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Richter The Master - Decca Edition - Part one

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Ludwig van Beethoven
Piano Sonatas Nos 19, 20
22, 23, 30, 31 and 32
Recorded 1991 and 1992






When I hear Sviatoslav Richter playing the piano, romantic poets like Goethe, Baudelaire, Poe, Tennyson, Leopardi or Hoffmansthal do not come to mind; the one who comes to mind is the great American poet Wallace Stevens, who as artists like Saint-John Perse or Eugenio Montale proposed a new worldview of modern man. Here is a fragment of his poem The Blue Guitar, which is overwhelmingly topical.

Things as they are have been destroyed.
Have I? Am I a man that is dead
At a table on which the food is cold?
Is my thought a memory, not alive?
Is the spot on the floor, there, wine or blood
And whichever may be, is it mine?


Piano Sonatas K 280, 283,W. A. Mozart
333, 457 and 533
Fantasia K 475
Recorded 1966 and 1991









 
Alexander Scriabin
Poeme-Nocturne, Deux Danses
Vers la Flamme
Sergei Prokofiev
Piano Sonatas Nos. 4 and 6
Dmitri Shostakovich
Selection from 24 Preludes ad Fugues
Recorded 1963 and 1993






Ludwig van Beethoven
Piano Sonatas Nos. 18 and 28
Piano and Wind Quintet
Two Rondos op. 51
Piano Trio No. 7
Borodin SQ
Moragues Wind Quintet
Recorded 1986 , 1992 and 1993




Franz Schubert
Piano Sonatas D. 575, 840
and 894
Recorded 1979








F. J. Haydn
Piano Sonatas Nos. 24 and 52
C. M. von Weber
Piano Sonata No. 3
Ludwig Van Beethoven
Piano Sonatas Nos. 9, 11, 12 and 27
Recorded  1963 and 1993




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Leonard Slatkin - The Golden Age of Hollywood

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BBC MM234

01. Leonard Bernstein: On the Waterfront. Symphonic Suite. From 'On the Waterfront, 1954' [20'04]
02. Erich Korngold: Cello Concerto. From 'Deception, 1946'* [12'06]
03. George Gershwin: Promenade 'Walking the Dog'. From 'Shall We Dance?, 1937' [3'18]
04. Miklos Rozsa: Spellbound Concerto. From 'Spellbound, 1945' ^[12'57]
05. Franz Waxman: Tristan and Isolde Fantasy. From 'Humoresque, 1946'^# [11'21]

Frederick Szlotkin- cello*; Simon Mulligan- piano^;  Stephen Bryant- violin#; BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Leonard Slatkin

BBC MM234  (recorded March 2003; CD issued October 2003 - Vol.12 no.2}

(CD-rip; flacs, booklet, cover and inlay scans)

Recording venue: BBC Maida Vale Studios, London
Recording engineer: Simon Hancock; Producer: Ann McKay

Another cover disc from BBC Music Magazine - with an interesting collection of mainly concert works extracted from film scores performed in studio recordings. In general Leonard Slatkin does a fine job with these works - excepting the Gershwin where the rhythms seem to elude him. Chief conductor of the orchestra at that time, he was to leave not long after - another conductor to fall foul of British orchestras. But they play very well for him here (and on other recordings of them together that I have heard).

The Korngold Cello Concerto is something of a family affair - the cellist Frederick Szlotkin is Leonard's younger brother and in the film Deception, the cello was played by their mother, Eleanor Aller, founder member of the Hollywood Quartet along with their father Felix Slatkin.

Theremin fans will appreciate Rosza's score for the Spellbound Concerto which prominently features the instrument - the wailing sound of which I can soon have enough. A bigger role for Simon Mulligan would have been more than welcome. Both Mulligan and the orchestra's leader Stephen Bryant are stellar in Waxman's kitschy use of Wagner's music.

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Richter The Master - Decca Edition - Part Two

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Johannes Brahms
Piano Sonatas Nos. 1 and 2
Paganini Variations
Piano Pieces
Robert Schumann
Fantasie
Recorded 1966, 1979 and 1988





J. S. Bach 
French Suites Nos. 2, 4 and 6
English Suites Nos. 3, 4 and 6
Toccatas BWV 913 and 916
Recorded 1991
 





J. S. Bach
Italian Concerto
French Overture
Frederic Chopin
Etudes
2 Polonaises
Recorded 1988 and 1991




Frederic Chopin
Preludes op. 28
Barcarolle - Polonaise-Fantasie
Franz Liszt
Piano Sonata in B minor
Scherzo - Polonaise - Etudes
Mephisto Polka - Hungarian Rapsody No. 17
Recorded 1988




Piano Works by
Prokofiev - Hindemith
Stravinsky - Webern
Shostakovich - Bartok
Szymanowski
Recorded 1989




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Mozart: LUCIO SILLA - Hager

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W.A. Mozart

LUCIO SILLA

Peter Schreier (Lucio Silla), Arleen Augér (Giunia)
Julia Varadi (Cecilio), Edith Mathis (Lucio Cinna)
Helen Donath (Celia), Werner Krenn (Aufidio)

Salzburger Rundfunk - und Mozarteumchor
Mozarteum-Ochester Salzburg

dir : Leopold Hager

BASF 7822472-4   -  Four stereo LPs [P] 1975

Individual FLAC files, scans

Gramophone Jan 1976
      Gramophone, January 1976




Berlioz - Te Deum - John Nelson

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Hector Berlioz (1803-1869)
Te Deum (1855)
Roberto Alagna  tenor
Marie-Claire Alain  Cavaillé-Coll grand orgue, La Madeleine
Choeur d'enfants de l'Union Européene et Maîtrise d'Antony
Choeur et Orchestre de Paris
John Nelson
Recorded 2001, Salle de la Mutualité, Paris;
Virgin Classics (57:40)
flac, cue, log and scans


