What are you listening to?
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Re: What are you listening to?
Beethoven - Overture Leonore No.3
Prokofiev - Suite Love for Three Oranges (Rudolf Kempe, BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Legends)
Prokofiev - Suite Love for Three Oranges (Rudolf Kempe, BBC Symphony Orchestra, BBC Legends)
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Re: What are you listening to?
Tchaikovsky - Marche Slave & Capriccio Italien (Adrian Leaper, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Naxos)
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Re: What are you listening to?
Holst - The Planets (James Levine, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Deutsche Grammophon)
Re: What are you listening to?
This is really lovely, sensitively played in a massive acoustic. Only problem is I can't shake the feeling that it's the kind of music played in the communal areas of expensive spas.
Nerdcave: ...is no more!
Sitting Room: Wadia 581SE - Rega Planar 3/AT VM95ML & SH - Bluesound Node II - Copland CSA 100 - Audioplan Kontrast 3
Kitchen: WiiM Pro - Wadia 151 - B&W 685s2
Sitting Room: Wadia 581SE - Rega Planar 3/AT VM95ML & SH - Bluesound Node II - Copland CSA 100 - Audioplan Kontrast 3
Kitchen: WiiM Pro - Wadia 151 - B&W 685s2
Re: What are you listening to?
bombasticDarren wrote:Tchaikovsky - Marche Slave & Capriccio Italien (Adrian Leaper, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Naxos)
I think that is a lovely CD Darren with very good performances of those works. I hope that you enjoy it
To be is to do: Socrates
To do is to be: Sartre
Do be do be do: Sinatra
To do is to be: Sartre
Do be do be do: Sinatra
Re: What are you listening to?
Diapason wrote:
This is really lovely, sensitively played in a massive acoustic. Only problem is I can't shake the feeling that it's the kind of music played in the communal areas of expensive spas.
As you said you had not heard this music before Simon I did not want to pre-empt your listening impressions but I think that it is not bad music but it certainly is not the most engaging music the JSB wrote.
To be is to do: Socrates
To do is to be: Sartre
Do be do be do: Sinatra
To do is to be: Sartre
Do be do be do: Sinatra
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Re: What are you listening to?
Yes, what I have heard so far was beautifully recordedfergus wrote:bombasticDarren wrote:Tchaikovsky - Marche Slave & Capriccio Italien (Adrian Leaper, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Naxos)
I think that is a lovely CD Darren with very good performances of those works. I hope that you enjoy it
Re: What are you listening to?
I think close attention pays massive dividends and the music itself is quite satisfying, but I suspect this will get more airplay as background music than concentrated listening. There's something about the sound of the lute that I find simultaneously soporific and new-agey, and it means that I don't hear or appreciate the musical lines as much as I would on another instrument. (I actually have a similar issue with harpsichord, although at the opposite end of the spectrum: the musical line is swamped (for me) by the sound of the instrument itself.)fergus wrote:Diapason wrote:
This is really lovely, sensitively played in a massive acoustic. Only problem is I can't shake the feeling that it's the kind of music played in the communal areas of expensive spas.
As you said you had not heard this music before Simon I did not want to pre-empt your listening impressions but I think that it is not bad music but it certainly is not the most engaging music the JSB wrote.
In any case, I'm very glad I bought this disc.
Nerdcave: ...is no more!
Sitting Room: Wadia 581SE - Rega Planar 3/AT VM95ML & SH - Bluesound Node II - Copland CSA 100 - Audioplan Kontrast 3
Kitchen: WiiM Pro - Wadia 151 - B&W 685s2
Sitting Room: Wadia 581SE - Rega Planar 3/AT VM95ML & SH - Bluesound Node II - Copland CSA 100 - Audioplan Kontrast 3
Kitchen: WiiM Pro - Wadia 151 - B&W 685s2
Re: What are you listening to?
Cheers for that Simon....I will probably end up buying it myself at some stage!Diapason wrote:
I think close attention pays massive dividends and the music itself is quite satisfying, but I suspect this will get more airplay as background music than concentrated listening. There's something about the sound of the lute that I find simultaneously soporific and new-agey, and it means that I don't hear or appreciate the musical lines as much as I would on another instrument. (I actually have a similar issue with harpsichord, although at the opposite end of the spectrum: the musical line is swamped (for me) by the sound of the instrument itself.)
In any case, I'm very glad I bought this disc.
To be is to do: Socrates
To do is to be: Sartre
Do be do be do: Sinatra
To do is to be: Sartre
Do be do be do: Sinatra
Re: What are you listening to?
So just relax and let it soak in!Diapason wrote:
This is really lovely, sensitively played in a massive acoustic. Only problem is I can't shake the feeling that it's the kind of music played in the communal areas of expensive spas.
If you were looking for some more baroque lute music, then you might like this:
Jakob Lindberg playing Silvius Leopold Weiss (1687-1750, a composer who wrote almost exclusively for the lute, very famous in his day, and apparently friendly with JSB as he stayed with the Bach household and competed with him in improvisation) on the Sixtus Rauwolf lute, the oldest playable lute in existence. The music would remind you of the JSB cello suites, and is beautifully played and recorded.
Another:
I enjoyed it a lot!