What are you listening to now?

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

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Mirror Image

Quote from: TheGSMoeller on November 30, 2015, 06:01:54 PM
The best Rach 2nd I've heard?  Very, very possible. If the final 2 minutes of their performance doesn't give you chills then you might want to check your pulse. Plus the excitement of being live is very evident.

Quote from: TheGSMoeller on November 30, 2015, 03:38:49 PM
Both arrived today, both fantastic. The type of performances that could easily catapult these powerful works to the top of my favorite listening pile.

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Excellent and glad to hear it, Greg. Hopefully, mine will show up soon. What was your previous exposure to these works?

Mookalafalas

I seem to have fallen in love with Irina Lankova ???

It's all good...

bhodges

Stravinsky: The Firebird (Sir Colin Davis / Concertgebouw) - The last few years I've been listening to versions of this with Gergiev/Kirov and Jansons/Oslo (nothing wrong with either), but forgot about this one. My loss: it's great (and excellent sound on this version, despite being recorded in 1978).

--Bruce

ComposerOfAvantGarde

Quote from: ComposerOfAvantGarde on November 30, 2015, 02:29:42 PM
Symphony no. 3. Something very new to me and I am enjoying this kind of music more and more at the moment.



No. 7 right now....and I have changed my opinion about this work. I used to consider it too twee for my liking, but now it is the perfect kind of twee for me! ;D

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

Mirror Image

Quote from: ComposerOfAvantGarde on November 30, 2015, 06:55:24 PM
No. 7 right now....and I have changed my opinion about this work. I used to consider it too twee for my liking, but now it is the perfect kind of twee for me! ;D

It's amazing how our ears expand, isn't it? There's obviously something about RVW that has driven you back to the music and this kind of thinking goes along with what I said on another thread:

Quote from: Mirror Image on November 30, 2015, 03:13:43 PMI think we must be allured by the music we first hear whether this allurement continues throughout the work depends on how receptive we are to the music.

ComposerOfAvantGarde

Just listened to no. 2 from this:



These are all fairly new for me as well. Enjoying this immensely! :)

Dancing Divertimentian

#55887
Quote from: ComposerOfAvantGarde on November 30, 2015, 08:33:03 PM
Just listened to no. 2 from this:



These are all fairly new for me as well. Enjoying this immensely! :)

That's my favorite set of Prokofiev's concertos (with Browning/Leinsdorf hot on its heels). I love the sound Fuga Libera achieves, clear as a bell and very rich. Performance-wise, I love the "modernist" approach from El Bacha/Ono, giving Prokofiev that hard edge which makes him, well...sing!


Veit Bach-a baker who found his greatest pleasure in a little cittern which he took with him even into the mill and played while the grinding was going on. In this way he had a chance to have the rhythm drilled into him. And this was the beginning of a musical inclination in his descendants. JS Bach

Dancing Divertimentian

TD: Bruckner 6, Dohnanyi/Cleveland.



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Veit Bach-a baker who found his greatest pleasure in a little cittern which he took with him even into the mill and played while the grinding was going on. In this way he had a chance to have the rhythm drilled into him. And this was the beginning of a musical inclination in his descendants. JS Bach

SimonNZ



John Kinsella's Sinfonietta "Pictures from The Odyssey" - Colman Pearce, cond.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rUWfF3NMEBA

ComposerOfAvantGarde

The Colour Symphony and Adams Zero. The symphony is still growing on me, but as symphonies go in the 20th century, this is one worth hearing. It may not be greatest symphony ever written, but I think it should be heard a little more often.


Karl Henning

Revisiting this magnificent piece:

Jack Gallagher
Symphony № 2, Ascendant
LSO
Falletta


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Karl Henning, Ph.D.
Composer & Clarinetist
Boston MA
http://www.karlhenning.com/
[Matisse] was interested neither in fending off opposition,
nor in competing for the favor of wayward friends.
His only competition was with himself. — Françoise Gilot

ZauberdrachenNr.7

A re-re-re-listen to these great VCs (I've time for all of them today) whilst I read the composer's autobiography published in the Guide Musical here : http://vieuxtemps.kbr.be/pdf/leGuideMusical.pdf

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San Antone


jlaurson

Quote from: Gordo on November 30, 2015, 09:50:25 AM
You have a good sense of design, sir. You have softened that like-bloody- Metropolis cover.  ;D

Hideous, random cover; great content. Don't know if they were trying to go for "pretty lady" a la Vivaldi and failed or if they just didn't think about it at all. (I've inquired, perhaps I will be enlightened.)

aligreto

Onslow: String Quintet Op. 51....



Maestro267

Brian: Symphony No. 8
Royal Liverpool PO/Groves

Nielsen: Symphony No. 4 ('The Inextinguishable')
Danish National SO/Schonwandt

San Antone


North Star

Валентин Васильович [ Valentin Vasilyovich (Silvestrov) ]
Тихие песни [ Quiet Songs ]
Sergei Yakovenko, baritone
Ilya Scheps, pf

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"Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it." - Confucius

My photographs on Flickr

Karl Henning

Quote from: North Star on December 01, 2015, 05:37:40 AM
Валентин Васильович [ Valentin Vasilyovich (Silvestrov) ]
Тихие песни [ Quiet Songs ]
Sergei Yakovenko, baritone
Ilya Scheps, pf


[asin]B0002XV2UM[/asin]

I was revisiting this exquisite music just a week-ish ago.
Karl Henning, Ph.D.
Composer & Clarinetist
Boston MA
http://www.karlhenning.com/
[Matisse] was interested neither in fending off opposition,
nor in competing for the favor of wayward friends.
His only competition was with himself. — Françoise Gilot