What are you listening to now?

Started by Dungeon Master, February 15, 2013, 09:13:11 PM

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aligreto

Disc 2 from this set....





Sonatas Nos. 7-12.

Que

Quote from: aligreto on November 18, 2015, 08:18:53 AM
That has been on my List for a while now; what did you think of it Que?

I already had some Duphly discs by Jean-Patrice Brosse, so I am familiar with the music. Rousset does a cross-section of Duphly's oeuvre.
Playing is, as usual with Rousset, elegant, virtuosic, brilliant and dazzling....but fortunately Rousset's style is for some time now not longer over-the-top and out-of-breath. This is perfectly balanced.  :)

All good news, but there is a catch here....this recording is out of print.... :(  I would recommend tracking a copy down soon...

Q

Brian

#55162
Someone mentioned Rheinberger recently, so I'm trying out a random sampling of his piano music.

Sonata No. 3
Klaviervortrage Op 53
Fantasiestuck, "Hoch geht die See"
Improvisation on Die Zauberflote
Aus den Ferientagen, Op. 72



Right now I'm starting with the sonata. It seems like the recorded sound is not too great (like early '80s digital) and the pianist is not exciting, but the music is. In the hands of someone like Julius Katchen, Krystian Zimerman, or Jonathan Plowright, this could be really terrific stuff.

The other works were recorded later so maybe there will be a favorable change in the sound.

listener

a combination not likely to be duplicated today :
MOZART: Symphonies 1 -5  Kk 16-19 22
Philharmonic S.O of London,  Leinsdorf cond.         Westminster mono LP's
re-visit:  BALAKIREV: Tamara    IPOLITOV-IVANOV:  Songs of Ossian
USSR State Radio Orch.,  --- Golovanov, cond.
and a couple of discs featuring the clarinet:
WEBER: Variations op. 33 PIXIS: Variations on a theme from Seyfried's Nikas am Scheidewege, op. 19
ROSSINI: Fantaisie and Variations (c.1826) SPOHR: Fantaisie and Variations on a theme by Danzi ( string quartet op. 6/4)  REISSIGER: Duo Brillant op.130,  DONIZETTI: Studio primo (clarinet solo)
Colin Bradbury, clarinet ( Boosey & Hawkes, 1970)  Oliver Davies, piano
KROMMER: Concerto op. 36, WEBER: Concertino op. 26  WAGNER::  actually by BAERMANN: Adagio DEBUSSY: First Rhapsody
Jack Brymer, clarinet   Vienna State Opera Orch.   Felix Prohaska, cond.
"Keep your hand on the throttle and your eye on the rail as you walk through life's pathway."

North Star

First listen (this recording)

Vaughan Williams
Serenade to Music
London Symphony Chorus & Orchestra
Boult

[asin]B00156ZWV0[/asin]
"Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it." - Confucius

My photographs on Flickr

SonicMan46

Quote from: Brian on November 18, 2015, 09:01:51 AM
Someone mentioned Rheinberger recently, so I'm trying out a random sampling of his piano music.

 

Right now I'm starting with the sonata. It seems like the recorded sound is not too great (like early '80s digital) and the pianist is not exciting, but the music is. In the hands of someone like Julius Katchen, Krystian Zimerman, or Jonathan Plowright, this could be really terrific stuff.

The other works were recorded later so maybe there will be a favorable change in the sound.

Hi Brian - well, I was at least one who mentioned the piano box - I have his chamber music collection and enjoy - the back cover states that these works were recorded between 1990 & 2004 - will look forward to your further comments; the 10-CD box is selling for about $35 on the Amazon USA MP at the moment.  Dave :)

Brian

Quote from: SonicMan46 on November 18, 2015, 10:14:54 AM
Hi Brian - well, I was at least one who mentioned the piano box - I have his chamber music collection and enjoy - the back cover states that these works were recorded between 1990 & 2004 - will look forward to your further comments; the 10-CD box is selling for about $35 on the Amazon USA MP at the moment.  Dave :)
The sound quality did increase after CD 1! Must be moving ahead from 1990 to the 2000s that did the trick. :)

All the music I've heard so far from it has been very good. The Mozart "improvisation" was a lot of fun. But yes, it is fun to fantasize about someone like Gilels playing this music...

mc ukrneal

Quote from: Brian on November 18, 2015, 10:17:42 AM
The sound quality did increase after CD 1! Must be moving ahead from 1990 to the 2000s that did the trick. :)

All the music I've heard so far from it has been very good. The Mozart "improvisation" was a lot of fun. But yes, it is fun to fantasize about someone like Gilels playing this music...
The first disc seems to be a bit pingier and a bit colder in sound, but this is really only noticeable when compared to other performances. In and of itself, it is perfectly listenable.  Lethe was the one who actually noticed this one (that long ago) when it came out. I don't feel the performance is lacking either and I've listened from top to bottom a bunch of times.
Be kind to your fellow posters!!

Que


The new erato

Finally getting started on this set:

[asin]B002QEXBQS[/asin]

after playing disc 2 from this:

[asin]B00V872H0K[/asin]

aligreto

Quote from: Que on November 18, 2015, 08:56:24 AM
I already had some Duphly discs by Jean-Patrice Brosse, so I am familiar with the music. Rousset does a cross-section of Duphly's oeuvre.
Playing is, as usual with Rousset, elegant, virtuosic, brilliant and dazzling....but fortunately Rousset's style is for some time now not longer over-the-top and out-of-breath. This is perfectly balanced.  :)

All good news, but there is a catch here....this recording is out of print.... :(  I would recommend tracking a copy down soon...

Q

Thank you for that.

aligreto

Mozart: String Quintets K. 406 & K. 174...





Two particularly fine performances of the Allegros in both K. 406 & K. 174.

ritter

Assorted chamber music by Nikos Skalkottas (by both of them, the Hellenic folklorist and the Germanic twelve-tone modernist  ;) ):

[asin]B000042GR6[/asin]

Mirror Image

Now:



Listening to Symphony No. 3 in A minor, Op. 44. My heart melts. Oh and it's written in my favorite key (that also helps). 8)



NJ Joe



My current favorite Sibelius 2, recorded in 1980.
"Music can inspire love, religious ecstasy, cathartic release, social bonding, and a glimpse of another dimension. A sense that there is another time, another space and another, better universe."
-David Byrne

TheGSMoeller

I could never see what was written on this cover. My partial color-blindness perhaps? It wasn't until I began scrolling through the Purchased Today thread and moving quickly passed the image I could finally see it! I didn't know Currentzis released a Rite of Spring!  ;D

[asin]B00ZKNBWCW[/asin]

Mirror Image

Now:



Listening to Symphony No. 3. Often categorized as part of the 'trifecta' of great American 3rd symphonies (along with Copland and Harris), this symphony is vigorous, highly charged, and a bit boisterous, but this isn't to criticize the symphony, but it's a completely different kind of animal than Copland or Harris. It also simply doesn't get any better than this particular Bernstein performance.

Todd





From the big box.  Revisiting a mixed bag disc.  I don't care for the Beethoven, but the Franck is very good, and the Brahms is great in a super-virtuoso sort of way.
The universe is change; life is opinion. - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

People would rather believe than know - E.O. Wilson

Propaganda death ensemble - Tom Araya

Panem et Artificialis Intelligentia