So far only one mention of Edvard Grieg in this thread - here's a specific recording. Emil Gilels playing a selection of his Lyric Pieces.
https://www.amazon.com/Grieg-Lyric-Pieces-Emil-Gilels/dp/B000001GX2
Smetana's not had a mention at all, this collection I don't own but I keep returning to it on YT : https://www.amazon.com/Ma-Vlast-B-S...brilliant+classics,music-intl-ship,268&sr=1-1
https://www.amazon.com/Grieg-Lyric-Pieces-Emil-Gilels/dp/B000001GX2
Smetana's not had a mention at all, this collection I don't own but I keep returning to it on YT : https://www.amazon.com/Ma-Vlast-B-S...brilliant+classics,music-intl-ship,268&sr=1-1
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I grew up on Peer Gynt. A lot of people know Morning and In the Hall of the Mountain King, but don't know that it's Grieg.
Holberg Suite, kind of Romantic take on folksy Early Music. Scottish Baroque Orchestra; "purist" soundstage minimally-mic'ed CRD recording engineered by Simon Lawson.
I listen to jazz most the time but occasionally listen to classical. An artist who has caught my attention is Helene Grimaud.
1. any Beethoven symphony (all movements)
2. Mozart 41st (4th movement)
3. Schubert's Great (4M) - great because there are 2 C major symphonies
4. Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique
5. Orff's Carmina Burana - O Fortuna (read background story)
6. Faure Pavane (bring tissues)
7. Tchaikovsky Francesca Di Rimini
8. Horowitz Carmen Variations by Horowitz or Yuja Wang
9. Bach Toccata and Fugue D Minor
10. Brahms Violin concerto (3M)
11. Bruch Violin concerto (3M)
12. Mozart Queen of the Night
13. Mussorsky Pictures at an Exhibition (Giulini/CSO) vinyl only with MC
and if you are writing the great american novel or building a 16-leg put/call
straddle/strangle with 8 naked legs, or rebuilding a 1926 Rolex with screw-down
crown:
try all the Requiems til you find the one that works.
2. Mozart 41st (4th movement)
3. Schubert's Great (4M) - great because there are 2 C major symphonies
4. Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique
5. Orff's Carmina Burana - O Fortuna (read background story)
6. Faure Pavane (bring tissues)
7. Tchaikovsky Francesca Di Rimini
8. Horowitz Carmen Variations by Horowitz or Yuja Wang
9. Bach Toccata and Fugue D Minor
10. Brahms Violin concerto (3M)
11. Bruch Violin concerto (3M)
12. Mozart Queen of the Night
13. Mussorsky Pictures at an Exhibition (Giulini/CSO) vinyl only with MC
and if you are writing the great american novel or building a 16-leg put/call
straddle/strangle with 8 naked legs, or rebuilding a 1926 Rolex with screw-down
crown:
try all the Requiems til you find the one that works.
I’m no classical connoisseur but I found this the other day and liked it:
Classical music is a deep rabbit hole but Tidal and Roon have made it so simple to find and tryout the multitude of recordings.
Classical music is a deep rabbit hole but Tidal and Roon have made it so simple to find and tryout the multitude of recordings.
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In live performance, I could listen to Schubert "lieder" for hours, but recorded, not so much. We had a tenor in our choir who did wonderful Schubert, but all the recordings I have just fall flat.
I probably have ~1,000 CDs and maybe 300 LP's -- of these operatic and choral are in the greatest frequency.
Take a listen to the Allegri "Miserere"...
I probably have ~1,000 CDs and maybe 300 LP's -- of these operatic and choral are in the greatest frequency.
Take a listen to the Allegri "Miserere"...
BTW, here’s a very nice podcast from swiss national radio, srf2: https://www.srf.ch/audio/diskothek
It is about (blindly) comparing various interpretations of a specific classical piece. They listen to various parts of it and discuss it, and at the end the interprets are revealed. I was flabbergasted at the spectrum of … interpretation‘s qualities?
It is all in german of course, unfortunately.
It is about (blindly) comparing various interpretations of a specific classical piece. They listen to various parts of it and discuss it, and at the end the interprets are revealed. I was flabbergasted at the spectrum of … interpretation‘s qualities?
It is all in german of course, unfortunately.
The Sixteen on Coro Recordings: Allegri Miserere and Palestrina Missa Papae Marcelli. The latter is a difficult choral piece, it's written for two choirs and a lot of moving pieces.
Believe it or not, my favorite Mahler 5... but first let me tell you this...and, I am not a pathological liar.My favorite piece is Mahlers 5th symphonie but I struggle to find a great recording. Any suggestions or more pieces along these lines?
Mahlers 5th part One tears me open each time. I have not found a piece of music that comes close.
There are only two people shaking hands between me and Gustav Mahler... who died in 1911. My friend and colleague Jerry Bruck, when he was young, knew Mahler's widow Alma, when she was very old.
I have heard very many Mahler 5s. My favorite is the one conducted by radical modern composer Pierre Boulez!!! With the Vienna Philharmonic.
https://play.qobuz.com/album/0002894534162
My guess is that because Boulez probably had trouble getting conductors exactly to follow the instructions in the music he wrote, he decided to honor Mahler by following Mahler's instructions exactly. And, of course, string tone hardly gets any better.
BTW, there is an a-cappella choral (WITH WORDS!!!) version of the slow movement of M5. I love it. But my former boss at Stereophile finds it unlistenable. So, you get to decide. It's Track 2 on this album:
https://play.qobuz.com/album/0822189013592
If you like Mahler Symphony 5, try Elgar Symphony 2! The English Horn solo in the slow movement is amazing.
https://play.qobuz.com/album/qbw7wqc6kgkec
all my best,
john
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