What are you listening to now?

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

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Que

Quote from: Harry's corner on October 01, 2017, 11:59:08 PM
Right, you forgot the malt dear friend. A hot toddy works wonders, especially for your mood. :laugh:
I hope that the flu or cold does not get you!

The flu already got to me...hence the quantities of hot tea

But I'll keep the idea of a strong drink in mind... ;)

Q

Que

#98661
Auditioning a recent purchase:

[asin]B001GHQ708[/asin]

This disc with its not very original title didn't particularly attract my attention....
That is until I became infatuated with the voice of Nuria Rial.

Behind the title is in fact a cleverly composed programme of Early & Baroque arias dedicated to the Holy Virgin from South Germany, the Habsburgian Empire and Italy.
The list of composers inludes familiar as well as unfamiliar names.
And Bell'Arte Salzburg turns out to be a splendid period ensemble, and also provides an instrumental opening and interlude.

Recommended!  :)

And currently cheap (€4) at jpc.de......

Q

Florestan

Get well quick, Que!

My listenings during the weekend:



Hat tip to Mandryka!

Quote from: Mandryka on September 28, 2017, 07:23:12 AM
If you like what he does there you'll like Francesco Tristano Schlime's Frescobaldi recording, which has a similar feeling of a stoned jazz pianist in a club in the early hours of the morning.

Well, this is not very far off the mark, given that the recording was made in a Paris night club, live. Yes, that's right --- and the audience is possibly the most well-behaved I've ever witnessed on disc: not a cough, not a whisper, nothing. It's as if they were all mesmerized by the music to the point of forgetting themselves. And fascinating the music is, indeed. The sound of the piano (blessed be your soul, signor Cristofori!) turns the whole thing into a poetical and ecstatic, even mystical, experience. I struggle rather hard with Italian Renaissance keyboard music but this disc was right up my alley. I wish more pianists threw off the shackles, and rejected the monopoly, that the ideological HIP brigade have put on and assumed of, early keyboard music performance: Schlime proves convincingly that a pianist with imagination, sensitivity and commitment can work wonders in this repertoire.

Highly recommended.



Hat tip to pjme!

This is a superb "concept album". Michiels plays Dvorak's Poetic Tone Pictures op. 85 and Janacek's On An Overgrown Path, Sonata 1. X. 1905 and In the Mist --- with a difference: the various pieces are interspersed. The result is a truly magical journey through and towards the mysteries and beauties of the Slavic soul. The only quibble I have is that Michiels's breathing is clearly audible, sometimes a bit too close.

Highly recommended.



Hat tip to Tharaud and his sound engineer Cecile Lenoir!

Another conceptual album, another marvel. An inspired and engaging selection of Chopin's music, played with passion and fire. Everything the music calls for (poetry, drama, melancholy, frenzy, serenity, turbulence, resignation, joy, nostalgia, foreboding, you name it) Tharaud delivers in spades. A special mention for the sound: it's splendid, one of the best I've ever heard: full, rich, powerful and above all beautiful, it flows like honey. If you like Chopin, or solo piano music in general, or if you just want to wallow in a sea of wondrous sounds, then you should own this disc. And if you like it, a hat tip to yours truly might follow.
"Beauty must appeal to the senses, must provide us with immediate enjoyment, must impress us or insinuate itself into us without any effort on our part." - Claude Debussy

Florestan

#98663
Now playing:



CD 13

Berceuse, Barcarolle, Bolero, Tarentelle, Souvenir de Paganini etc.

EDIT: it's autumn, I see a massive overdose of Chopin, Brahms, Schubert and Russian Romantics coming.  :)
"Beauty must appeal to the senses, must provide us with immediate enjoyment, must impress us or insinuate itself into us without any effort on our part." - Claude Debussy

Que

More Telemania with disc 7:

[asin]B0085U0GJW[/asin]
Overture in D, TWV55:D17 for two trumpets, bassoon, strings and basso continu
Overture in A, TWV55:A2 for strings and basso continuo
Overture in A Minor, TWV55:a2 for recorder, strings and basso continuo
Overture in E Minor, TWV55:e8 'l'Omphale' for two oboes, bassoon, strings and basso continuo


Review by David Vernier: http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/album.jsp?album_id=755876

Q

Florestan

"Beauty must appeal to the senses, must provide us with immediate enjoyment, must impress us or insinuate itself into us without any effort on our part." - Claude Debussy

Turner

#98666
Shostakovich string quartets - Rubio Quartet / Brilliant 5CD box

Prices for 2nd hand items continue to descend here in shops. Bought this set at a special sale for 1,3 Euros - the first CD does have some scratches, but probably only superficial ones.