It is surprising that the Berlioz Te Deum has been relatively neglected on disc in comparison with his other major works, the more so when it so conveniently fits onto a single CD. This latest version has John Nelson as an incisive, understanding conductor of Berlioz, revelling in the weight of choral sound, balancing his forces beautifully. He is helped by fuller, more brilliant, more detailed digital sound than on previous versions.
The organ sound may be less transparent than it might be, but the authentic French timbre of the Cavaille-Coll organ of the Madeleine in Paris blends beautifully in the ensemble, and Marie-Claire Alain, as one might expect, is the most idiomatic soloist, making her non-French rivals seem rather square by comparison. It makes for luxury casting, too, to have Roberto Alagna as an imaginative, idiomatic tenor soloist in the prayer, ‘Te ergo quaesumus’, warmly persuasive and full of temperament.
An additional plus-point for the new issue, even in relation to Sir Colin Davis’s now classic version for Philips, is not only the fuller, more open recorded sound but the interesting bonus provided. The two extra instrumental movements included here were written by Berlioz expressly for performances celebrating victory, both with military overtones.
It is good to have them both, even if they are intrinsically far less valuable than the usual choral movements. A Prelude, inserted before the third movement, ‘Dignare’, uses one of the work’s main themes in fugato, while at the very end the performance is rounded off with a March for the Presentation of the Colours that in its bold, even corny military style reminds me of the Symphonie funebre et triomphale. On CD one can easily leave either of them out, yet Berlioz, even at his most populist, never fails to grab the ear. (Grammophone review)
You can read more reviews here and here

W. A. Mozart - Betulia Liberata - L´Orfeo Barockorchester - Michi Gaigg

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W. A. Mozart (1756-1791)
La Betulia liberata, K118/74c (1771)
Margot Oitzinger alto Giuditta
Christian Zenker tenor Ozia
Marelize Gerber soprano Amital
Markus Volpert baritone Achior
Ulrike Hofbauer soprano Cabri
Barbara Kraus soprano Carmi
L’Orfeo Barockorchester
Michi Gaigg
Challenge 2013
digital download, cover and booklet with full libretto, score

Mozart’s teenage music suffers only by comparison with his mature works. Here is music that would hardly shame a mature composer and it needs no gimmicks to make it attractive. 
Betulia liberata, described as an azione sacra in due parti, is an oratorio composed by the 15-year-old composer to a text by Metastasio and based on the biblical Book of Judith. Leopold Mozart seems to have believed that it had been commissioned for performance in Padua, but the precise circumstances are unclear; in the event the Duke of Aragon appears to have preferred a setting of the same text by Mysliveček.
The story of Judith slaying Holofernes, general of the besieging Assyrian army, has inspired a large number of artistic productions, ranging from the Anglo-Saxon Abbot Ælfric via various renaissance paintings and Vivaldi - Juditha Triumphans - to Mozart and his contemporaries. The Metastasio libretto which Mozart set was particularly popular, despite the fact that it sticks rigidly to the Aristotelian unities, which means that the decapitation of Holofernes is only narrated. 
Clearly any performance stands or falls by the quality of the principal character, Judith, and the nearest that I have to a benchmark comes in the form of Aria #8, Parto inerme (CD1 track 17), sung by Marie-Nicole Lemieux on a Naïve album of arias by Gluck, Haydn and Mozart. Here, as throughout, Michi Gaigg sets a fairly brisk tempo - brisker than Peter Schreier, too - but still gives Margot Oitzinger plenty of space to express her faith in God as she goes forth unarmed and unafraid. Oitzinger also has a lighter voice than Lemieux, who tends to sound ever so slightly plummy. 
Where the Challenge disc gains, too, is in the use of period instruments; light and airy Le Violons du Roy may be on Naïve but, despite the archaic spelling, they use modern instruments. Much as I enjoyed the more studied account of this aria on Naïve, Oitzinger and Gaigg emerge as winners for me and this track leads on to a rousing finale of Part One.
There’s a Berlin Classics recording on which Edith Mathis sings Aminta’s Aria #11, Quel nocchier che in gran procella (CD2 track 4). Here, too, Michi Gaigg’s tempo is slightly faster than Bernhard Klee’s. Marelize Gerber may have a less famous name than that of Edith Mathis, but there’s little to choose between them and again I incline slightly towards the tempo on the new recording. 
The other singers are also very good. In the stillness after the storm of the narration of the death of Holfernes, Christian Zenker’s rendition of Achior’s Aria #13, Te adoro (CD2 tr.8) strikes the right note before the exultant finale. 
I’ve mentioned conductor Michi Gaigg en passant as setting fairly fast, dramatic tempi. It’s her guiding hand that ultimately makes this recording well worth considering. Terry Barfoot thought that her earlier recording of Mozart tenor arias with Christophe Prégardien was fresh and direct and had much to commend it  . I not only happily second that, I’d also go up a notch or two and say that I can’t imagine a better presentation of this music. That said, the dramatic account of the overture from Concerto Köln on Capriccio - 3:40 against Gaigg’s by no means sedate 4:03 and Peter Schreier’s 3:56 - raises the intriguing possibility of an even more cogent account. 
Not the most urgent choice for those who have yet to get to know Mozart’s mature masterpieces but all concerned here make this well worthwhile for confirmed Mozartians. (Musicweb review)

Dussek: Duets for Harp & Fortepiano (Edward Witsenburg, Jacques Ogg)

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Jan Ladislav Dussek (1760-1812)
Duo for Piano (or Harp) & Piano, with Horn ad libitum, Op. 38
Duo Concertante for Harp & Piano in B-flat major, Op. 69 No. 1
Duo Concertante for Harp & Piano in E-flat major, Op. 69 No. 2
Duo Concertante) for Harp & Piano in F major, Op. 69 No. 3
Jacques Ogg, Fortepiano
Edward Witsenburg, Single Action Harp
(Period Instruments)
Globe GLO 5169 (1999)


[Flac & Scans]




Illuminations of the Beyond - Messiaen - Mahler - Silvestrov - Panufnik - Rachmaninov - Glass

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Olivier Messiaen
Eclairs sur l´Au-Dela...
Orchestre de l´Opéra Bastille
Myung-Whung Chung
DG 1994








Gustav Mahler
Symphony No. 6
Kindertotenlieder
Rückert-Lieder
Christa Ludwig mezzosoprano
Berliner Philharmoniker
Herbert von  Karajan
Recorded 1974, 1975 and 1977
DG 1998
Grand Prix du Disque



Andrzej Panufnik
Sinfonia Sacra
Arbor Cosmica
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra
New York Chamber Symphony
Andrzej Panufnik
Nonesuch 1990






Franz Schreker
From Eternal Life
Irrelohe: Preludes
Four little Pieces for orchestra
Prelude to a Grand Opera
Claudia Barainsky soprano
Deutsches SO Berlin
Peter Ruzicka
Koch 1997




Valentin Silvestrov
Metamusik
Postludium
Alexei Lubimov piano
RSO Wien
Dennis Russell Davies 
ECM 2003






