Schnell - Trio: Etwas Langsamer
- IV. Finale: Bewegt, Doch Nicht Zu Schnell
Tracks:
- I. Allegro Moderato
- II. Scherzo: Allegro Moderato - Trio: Langsam
- III. Adagio: Feierlich Langsam; Doch Nicht Schleppend
- IV. Finale: Feierlich, Nicht Schnell
Tracks:
- I. Feierlich, Misterioso
- II. Scherzo: Bewegt, Lebhaft - Trio: Schnell
- III. Adagio: Langsam, Feierlich
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Film Noir
Manufacturer: Milan Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00081U78G Release Date: 2005-05-24 |
Tracks:
- Turning Pages - Matthew Herbert Big Band
- Godfather - Terence Blanchard
- Silencio - Angelo Badalamenti
- They Go Long - Edward Artemiev
- Don't Be Worried - Cyril Morin
- Suspense - Frederick Rousseau
- Chop Shop - Alex Wurman
- The Wrong Man - Bernard Herrmann
- Simpatico/Misterioso - Ornette Coleman
- House Of Silence - Angelo Badalamenti
- Mansfield Crash - Howard Shore
- Verbal Kint - John Ottman
- The Swing - Hans Zimmer
- Blues For Guylaine - Andre Hossein
- Buckets Of Blood - Pino Donaggio
- The Elephant Man - John Morris
- Mourning - Claire David
- Ballade - Joe Hisaishi
- Taxi Driver Suite - Bernard Herrmann
Customer Reviews:
Perhaps not *quite* what you want..........2007-04-27
Never mind the fact that the great majority of films noir from the classic period (1941-1955) didn't have jazzy background music like that at all, but was usually scored with quasi-classical romantic string music (with a solo violin) or bombastic, brass-heavy instrumentals.
Anyway, this CD isn't the 3 AM sax stuff.
Not to say that there isn't some of that on here. You might like "Godfather" (not, however, the theme you're thinking of from the Francis Ford Coppola Godfather films), or "Blues for Guylaine," or even the bluesy passages from Bernard Herrmann's "Taxi Driver" suite.
But there's some odd stuff on here that causes me to wonder how, precisely, it qualifies as "film noir."
For instance, the dreamy carnival music from "The Elephant Man," or the angular string music in "Buckets of Blood" (from "Carrie," not the Roger Corman film). Seems like a reach. The first cut, "Turning Pages" had me unpleasantly surprised, and triggered my I've been ripped-off alarm. And "Chop Shop" has a wah guitar that sounds a lot more like a 70's blaxsploitation film than film noir.
The inclusion of Angelo Badalamenti helps redeem the collection; his music for "Twin Peaks," "Fire, Walk With Me" and "Mulholland Drive" redefines what a noir theme should sound like.
This CD is odd, no doubt about it. "Godfather," which sounds decidedly noirish, is from a comedy/drama film about a man who's paid to impregnate lesbians. "The Wrong Man" music is relentlessly perky but comes from a bona fide noir. (Okay, a Hitchcock noir, not quite the same thing.)
The key here, I guess, is to enlarge the scope of what you think noir film music ought to be... But perhaps a better title for this collection of music might have been "Neo-Noir!"
Still, credit must be given to liner notes writer Eddie Muller and his Film Noir Foundation for at least directing the current noir wave. His book "Dark City" turned me - and probably many others - to noir. Long may his tribe increase!
Summary: If you're looking for classic/sterotypical, 3 AM wet-pavements-in-the-Dark-City noirish stuff, try John Barry's "Body Heat," which I enthusiastically recommend. Barry practically *owns* that silky/sexy slow sax genre.
