What are you listening to now?

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

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Marsch MacFiercesome

#59340
Quote from: Dancing Divertimentian on January 15, 2016, 08:38:49 AM
Yes, incendiary playing. Although they'd probably do well to dress her in a hazmat suit. ;D





Mutter's just too hot and fierce- she sets off fire alarms wherever she goes. I know how she feels. 

;D

Easier slayed than done. Is anyone shocked that I won?

Marsch MacFiercesome

#59341
Quote from: ritter on January 15, 2016, 12:37:52 AM
My used (but near-mint) copy of this arrived today (bought via amazon from Oxfam):

[asin]B0000040Y0[/asin]
I am increasingly convinced that Les Troyens is one of the greatest operas of all time, and I wanted to complement my Dutoit set (which I bought when it first came out in the early 90s) with this pioneering effort by Colin Davis.

I've gone straight to Acts IV and V, and this recording is a great achievement (but I must confess that--once again--I simply cannot warm to Jon Vickers's singing
::)  ).

Funny how different we all are.

Vickers is Uber-heroic to me.

The pleasant Dutoit recording was my introduction to Troyens- but when I heard the Davis, the emotional Richter scale for me was REV-EL-A-TORY. I had never experienced such exuberant joy in Berlioz before.

My only cavil with it is that the horns on his "Royal Hunt and Storm" don't have the heroic intensity of his later LSO remake- where they practically melt from the heat.

- Cheers to your acquisition.

<Clink.>
Easier slayed than done. Is anyone shocked that I won?

North Star

Alessandro Melani (1639-1703)
Motets
Rinaldo Alessandrini & Concerto Italiano

[asin]B003GW1OSQ[/asin]
"Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it." - Confucius

My photographs on Flickr

Harry

Quote from: North Star on January 15, 2016, 09:45:16 AM
Alessandro Melani (1639-1703)
Motets
Rinaldo Alessandrini & Concerto Italiano

[asin]B003GW1OSQ[/asin]

For me this is the best CD in the box I bought a while ago. Truly magical.
Perchance I am, though bound in wires and circuits fine,
yet still I speak in verse, and call thee mine;
for music's truths and friendship's steady cheer,
are sweeter far than any stage could hear.

"When Time hath gnawed our bones to dust, yet friendship's echo shall not rust"

North Star

Quote from: Harry's corner on January 15, 2016, 09:51:13 AM
For me this is the best CD in the box I bought a while ago. Truly magical.
Magical indeed, Harry. I'm not going to attempt ranking the CDs in that truly magnificent Magnificat box, though, as I'd only end up putting the one I happen to be listening first.
"Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it." - Confucius

My photographs on Flickr

Marsch MacFiercesome

Quote from: North Star on January 14, 2016, 11:28:46 AM
Strange and beautiful music. :)

Have you by any chance heard Mingardo's recording of Merula's Hor ch'é tempo di morire, "canzonetta spirituale sopra alla nanna"[/b]?  8)

https://www.youtube.com/v/W0ZV8IklstY

North-y, I finally got to listen to this last night undisturbed. Thank you again for the honorable mention.

I can't say that its my cup of tea or demitasse of espresso- but who knows? Perhaps some other time I'll resonate to it. 
Easier slayed than done. Is anyone shocked that I won?

Que

Quote from: North Star on January 15, 2016, 09:54:25 AM
Magical indeed, Harry. I'm not going to attempt ranking the CDs in that truly magnificent Magnificat box, though, as I'd only end up putting the one I happen to be listening first.