Journey to the Stars
Movie Music by Blomdahl, 
Herrmann, Goldsmith, Barron,
Waxman, Corigliano, Strauss,
Ligeti, North, Williams,
Elfman and Bliss
Hollywood Bowl Orchestra
John Mauceri
Philips 1995




Gustav Holst
The Planets
The Mystical Trumpeter
Colin Matthews
Pluto
Claire Rutter soprano
Royal Scottish NO
David Lloyd-Jones
Naxos 2002




Ludwig van Beethoven
Christus am Ölberg
Maria Venuti soprano
Keith Lewis tenor
Michel Brodard bass
Gachinger Kantorei
Bach Collegium Stuttgart
Helmut Rilling
Hänssler 1994




Georges Bizet
Symphony in C
P. I. Tchaikovsky
Francesca Da Rimini
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Charles Munch
Chesky 1962






Gavin Bryars
String Quartet No. 1
String Quartet No. 2
The Last Days
Balanescu Quartet
Argo 1990







Gerald Finzi
Intimations of Immortality
Dies Natalis
John Mark Ainsley tenor
Corydon Singers and Orchestra
Matthew Best
Hyperion 1993






John Adams
Harmonium
Sergei Rachmaninov
The Bells
Renée Fleming soprano
Karl Dent enor
Victor Ledbetter baritone
Atlanta Symphony Chorus and Orchestra
Robert Shaw
Telarc 1996
 


Nikolai Miaskovsky
Symphony No. 6
Gothenburg Symphony Chorus and Orchestra
Neeme Jarvi
DG 2002








Hans Pfitzner
Das Dunkel Reich
Die Blume Rache
Fons Salutifer
Berlin Radio Choir
Berlin RSO
Rolf Reuter
CPO 1994





Arnold Schoenberg
Die Jakobsleiter
Friede auf Erde
Berlin Radio Choir
Berlin RSO
Kent Nagano
HM 2004






Richard Strauss
Tod und Verklärung
Metamorphosen
Berliner Philharmoniker
Herbert von Karajan
DG 1983







Robert Simpson
Symphony No. 1
Symphony No, 8
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Vernon Handley
Hyperion 1996







Philip Glass
Koyaanisqatsi
Albert de Ruiter bass vocal
The West Wind Vocal Ensemble
The Philip Glass Ensemble
Michael Riesman
Nonesuch 1998





Matthijs Vermeulen
Symphony No. 2 "Prelude à la nouvelle journée"
Symphony No. 6 "Les minutes heureuses"
Symphony No. 7 "Dithyrambes pour le temps à venir"
Residentie Orchestra The Hague
Gennady Rozhdestvensky
Chandos 2002






Alexander Scriabin
Symphony No. 3 "Le Divin Poème"
Le Poème de l´Extase
Russian National Orchestra
Mikhail Pletnev
DG 1999







Louis Andriessen
Trilogy of the Last Days
Tomoko Mukalyama piano, koto and voice
Ferco Kol boy soprano
Children´s Choir De Kickers
ASKO Ensemble
Reinbert de Leeuw  
Donemus 1999





Harald Banter
Rhapsodic Intermezzo
Phädra
Tod des Aktaeon
Prolog 2000
Beate Berthold piano
Maria Kliegel cello
WDR Philarmonic Orchestra
Michail Jurowski
Marco Polo 1996



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Brahms: Choral Works - Bernard Haitink and Alfreda Hodgson

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Orfeo C025821A

Johannes Brahms:
01. Rhapsody for contralto, male chorus and orchestra, op.53* [15'12]
02. Begräbnisgesang, op.13 [7'51]
03. Gesang der Parzen 'Song of the Fates', op.89 [12'51]
04. Nänie, op.82 [12'42]

Alfreda Hodgson- contralto*;  Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and Choir conducted by Bernard Haitink

Orfeo C025821A  (recorded November 1981; CD issued 1982)

(digital download; flacs, booklet, cover and inlay scans)

Recording venue: Herkulessaal, Munich
Recording engineer: Martin Wohr; Producer: Wolfram Graul

Here is a collection with one of Brahms' most popular works accompanied by three much less familiar, although almost equally fine, choral works. To augment the plethora of recordings of the Alto Rhapsody that have appeared recently in the c-box, here is another and one of my favourites of the work.

I am a great fan of the late Alfreda Hodgson, who died in 1992 at the young age of 52. As with another well-known British contralto she was Lancashire born and she was one of those rarities, a true contralto, with a beautiful voice, minimal vibrato and supreme intelligence in her singing. I had the great pleasure of hearing her sing in the Mahler Third Symphony when she visited Hong Kong with Andrew Davis and the BBC Symphony in the late 1980s. There was no audible affect then on her voice from the illness that was to take her so soon after. I still hold her Das Lied von der Erde with Jascha Horenstein as one of my very favourite recordings of that work and this Alto Rhapsody is right up there alongside Janet Baker with Adrian Boult.

I'm not always so much of a fan of Bernard Haitink' conducting but here he is on top form in all four works with splendid support from the choir and orchestra. But for my taste, he doesn't match Adrian Boult in the Alto Rhapsody - I always love Sir Adrian's conducting in Brahms. But it's a pity that Orfeo have such short breaks between the four works.

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Prokofiev - The Stone Flower - Gianandrea Noseda

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Sergei Prokofiev
The Tale of the Stone Flower, Op. 118
BBC Philharmonic
Gianandrea Noseda
Chandos 2003
This recording of The Stone Flower is released to mark the 50th anniversary of the composer's death
flac, cue, logs ,digital cover and booklet