Nice imaginative collection.......2006-08-04
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Bruckner: Symphony No. 9 (with the Documentation of the Finale Fragment) [Hybrid SACD]
Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000AF1IG Release Date: 2003-10-21 |
Tracks:
- Warum Hat Man Eigentlich 100 Jahre Lang Gedacht, E - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
- Finale. T. 1-278 - Wiener Philharmoniker
- Gegen Ende Eine Extreme Dissonanz In Den Trompeten - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
- Nach Dem Ende Der Durchfuhrung Folgt Eine Wilde Fu - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
- Finale. T. 279-342 - Wiener Philharmoniker
- Quasi En Schreckensbild Des Todes - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
- Finale. T. 343-478 - Wiener Philharmoniker
- Danach Fehlen 16 Takte; Dazu Ist Nichts Zu Erklare - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
- Finale. T. 479-510 - Lucke/Fehlender Partiturbog - Wiener Philharmoniker
- Why Did We Think For Over Hundred Years That Nothing... - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
- WAB 109: Finale. MM. 1-278 - Wiener Philharmoniker
- Extreme Dissonances In The Trumpets Towards The End - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
- At The End Of The Development A Wild Fugue Begins - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
- Finale. MM. 279-342 - Wiener Philharmoniker
- A Sudden Vision Of Death - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
- Finale. MM. 343-478 - Wiener Philharmoniker
- Then There Are Sixteen Bars Missing. We Will Just... - Nikolaus Harnoncourt
- Finale. MM. 479-510 - Gap/Missing Score Bifolio - Wiener Philharmoniker
Tracks:
- I. Satz. Feierlich; Misterioso - Wiener Philharmoniker
- Scherzo. Bewegt; Lebhaft - Trio. Schnell - Scherzo - Wiener Philharmoniker
- Adagio. Langsam; Feierlich - Wiener Philharmoniker
Customer Reviews:
Harnoncourt's Bruckner, a viable alternative to Karajan?.......2006-03-19
First of all, Harnoncourt has his own instincts about phrasing and organizing the music. Contrary to a reviewer below, he doesn't exploit extreme rubato or sudden tempo changes. There are some quirky moments where the tempo speeds up unexpectedly, but overall, Harnoncourt's timing of 58 min. is dead center among various recordings (as much as I admire Giulini, his 68 min. traversal drags). Harnoncourt favors brash outbursts from the brass, particularly in the Scherzo, my least favorite movement here. But his main intent is to keep Bruckner simple, to impose himself far less than Karajan did with his ultra-control. This Bruckner Ninth is a bit plain at times, but it always breathes.
As to the recorded sound, I have only heard the regular two-channel CD, which is quite clear; the Vienna Pphil. is placed a bit far back on a wide soundstage. I would have liked to hear the solo winds up closer, but that's a quibble. This Bruckner Ninth satisfied me as much as the great accounts by Walter, Klemperer, Giulini, and Boulez. I sitll feel more thrills from Karajan's analog reading from the Sixties, yet Harnoncourt provides a viable alternative in itnerpretation.
In theory it was an exciting notion to provide a free bonus CD containing Harnoncourt's defense of Bruckner's surviving sketches for a fourth movement, never completed. Could it really be that his ocntemporaries were wrong and that Bruckner left us pages of great music begging to be revived? Harnoncourt's talk is highly persuasive, but when the Vienna Phil. actually plays what survives of the finale, it proves as sorely disappointing as its reputation would lead one to believe.
Depends what you consider good.......2004-06-14
There are other versions, many of which are mentioned by the other reviewers below (Giulini, Karajan, et al.), which communicate this great work more simply and effectively. They are also unique and full of interesting details (some attention to detail is good). In light of them, Harnoncourt's view is radically different. Experience has taught me that subtle differences in interpretation give pleasure with repeated listening. Radical differences are OK in a live performance (which this is), but do not stand the test of time. So I do not recommend this as a first recording to have of Bruckner's 9th.
Terrific performance!.......2004-02-25
Unconvincing performance; interesting commentary.......2004-01-15
Secondly, I found his commentary on the 4th movement "chunks" informative. They could easily have been printed in liner notes; instead, we have each of the chunks played twice, followed first by commentary German, then in English.
Thirdly, I see no reason why he should not have recorded the full movement as completed by someone -- by William Carragan (Chandos: Yoav Talmi, Oslo Philharmonic); by Nicola Samale & Giuseppe Mazzuca (Teldec: Inbal, Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orch [with the 5th Symphony]); or by Samale, Mazzuca, and John A Phillips (Camerata: Eichhorn, Linz Bruckner Orch). My first choice is the Carragan: though the Oslo band takes third place among those in these recordings, it is good enough and I find Carragan's completion the most convincing.*
(In January 1984 I went to New York and Carnegie Hall to hear the American Symphony Orchestra perform the premier of the 9th with Carragan's finale. The performance was reviewed the next day in the Times. I immediately wrote Joel Flegel, editor of Fanfare, asking if he knew whether a recording was planned. Joel was dubious and dismissive: "If that college professor really....")