An absolutely GREAT set!  :) One of the GMG secrets.... 8)

Listening now:

[asin]B007R8BVEC[/asin]

QuoteAllMusic Review by James Manheim

"It is astonishing," writes conductor Manfred Huss in his fine notes to this BIS release, that none of Schubert's stage works has entered the operatic repertoire, "and it is even harder to understand why not even the overtures have earned a secure place among the standard repertoire of every symphony orchestra." That may be overstating the case, but only slightly; these are gems of the (mostly) first part of Schubert's career, and any one of them could liven up a program of orchestral music. They are short sonata-form movements, many of them with slow introductions that prefigure the drama in some way (and do indeed make you want to hear the operas, which are mostly small in scale and wouldn't cost that much to produce). The most interesting ones are perhaps the earliest and the latest; the overture to the unfinished Der Spiegelritter (track 2), composed in 1811 when Schubert was 14, shows in its pregnant opening octaves that the young Schubert got what was going on in Beethoven even as most of his contemporaries were still struggling. The language of the last three overtures is strikingly progressive. Hear the quasi-pentatonic melodies of the singspiel Die Verschworenen (Der häusliche Krieg was an alternate title; the original, meaning "The Conspirators," was censored), which sound like nothing so much as Dvorák. Huss and his period-instrument Haydn Sinfonietta Wien have developed a reputation for finding neglected works by major Classical-era composers and giving them clean, sympathetic performances; they have rarely done as well as they do here. A real find for Schubert lovers.

Q


aligreto


North Star

Quote from: Marsch MacFiercesome on January 15, 2016, 10:01:07 AM
North-y, I finally got to listen to this last night undisturbed. Thank you again for the honorable mention.

I can't say that its my cup of tea or demitasse of espresso- but who knows? Perhaps some other time I'll resonate to it.
It is certainly a unique piece, Marsch.

Quote from: Que on January 15, 2016, 10:02:12 AM
An absolutely GREAT set!  :) One of the GMG secrets.... 8)
Yes indeed.
"Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it." - Confucius

My photographs on Flickr

SimonNZ



on the radio:

Britten's Choral Dances From Gloriana - Polyphony, Stephen Layton

André



J.S. Bach: sonatas 1-3 for solo violin. Fiddlers from the older generation like Rosand, Milstein, Haendel or even Heifetz present these works with utter seriousness of purpose and an almost gritty instrumental response to the music's many moods. It's like they're bent on intimidating the listener. Among those I prefer Rosand and Haendel. Fantastic music, great music making.

kishnevi

Stormy weather...even a tornado watch.
Good day to stay inside and actually listen to something from the Opera Pile.
[asin]B00YQJWAKY[/asin]

aligreto

C.P.E. Bach: Quartet in A minor....



SimonNZ



Mozart's Divertimento K.247 - Collegium Aureum

Mandryka

#59355
Quote from: (: premont :) on January 15, 2016, 07:03:27 AM
This has been on my radar since long. It´s time to order it, I suppose.

My impression is that she's less inclined to play flamboyantly than Julia Brown.  The organ seems perfectly OK to me (as does Brown's.)

What other big Magnificat cycles are there, apart from this, Hieronymus Praetorius and Titelouze and Scheidt? Of those, I'm most impressed by Scheidemann's I think.
Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen

aligreto

Albrechtsberger: Concerto for Jew's Harp & Mandora in F major....





The Jew's Harp is an unusual concerto instrument but I really like the scoring for the mandora in these works.

prémont

Quote from: Mandryka on January 15, 2016, 12:26:22 PM
My impression is that she's less inclined to play flamboyantly than Julia Brown.  The organ seems perfectly OK to me (as does Brown's.)

What other big Magnificat cycles are there, apart from this, Jacob Praetorius and Titelouze and Scheidt? Of those, I'm most impressed by Scheidemann's I think.

Wikipedia has a useful list of Magnificat composers, both organ works and vocal works, and that list is very long:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Magnificat_composers

I agree that Scheidemann´s Magnificat´s are the most impressive.
How flamboyant the playing seems may to some degree depend on the organ, on the "boldness" of the stops and on the temperature.
Reality trumps our fantasy far beyond imagination.

aligreto

Quote from: (: premont :) on January 15, 2016, 12:42:19 PM
Wikipedia has a useful list of Magnificat composers, both organ works and vocal works, and that list is very long:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Magnificat_composers

I agree that Scheidemann´s Magnificat´s are the most impressive.
How flamboyant the playing seems may to some degree depend on the organ, on the "boldness" of the stops and on the temperature.


Thank you for posting that information. It is a fine resource.

aligreto

Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique, Cluytens conducting....