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The Stone Flower ballet is contemporaneous with the opera The Story of a Real Man. It was his last ballet and as you can see from the timings is on an ambitious scale inviting comparison with Cinderella and Romeo and Juliet. The year was 1948. Prokofiev had put aside thoughts of setting Pushkin's The Stone Guest in favour of a subject with nationalist resonance. Folk material was required by the invitation of Zhdanov's ‘spirit of the times’; an invitation not to be denied.
The hero of the ballet is the artist Danilo. His ‘grail’ is the stone flower hidden somewhere in the caverns of the Copper Mountain. He needs it as the raw material for a malachite vase. The supernatural Mistress of the Copper Mountain guards the flower. Danilo finds it but is enchanted by the Mistress. Katerina rescues Danilo and the flower is won. The villainous bailiff, Severyan, is consigned to the earth.
While comparisons will inevitably be made with Romeo and Juliet the composer’s creative furnace, rather like that of his close contemporary, Arnold Bax, had faltered by the late 1940s - earlier in Bax’s case. Mind you there are some fine and distinctive moments provided you are braced for sackcloth and ashes along the way. For example, the invention in most of Act III of The Stone Flower is fatigued. Amid this workaday stuff comes Yuri Torchinsky's luscious oriental serenade for the gypsy girl solo; a lovely piece in own right complete with soughing piano (tr.13 CD2).
The first disc has most of the best bits. These range from the rasping abrasion of the firmament excoriating trumpets (tr.1) to stamping rhythmic material (tr.3) to a slippery little tune contrasted with the distanced wooden rattle of castanets (tr.14). There is a Rimskian ‘round dance’ like something from Antar (tr.7) as well as diaphanous gauzy effects and whispered violins (tr. 8. 1.03). The lovely oboe theme in track 9, infinitely tender, is unnervingly similar to a Warlock song; I cannot quite put my finger on which one. This theme is developed with mounting passion by the violins. The wooing of Danilo by the Mistress is portrayed strongly. He is lured with music that is scorchingly supernatural - like an updated version of Grieg’s goblin music in Peer Gynt (tr.16). I thought also of the invocational music towards the end of Martinů’s 1959 Epic of Gilgamesh. Sadly the quality of the music collapses in tracks 17-21. The Devil does indeed have good tunes so it comes as no surprise that the Severyan episodes are good. These include the peremptory trumpet interruption (tr.6 1.52) and suggestions of oppression afoot (tr.3 CD2) in the Mistress’s Warning. The stomping nasal grouching of the tuba, horns and trombones is to be relished (tr.12) as is the Balakirev style nationalism deployed for Severyan’s Arrival (CD2 tr.5).
The second disc has its highlights, though fewer than on the first disc. As a burden it carries the fatigued Act III set-pieces in a hollow tribute (tr.10 - a creaky Russian Dance) to the divertissement dances in Tchaikovsky’s ballets. Outstanding are the lovely flute-outlined melody for Severyan and the workers (tr.3) and Katerina's redemptively innocent theme (tr.14). Interlude II (tr.9) is memorable for the novel textures projected by piano and muted trumpets. Time and again the skills of the BBCPO violins startle and delight as they do in the tenderness of Where Are You Sweet Danilo? (tr.6). The Ural Rhapsody sports stygian brass and pays its dues to nationalism although the coinage is noticeably Prokofiev’s.
Act IV has a jittery fire spirit diverting Katerina from her gloomy thoughts about the lost Danilo. The spirit leads her back to the Mistress who reveals Danilo. He has been turned to stone. Some imaginative orchestration, cousin to the mene mene tekel upharsin music in Belshazzar’s Feast, is used here. Katerina pleads her case for Danilo's return to life and the Mistress concedes. A shared rapture suffuses the orchestra but the Adagio misses the climactic payload of similar episodes in Romeo and Juliet though the repeated step-down note-cell for the french horns makes its mark. The momentary epilogue carries much the same material ending gloriously ablaze with salty dissonance.
Competition comes in the shape of one real contender and another recording currently absent from the catalogue. CPO’s 1995-97 version with Michail Jurowski and the Radio-Philharmonie Hannover des NDR is on CPO 999 385-2. In the mists of time you will do well to find the version with Rozhdestvensky and the Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra. This dates from 1968 and was issued in the 1994 on Russian Disc. There is also a VHS video (9031-76401-3) with choreography by Yuri Grigorovich and the Maryinsky Theatre Orchestra is conducted by Alexander Viliumanis. Colin Nears is the director and the running time is 110 minutes. I have not seen or heard these different versions though I have seen comments disparaging of Rozhdestvensky because of allegedly brisk insensitive tempi throughout.
Chandos, the BBCPO and Noseda give the fillip of intensity that this music deserves and make many moments rise up as classic Prokofiev.(MusicWeb review)

I do not entirely agree with this article. Prokofiev's inspiration, like that of Schumann and Bax, did not diminish in his later years; it just took another path.

Hugo Wolf - Orchestral Works - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau

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Hugo Wolf (1860-1903)
Orchestral Works
Italian Serenade
Scherzo and Finale
The Corregidor: Prelude and Interlude
Penthesilea
Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
EMI 1998
flac, cue, logs and scans

 
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau's interest in conducting began when he was a child, and he studied conducting along with singing. However, he didn't appear professionally as a conductor until midway in his career.
In 1973 Fischer-Dieskau was invited to substitute for Otto Klemperer in a recording for EMI. In the same year he made his concert debut as a conductor with the Camerata Academica Salzburg in Austria. Thereafter, he appeared as conductor with many well-known orchestras in Germany, Israel, the U.K., and the U.S.A. and made a number of recordings before he gave up conducting in September 1976.
After he ended his singing career at the beginning of 1993, Fischer-Dieskau resumed his activity as a conductor. Since then, he has led several well-known orchestras in a number of notable performances, including Schubert's "Lazarus," and Mahler's "Das Lied von der Erde". He has also continued to record, although most of the post-1993 recordings have been as "accompanist" to his wife, Julia Varady. So far, two recordings of Verdi arias have been released, as well as one of arias by Richard Strauss, and two of songs, arias, and duets by Richard Wagner. In addition, Fischer-Dieskau has recorded a collection of rarely-heard orchestral works bu Hugo Wolf for EMI.
Why was Fischer-Dieskau drawn to conducting in the first place? It was, as he explained to an American journalist, a desire to make music in its broadest sense. Many critics have remarked that his approach to conducting is similar to his approach to singing-- serious, sensitive, detailed, and not given to grand gestures for their own sake. Naturally, the singer who conducts (and thereby steps beyond the boundaries of his "speciality") is greeted with a good deal of skepticism by the critics, and perhaps by the public, as well. But several of Fischer-Dieskau's early recordings, his Schubert "Fifth Symphony," Berlioz "Harold in Italy," and Brahms "Fourth Symphony" in particular, have achieved a kind of cult status among record collectors. And the recordings he has made since his retirement from singing have been very well received and given the kind of critical evaluation reserved for "serious" conductors.
"The contemporary 'coffee-cup-conductors' always say that if they rehearse everything well, then everything works well on the evening of the concert. I find that boring. It wasn't like that earlier; back then there was a period of time when people said: we won't rehearse at all so that the interpretation will remain fresh. Then people started to rehearse, but at the concert the conductor still faced the challenge of achieving with his eyes and gestures something that hadn't existed up until then. And that was clearly the case with Wilhelm Furtwängler. He was able to transform the orchestra and the audience during a performance-- and that is the objective of a concert." (Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, responding to the question: "What is a great conductor?")
"I have seldom felt more anxious about a recording than on the morning of Fischer-Dieskau's first session. I was not worried about whether he would acquit himself creditably; he would never have accepted an assignment which he did not believe he could carry out. I wanted him not merely to go through the sessions and make a record, but to get memorable performances of the two works. Very few people had lived so closely, for so long, with the composer's lieder; I wanted Fischer-Dieskau's Schubert symphonies to be as characteristic of him as his Schubert lieder.
I am positive that none of the anxiety I felt showed obviously when he arrived at the studio and I met him at the front door, but that queer telepathic communication must have been working again, for after a few moments Fischer-Dieskau looked at me, suddenly smiled and said, "Don't worry about the recording, Suvi-- if the first session is a disaster, I shall fly back to Berlin this evening." I stoutly maintained that I was not worried, and now that the actual moment had arrived, I really was not. When I presented Fischer-Dieskau to the New Philharmonia they greeted him with the prolonged and enthusiastic applause orchestras reserve for musicians they respect.
Within a quarter of an hour I realized just what it meant to have an orchestra on the side of a conductor. Fischer-Dieskau's conducting technique was just about adequate. How could it have been otherwise, for until the beginning of the session he had not stood in front of an orchestra and conducted it; any rehearsing he might have done could only have been in private, and perhaps in front of a mirror. His gestures were sometimes ambiguous and his instructions to this or that section of the orchestra were not always precise. But none of this mattered-- the orchestra sensed that he had a clear conception of the 'Unfinished' Symphony and he was able to transmit it to every member of the orchestra. The leader, Desmond Bradley, was a tower of strength, acting, when required, as an interpreter between Fischer-Dieskau and the orchestra, and everyone responded. By the time the break came I knew that this was going to be a very special Schubert B minor. As the leader of the cellos put it, "He's made me play the second theme exactly as he might have sung it." (Suvi Raj Grubb, Music-Makers on Record)
(From  https://www.mwolf.de)