As Carragan noted in his program notes for the ASO "premier," the finale includes the greatest of Bruckner's chorales. That magnificent theme cannot be understood or appreciated by hearing it only in Harnoncourt's chunks. It needs to be heard in context -- and that context can only be provided in a "performing version."
In my opinion, Harnoncourt does a disservice to Bruckner and to listeners by not offering a completed finale. There is certainly room for one in this two-disk set.
* But Carragan will either produce a new version or be superseded as pages not available to him have since been found -- and as still more come to light.
Harnoncourt roars, but Wildner rages.......2004-01-05
Just a few months ago, a recording of the 9th including a reconstruction/completion of the 4th movement, based on the same body of fragments and sketches (including the coda) and prepared by the same editors, was released on Naxos(8.555933-34). The orchestra is the New Philharmonia of Westphalia (Germany) and the conductor is Johannes Wildner. Now, finally, we can hear this work in a form tantalizingly close to the way Bruckner intended. Furthermore, unlike Harnoncourt's Vienna Phil performance, Wildner and his astonishiingly capable Westphalians present what I can only describe as a ferocious performance, with horns and timpani cutting through the fabric of the orchestra at key points, and effectively flexible tempos. It's a performance unlike any I've heard since Furtwangler's furious and terrifying recording made in Berlin during the darkest days of World War II. If you've gotten the Harnoncourt (or even if you haven't), you have to get the Wildner, too.
As an aside, these recordings render superfluous the 1986 Chandos recording by Yoav Talmi and the Oslo Phil of a 4-movement version of Bruckner's 9th. That documented a brave effort by William Carragan to reconstruct a finale. Unfortunately he had barely 3/4 of the body of sketches to work with that we have now, and nothing of the coda at all.
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K-19 the Widowmaker (Score)
Klaus Badelt Manufacturer: Hollywood Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006AATU Release Date: 2002-07-16 |
Tracks:
- Suite For Orchestra And Chorus In G Minor: I. Fear - Largo
- Suite For Orchestra And Chorus In G Minor: II. Fate - Adagio
- Suite For Orchestra And Chorus In G Minor: III. War - Allegro
- Suite For Orchestra And Chorus In G Minor: IV. Soul - Misterioso
- Home
- Heroes
- Journey
- Capt. Alexi Vostrikov
- Missle Launch - The Rescue
- Reactor - Selections From 'Voices Of Light': 'Victory At Orleans', 'Interrogation', 'Abjuration', 'Relapse', 'Karitas', 'The Final Walk'
- Reunion
Amazon.com
Given the film's fevered, rooted-in-cold-war-history nuclear tensions and claustrophobic, intensely Russian settings, promising newcomer/Hans Zimmer protégé Klaus Badelt (The Time Machine and contributions to Gladiator and Pearl Harbor) was saddled with more than a few expectations in scoring director Kathryn Bigelow's Soviet sub thriller. But Badelt has admirably risen to the occasion, conjuring up an orchestral score (masterfully performed by the Kirov Orchestra and Chorus under Valery Giergiev) rooted in moody Russian classicism--and a dash of Zimmer's favorite Holstian drama as well. The centerpiece here is the neo-classical Suite for Orchestra and Chorus in G Minor, its four movements ("Fear," "Fate," "War," "Soul") powerfully underscoring the film's unrelenting pressure cooker of drama and emotion. Badelt's use of excerpts from Richard Einhorn's Voices of Light suite ("Reactor") is equally inspired, its haunting choral touches and spare, evocative arrangements imparting some compelling gravitas to the story's dark sense of impending doom. A score as noble, if emotionally ominous, as the 20th-century Russian masters who inspired it. --Jerry McCulleyCustomer Reviews:
One of the best scores .......2006-06-09
An Underwater Masterpiece..........2004-02-01
Classic (al ) Badelt.......2003-07-16
Music the masters would be proud to claim!.......2003-03-21
Another great Klaus Badelt score.......2002-12-01
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- Most Wanted: Italo Superstars [Import]
- Music of the World: Israel
- Native Brotherhood
- Osez Joséphine [Original recording remastered] [Import]
- Out of This World
- Paradeiro [Import]
- Patria [Import]
- Piano Museum [Import]
- Pontos De Macumba: Afro-Brazilian Religious Songs
- Revolucoes Por Minuto [Import]
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Kuschty Rye: The Singles 1973-1980
New Music for organ & percussion
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Live! From Da Manjah [Explicit Lyrics] [Live]