For example, they also sold the award-winning Chandos Peter Grimes for the same price, but I withstood the offer.

It´s a fine set with a very beautiful tone, I agree with David Hurwitz that too martial or very aggressive Shostakovich playing can be tiresome at times,
https://www.classicstoday.com/review/review-11666/
and this set is probably a bit more lyrical, but still certainly not with too subdued contrasts or moods.

I guess I tend to agree with Hurwitz more often than not.

Todd




A long-time favorite, it was wonderful to revisit this.  Fricsay's Introduzione is dark and tense, but he maintains a degree of flexibility that someone like Reiner does not.  The winds evoke a nice folk sound in select passages, to boot.  The Giuoco delle coppie is well done, though it lacks the precision of some other versions, but Fricsay makes it sound more musically whole and integral to the complete work.  The Elegia, at a taut 7'12", is dark and eerie when it should be, and biting and intense to a degree not found in others.  In contrast, the somewhat more relaxed Intermezzo interrotto allows the beautiful theme to emerge more lovely than normal, and the interruption to be more comical.  The Finale, at a zippy 9'01", gives equal weighting to both the folk music and formal, structural aspects of the music and generates oodles of excitement.  The excellent mono sound does not hamper things, either.  (And the accompanying MSPC, despite being in mono, is one of the best ever, too.)  Still a favorite.


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

Mandryka

#98668


A most  radiant Missa Solemnis from Haitink, warm and human rather than dramatic or boisterous. Beautiful textures and splendid climaxes.
Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen

Florestan

"Beauty must appeal to the senses, must provide us with immediate enjoyment, must impress us or insinuate itself into us without any effort on our part." - Claude Debussy

Mirror Image



Turbot nouveaux

Jonathan Harvey
String Quartets 1-4
String Trio
Arditti Quartet [Aeon, 2009]

Really, quite sublime. Frequently in my CD player since I bought these discs.


aligreto

Beethoven: Piano Sonatas Nos. 16, 17 & 18 [Arrau]....



aligreto

Quote from: Que on October 02, 2017, 12:08:22 AM
The flu already got to me...hence the quantities of hot tea

But I'll keep the idea of a strong drink in mind... ;)

Q

Get well soon Q  :)

Kontrapunctus


aligreto

Quote from: Toccata&Fugue on October 02, 2017, 08:34:06 AM
Fantastic in every aspect.



That is very interesting. I will have to check but I do not think that I have Marriner conducting any Bach at all.

Todd

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

Turner

#98678
Quote from: Toccata&Fugue on October 02, 2017, 08:34:06 AM
Fantastic in every aspect.



Yes, a good one - I remember borrowing it when a teenager, from my local, provincial library in a cassette recording, my introduction to that work. Today I have the LPs.

millionrainbows

Terry Riley: The Moscow Conservatory Solo Piano Concert (2001 Long Arms Records). An excellent solo piano concert by Terry Riley, at the legendary Moscow Conservatory, recorded on April 18th, 2000. In the notes, Riley gives brief explanations of the pieces, but no details on the tuning of the piano, if it is any different than standard equal-tempered. It doesn't sound like it has been retuned. He pays great respect to the fact of how proud he is to be playing in Russia, at the famous hall that so many of his piano heroes graced. He obviously has great respect for Western tradition, and the pianistic tradition. There are the usual transcendently beautiful improvisations, and also quite a taste of modern jazz voicings, and a tune called 'Requiem for Wally,' dedicated to the memory of Wally Rose, a great American ragtime piano player, close friend, and teacher. They played together at the Gold Street Saloon on San Francisco's Barbary Coast. As usual, various time signatures are employed throughout: 7/8, 5/4, 10/4, 14 beat cycle structures, etc., and various modes, such as Phrygian and Lydian. Especially with headphones, the music becomes hypnotic and trance-inducing, and is generally relaxing, but has many other more 'linear' sections of jazz progressions and ragtime. On a Russian label, this is hard to find in the US for under $50, so I ordered mine from an Italian individual for much less on Discogs.