John Adams - Nixon in China - Marin Alsop

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John Adams (1947)
Nixon in China  Opera in three acts (1987)
Richard Nixon Robert Orth
Pat Nixon Maria Kanyova
Henry Kissinger Thomas Hammons
Mao Tse-tung Marc Heller
Madame Mao Tracy Dahl
Cou En-lai Chen-Ye Yuan
First Secretary Melissa Malde
Second Secretary Julie Simson
Third Secretary Jennifer DeDominici
Opera Colorado Chorus Douglas Kinney Frost conductor
 Colorado Symphony Orchestra
Marin Alsop
Live Recording
Naxos 2009
flac, cue, logs and digital booklet with libretto
 
Released in late October 2009, this is the second commercially available recording of John Adams’s important opera Nixon in China, and it stands well alongside the premiere CD from Nonesuch, with Edo de Waart conducting the Orchestra of St. Luke’s. This new release is based on a production of the opera given in Denver, Colorado in June 2009, and stands as testimony to the durability of Adams’s score. Alsop’s is a fine interpretation allowing the sung text to emerge readily throughout the performance. Except for Thomas Hammons, who created the role of Henry Kissinger and may be heard on the existing recording, the entire cast is new to the work, and their performances convey their own engagement in this modern Zeitoper.
 As an historic event, the late President Nixon’s visit to China broke down one of the longstanding Cold War barriers. As public as this event was, the genre of opera is useful in bringing out some of the cultural dimensions of this momentous occasion. This is clear in Alice Goodman’s libretto, which offers Adams many opportunities to reinforce the various points she makes in her text. The full libretto is published in the booklet that accompanies the recording, along with synopses of the action for each of the acts. At times, the repetition of the text itself suffices, with this basic element of minimalism serving the dramatic purpose to great effect. For example, the repeated phrases of the number “News has a kind of mystery” is effective in bringing out the full import of the libretto at this point, and Robert Orth delivers it well. It is, after all, the accompaniment which makes the point of the exchange between Nixon and Mao about the latter’s preference for right-wing politics. In other places, Adams uses instrumental numbers well to convey aspects of the libretto uniquely, as in the depiction of the flight of Nixon’s jet, the Spirit of ’76. Here Alsop is good to bring out the interpretation of a plane without resort to sound effects or otherwise exaggerating the repeated patterns that create the impression of turbines. This passage in Nixon in China is comparable to Honegger’s Pacific 231 in its evocation of machinery.
 While much of Nixon in China is declamatory, Adams’s accompaniment helps to bring out elements through the shifting colors of the orchestra or in various kinds of motivic gestures, as with the trombones that accompany the passages about the rats in the sheets (in the first act). Alsop balances the vocal lines and accompaniment effectively, and this is accentuated by the excellent sonics of the Naxos recording, in which these details can be heard easily. When required in the score, Alsop shifts tempos in a facile way, and they are apparent in the vibrant sound represented well in the recording. This is particularly apparent with the chorus, which has a nice presence in the overall concept of this performance. While various places could be cited, the final scene of the first act is notable for the deft intersection of chorus and principals, a place where Alsop brings out the dramatic elements of the chorus, soloists, and orchestra as the action comes to a point of repose.
 The second act opens with an extended scene involving Pat Nixon, and in this role Maria Kanyova creates a strong impression. Her diction and phrasing make the character come to life, and the resulting clarity precludes the need to refer to a libretto to follow the text. A similar effect occurs in the second scene of that act, with the chorus of three secretaries performing in tight ensemble. Their sense of unity is akin to that of a single performer, as Adams intended, and their scene succeeds for various reasons, including the strong performances the three performers brought to this part of the opera. In this scene Thomas Hammons reprises the role of Henry Kissinger that he created on the premiere recording. His inflections and ease in the part emerge nicely. Likewise, Tracy Dahl as Madame Mao is effective in her solo number at the end of the act in which she explains her character’s motivation. As with the first act, Alsop builds the tension satisfactorily – this is evident, too, in the applause which is part of the recording and also adds to its appeal.
Alsop’s sensitivity is particularly noticeably at the beginning of the third act, in which the more delicate dynamic levels may be heard in conjunction with the sometimes abrupt shifts in the rhythmic patterns just before the entrance of the character of Richard Nixon. Such details include the fluid coloratura of Kanyova in her scene with Robert Orth, a moment in the opera which demonstrates Adams’s effective vocal writing. These and the other principals work well together to bring Nixon in China to its conclusion. Some of the ideas are now familiar to audiences who have heard Adams’s other music, including his recent opera Doctor Atomic, which has some similar passages of vocal beauty. Yet Adams is hardly formulaic as a composer, and the individual style and appeal of Nixon in China is evident in this performance of this major work of the late twentieth century. The elegiac quality of the Finale remains one of its memorable moments, and this recording provides a moving reading of that important scene.
 All in all, this second recording of John Adams’ Nixon in China has much to offer, and the interpretation of the work by Marin Alsop points to the durability of this score among other strong modern operas. The performance in this new recording is worth hearing; those already familiar with Nixon in China may wish to hear this performance, while anyone who has not yet heard the piece can find much to offer here. The convincing performance is supported by the excellent sound in a recording which is affordably priced and easy to obtain. The inclusion of the full text of the opera is another welcome part of this Naxos set. (Music Web review)

J. Eliot Gardiner conducts Lili Boulanger nd Igor Stravinsky

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Lili Boulanger
Psalm 24 "La terre appartient à l'Éternel"
Psalm 129 "Ils m'ont assez opprimé dès ma jeunesse"
Psalm 130 "Du fond de l'abîme"
Vieille prière bouddhique
Igor Stravinsky
Symphony of Psalms
Sally Bruce-Payne mezzo-soprano
Julian Podger tenor
The Monteverdi Choir
London Symphony Orchestra
John Eliot Gardiner
DG 1999
Had she not died at the age of 25, Lili Boulanger (1893-1918) would, by many acounts, be regarded as a major French composer. As it is, her compositional accomplishments overshadowed those of her better-known sister Nadia, who mostly gave up composition and devoted her life to training many American neo-classical composers. As it is, currently at Arkiv there are 35 recordings of Lili's music and on Amazon there are eleven. There have been at least two books devoted to Lili Boulanger's short musical career: LeIonie Rosenstiel's "Life and Works of Lili Boulanger"; and Caroline Potter's "Nadia and Lili Boulanger". She read music at age two and a half; at five Gabriel Fauré accompanied her on his songs; she began serious study of harmony at six, and at nineteen won the Prix de Rome with a cantata, Faust et Hélène, which Debussy praised. The works on this recording date from 1916 and 1917 and they impress me much more than the few other works by her I have heard. This is music that is both powerful and beautiful.At about twenty seven and a half minutes, Du fond de l'abîme is the longest work on this disc, although the text is relatively short. Its first minutes are soft and quiet – the chorus even seems to sigh at one point – but by a third of the way through it becomes first quietly then fiercely dramatic, with brass, drum rolls and loud singing. There is a big crescendo augmented by the organ toward the end. The orchestration is impressive, but does not overwhelm the strong voices, and is often quiet; there is an opportunity for the mezzo to have solos and for the tenor and mezzo to sing together over light accompaniment.
Psalm 24 for chorus, organ and orchestra, which opens the disc, is less than four minutes long but begins with a powerful fanfare and the male choir sings full out. It softens and slows, with a horn solo, but again becomes emphatic with brass and organ. Psalm 129 for chorus and orchestra, at seven and a half minutes, opens with slow and low thrusting tones and the orchestra plays for two minutes before the chorus enters powerfully; there is rising tension and emphatic rhythm with beating drums, but at the end voices become gentler and the female choir sings wordlessly over the males and then alone.
The Buddhist prayer (Vieille prière bouddhique) for tenor, chorus and orchestra lasts for eight and a half minutes and opens slowly and beautifully with the male choir accompanied by a higher vocal line; high strings play later also. There is a nice Debussy-like flute solo. The tenor is not heard until the mid-point. The final minutes are loud and powerful.
The commentator Roger Nichols says that "the music of these four works was not what a well-brought-up jeune fille was expected to produce, let alone one in poor health". He also notes that her melodic lines are "extraordinarily bold and wide-ranging, often negating any sense of key." She makes use of semitones.
The performance of Stravinsky's work for chorus and orchestra on texts from Psalms 38, 39, and 150 is excellent and the recording is better than the recent Rattle release (EMI Classics 2-07630-0), which I have reviewed here, so I am not going to say much about the work in this one. The first movement strikes me as just about perfect. The oboe solo opening the middle section is quite satisfying and the Monteverdi Choir is impressive here, as in the Boulanger. The male voices are especially powerful. The gorgeous "laudate" movement is well paced, well articulated in the staccato passages and has subtle dynamic emphases in the legato ones. I was struck by a beautifully built crescendo near the midpoint of the movement.
Strongly recommended. (Classical Net review)

tDel Tredici - Final Alice - Barbara Hendricks - Sir Georg Solti

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David Del trdici (b. 1937)
Final Alice (1976)
1. 'The King & Queen of Hearts'
2. 'Consider your verdict'
3. ‘They told me you had been to her' (Aria I)
4. 'She's all my fancy painted him' (Aria II)
5. 'She's all my fancy painted her' (Aria III)
6. Fuga
7. 'She's all my fancy painted her'
8. 'A boat 'neath a sunny sky' (Aria IV, ‘Acrostic Song’)
Barbara Hendricks (soprano)
Folk group: Fred Hemke Robert Black soprano saxophones
Fred Spector mandolin
Frederic Chrislip tenor banjo
Herman Troppe accordion
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Sir Georg Solti
Recorded 1980
Decca Eloquence 2008
flac, cue, log and scans
 
American composer David Del Tredici’s fascination with Lewis Carroll borders on the obsessive. He has composed no less than four major Alice works: Pop-Pourri (An Alice Symphony), 1969; Adventures Underground, 1971; Vintage Alice, 1972; and Final Alice, 1976. But wait, there’s one more – Child Alice, written between 1977 and 1981.
Since then Del Tredici, considered the father of neo-Romanticism, has broadened his horizons, setting contemporary American poets – often with a gay sensibility – and venturing into solo piano and chamber works as well. He is not very well represented in the CD catalogue at present, which makes this Eloquence reissue of Final Alice so very welcome.
 Composed for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in America’s bicentennial year Final Alice is a daunting work for large orchestra, folk ensemble and soprano/narrator. What makes this recording so exceptional is that Barbara Hendricks plays both roles; it’s quite an achievement, given that performances usually include a separate narrator.
 As for Solti – the work’s dedicatee – his Chicago years produced some fine recordings, although his somewhat driven style of conducting is not universally admired. In Final Alice it’s hard to believe he was ever dubbed ‘the screaming skull’, such is the warmth and spontaneity of this performance. Both he and Hendricks actually sound as if they are having fun, and the result is a most rewarding hour of spectacular music-making.
There is also a darker, more serious side to Final Alice. Arias I, II and IV are Carroll poems, the text of Aria I the only one to appear in the Alice story. According to the composer’s detailed liner-notes the source for the second and third arias is a sentimental Victorian poem by William Mee, Alice Gray, which deals with a man’s unrequited love for a young girl called Alice. Of course Carroll’s decision to use the first line of this poem as the springboard for his own verse is not fortuitous, adding a terrible poignancy to this multi-layered score.
This ‘opera written in concert form’ opens with Hendricks’ clearly enunciated, deliciously precocious narration of the trial from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Gradually the orchestra makes its presence felt, almost as if it’s tuning up during this introduction. The sonorities are very strange indeed, with some distinctive brass harmonies and unusual colours. The early digital recording is detailed and atmospheric, making it so much easier to engage with the composer’s eccentric sound world.
The temptation in narration of this kind must be to exaggerate but Hendricks – who took part in the premiere – keeps vocal mannerisms to a minimum. She is delightfully squeaky as the dormouse objecting to the growing Alice and commandingly regal when the king flies into a rage at the end of track 3.  As if that weren’t taxing enough she sings with astonishing agility and purity of tone in ‘The Accusation’ and the confused pronouns of Aria I.
In Aria II, produced as ‘evidence’ for the court, Hendricks alternates between dazzling embellishment and vehement outbursts, underpinned by some bracing sonorities from the orchestra. After a brief narrative she launches into a variation on the second aria. This is music of great longing, encapsulated in the words, ‘O my heart, my heart is breaking’. Hendricks imbues the text with considerable feeling. This is the other side of Alice – the subtext if you like – and it’s indescribably moving.
 Briefly we move back to the surreal proceedings of the court and the wickedly funny ‘suppression’ of the guinea-pig juror who dared to cheer. Cue drum thwacks and riotous. Orff-like orchestral effects, through which Hendricks still manages to make herself heard. One marvels at these vocal fireworks, which she essays with such style and accuracy.
After the lively orchestral fugue the court asks to hear more ‘evidence’; cue a reprise of 'She's all my fancy painted her', now more impassioned than ever, with the final cry, ‘Ye Gods! She is divine!’ The dynamic range of the fugal movement – from the splash of percussion right down to the rasping low brass – is very wide indeed, and in the confrontation between Alice and the pack of cards Solti whips his orchestra into an absolute frenzy. Remarkably the Chicagoans keep it all together, even as pandemonium reigns.
Alice’s return to ‘dull reality’ is followed by the so-called ‘Acrostic song’ the first letter of each line spelling out the name ALICE PLEASANCE LIDDELL. It is gloriously rich and Romantic and Hendricks continues to astound with her vocal dexterity; just listen to her breath control in that long, sustained phrase that begins at 3:01. Thereafter we plunge back into an orchestral passage filled with turmoil and dark discord. It defies all categorisation, confirming Final Alice as a one-off, a true original.
All credit to the Decca team for doing this piece proud and to Australian Eloquence for returning it to the catalogue. Not to be missed. (MusicWeb review)

PELLEAS ET MELISANDE - GLYNDEBOURNE, GUI 1963

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Claude Debussy
Pelléas et Mélisande

Hans Wilbrink (Pelléas), Denise Duval (Mélisande)
Michel Roux (Golaud), Guus Hoekman (Arkel)
Anna Reynolds (Geneviève), Rosine Brédy (Yniold)
John Shirley-Quirk (a Doctor)

The Glyndebourne Chorus
The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
dir : Vittorio Gui

Glyndebourne GFOCD 003-63 mono 3 CDs [P] 2009
Recorded live at Glyndebourne, summer 1963

Individual FLAC files, logs, booklet, scans


A Fine Cast makes for a Memorable Pelléas from Glyndebourne in 1963

As John Steane noted, welcoming Glyndebourne's 1962 Figaro, that "vintage year" saw the return to Sussex of Carl Ebert "to produce not only Figaro but also Glyndebourne's first Pelléas".  Recorded here on its revival a year later, Pelléas was conducted by Vittorio Gui, 78 in 1963, whose connection with the Glyndebourne company extended back to 1948.

If Gui's reading is "Italianate", this is because it gives considerable though never excessive weight to the drama's emotional intensity.  The idea that Debussy's opera is reticent from start to finish is a myth, and in this close-up recording the turbulent anguish of the orchestral interludes is especially vivid.  When the focus is on the voices, the orchestra suffers to a degree in the restricted balance.  That "bright hard edge which is the accursed associate of digital remastering" (JBS on the Figaro discs) is evident here too, though never to a disabling extent: better a hard edge than a pervasive lack of clarity.

In 1963 Glyndebourne fielded a cast of French, Dutch and English singers whose handling of the French text stands up well in comparision with the best recent recordings.  As with Bernard Haitink's account (Naive), hailed by Roger Nichols as setting "a new standard", there is the minor incongruity of a very femine Yniold, and also a Pelléas (Hans Wilbrink) whose occasionally strained moments suggest dramatic engagement rather than musical weakness.  Gui's Denise Duval is an even more persuasive, more convincingly youthful Mélisande than Haitink's Anne Sofie von Otter - although Act 1 scene 2 does rather underline the fact that Anna Reynolds, singing the Mother of Golaud and Pelléas, was actually 10 years younger than Duval.  The Golaud, Michel Roux, had recorded the role in 1955 and again in 1962.  RN concluded that "he did not have the necessary power": but Roux was not the first singer to find the Glyndebourne experience uniquely energising, and there is no lack of force in his telling protrayal of this most maddeningly obtuse of operatic characters.  Guss Hoekman is an eloquent Arkel, and John Shirley-Quirk has all the necessary gravitas as the Doctor in Act 5.

The packaging, with full text (four languages) and production photographs but no biographies of the performers, leaves some unanswered questions; in particular, just how extensive a composite of the works' 10 performances in 1963 is this recording?  Whatever the answer, the result is well sustained and consistent, and as memorable in its way as those versions by Desormière, Boulez and Haitink which RN singled out in his Gramophone Collection study of the work.

GRAMOPHONE, June 2009, p. 90.  Author: Arnold Whittall





Elgar Howarth & Grimethorpe Colliery Band - Bold As Brass and Classics for Brass Band

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Belart (Decca) 450023-2

Bold as Brass:
01. W Hogarth Lear: Red Sky At Night [3'45]
02. W Hogarth Lear: Hogarth's Hoe Down [2'26]
03. Stephen Foster (arr. Howarth): Jeanie With the Light Brown Hair# [2'43]
04. W Hogarth Lear: Barney's Tune [3'27]
05. Elgar Howarth: Cornet Concerto* [6'24]
06. W Hogarth Lear: Chinese Take-Away [4'25]
07. Elgar Howarth: Parade [4'41]
08. W Hogarth Lear: Paris le soir^ [3'57]
09. Elgar Howarth: Mosaic [4'40]
10. Sousa: The Stars and Stripes Forever [3'46]

Elgar Howarth- cornet* & flugelhorn^; David Moore- euphonium#; Grimethorpe Colliery Band conducted by Elgar Howarth

Belart (Decca) 450023-2  (recorded April 1976; CD issued 1998)

(CD-rip; cover and inlay scans, no booklet)

Decca Japan UCCD 7456
Classics for Brass Band:
01. Gustav Holst: A Moorside Suite [14'26]
02. John Ireland: A Comedy Overture [10'48]
03. Edward Elgar: Severn Suite, op.87 [19'31]
04. Arthur Bliss: Kenilworth [9'00]

Grimethorpe Colliery Band conducted by Elgar Howarth

Decca Japan UCCD 7456 (recorded June 1976; CD issued January 2019)

(CD-rip; cover and LP sleeve scans only)

Recording venue: Huddersfield Town Hall, Yorkshire
Recording engineer: Michael Mailes; Producer: James Mallinson

The Bold as Brass was one of my first attempts at ripping a CD to flac files, 20 years ago. At the time, I couldn't scan booklets and I no longer have the original so these scans are only from the interweb.

At the time of these recordings, Elgar Howarth - a member of the New Music Manchester school along with Harrison Birtwistle, Peter Maxwell Davies and Alexander Goehr - was working a great deal with the Grimethorpe Band - although he is better known for his more 'serious' work with the London Sinfonietta and Philip Jones Brass Ensemble and championing contemporary music. He brought the standard of brass playing to the highest level during his time at Grimethorpe.

W Hogarth Lear was Howarth's anagrammatical nom de plume when writing light music - although none of the works on Bold as Brass published under his real name could be considered heavyweight. But the Cornet Concerto does allow him to demonstrate his prowess on the cornet.

It seems incredible that Universal Music would think it worthwhile issuing the Classics for Brass Band recordings on CD in Japan only. Only Kenilworth is new to CD with Decca having issued the other three separately on other discs worldwide. I understand that they also issued a number of rare Howarth Decca recordings with the Philip Jones Ensemble at the same time but unfortunately not the Decca Headline release with the Grimethorpe Band of works by Henze, Birtwistle, Howarth and Takemitsu. This still languishes as only an LP issue. (If anybody has a rip that they could post, I would be most grateful.) 

This rip of Classics for Brass Band was sent to me by an internet friend and comes with a health warning. There seems to have been no remastering of the three works that were issued earlier on CD and Ireland's Comedy Overture exhibits the same early cut-off at the end as on other commercial download sites.

Both discs represent brass playing of the highest standard, superbly conducted by Elgar Howarth.

Download from MEGA.


Altered States - Music by Corigliano - Reich - Vaughan Williams - Hartmann - Feldman - Schoenberg

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John Corigliano
Altered States
Music for the Ken Russell film
Conducted by Christopher Keene
RCA 1991
Academy Award nominated






 
Arnold Schoenberg
Pelleas und Melisande
Richard Wagner
Siegfried-Idyll
Orchester der Deutsches Oper Berlin
Christian Thielemann
DG 2000






Karl Amadeus Hartmann
Concerto funebre for violin and strings
Symphony No. 4 for strings
Chamber Concerto for clarinet, string quartet and strings 
Isabelle Faust violin
Paul Meyer clarinet
Petersen Quartet
Munich Chamber Orchestra
Christoph Poppen
ECM 2000

Steve Reich
Remixed
Tracks by DJ Sooky. Andrea Parker
Coldcut, Howe B, Tranquility Bass,
Mantronik, Nobukazu Takemura,
D*Note and Ken Ishii
Nonesuch 1999






Ralph Vaughan Williams
Job - A Masque for Dancing
The London Philharmonic
David Nolan violin
Stephen Trier saxophone
David Bell organ
Vernon Handley
EMI 1984





Morton Feldman
Piano and String Quartet
Aki Takahashi piano
Kronos Quartet
Nonesuch 1991







flac, cue, logs and scans

M Haydn: Vocal and Instrumental Works (Marcoloni Quartet)

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Johann Michael Haydn (1737-1806)
Missa Tempore quadragemisae, for Chorus & Organ, MH 553
Symphony in E-flat major, MH 340 (P 17)
Ave Regina, for Soloists, Chorus & Orchestra in A minor, MH 140
Divertimento for String Quartet in A major, MH 299 (P 121)
Responsoria in Nativitate Domini, for Chorus & Orchestra, MH 639
Florian Heyerick Academia Palatina, Ex Tempore, Marcolini Quartett
(Period Instruments)
Etcetera KTC 4020 (2006)
 
 
[Flac & Scans]
 

 
 

Miaskovsky - Prokofiev - Maisky - Pletnev

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Nikolai Miaskovsky
Cello Concerto op. 66
Sergei Prokofiev
Sinfonia concertante op.125
Mischa Maisky cello
Russian National Orchestra
Mikhail Pletnev
DG 1996
Flac, cue, log and scans





The innately aristocratic feeling the Russian National Orchestra exhibit and the classical finesse that Pletnev commands ensures a wonderfully balanced reading. ... I have never heard the Prokofiev sonority better served and its characteristically sardonic bite and wit emerge more potently. Miaskovsky's beautiful and more lightly scored concerto ... happens to be one of my favourite concertos which I often play for pleasure. Now it is to this version that I shall be turning not only for the sake of Maisky's committed advocacy but for the unforced eloquence which Pletnev and his orchestra bring to this score. The DG recording gives Maisky an appropriate prominence without ever masking the orchestral detail. An outstanding coupling. (Grammophone review)


Vaňhal: Sonatas for Clarinet & Piano (Ernst Schlader, Wolfgang Brunner)

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Johann Baptist Vanhal (1739-1813)
Clarinet Sonata in E-flat major
Violin Sonata in G major (arr. for Clarinet)
Clarinet Sonata in B-flat major
Clarinet Sonata in C major
Violin Sonata in E-flat major (arr. for Clarinet)
Ernst Schlader, Clarinet
Wolfgang Brunner, Fortepiano
(Period Instruments)
Gramola 98988 (2013)
[Flac & Scans]
 

 

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