What are you listening to?
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Re: What are you listening to?
Faure - Pelleas et Melisande (Frederica von Stade/Michel Plasson, Orchestre du Capitole de Toulouse, EMI)
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Re: What are you listening to?
This is the first all-instrumental recording by la Cappella de´Turchini, with cello concertos and a sinfonia concertante by some master Neapolitan composers like Leo, Fiorenza and Di Majo, all well known from previous Turchini recordings. The performances as expected, are expert and beautiful, cellist Giovanni Sollima has a beautiful, warm Italian sound and superb technique. He also happens to be a composer, and strikingly, a 20 minute composition by him is included. It´s a stravinskyan one movement piece for cello and strings that´s actually quite good, inventive, funny and certainly not unattractive. But it really feels out of place among these elegant baroque concertos.
I think I´ll play the modern piece separately when I play this cd.
Re: What are you listening to?
kind of suits the weather.....
Brass Bands are all very well in their place -
outdoors and several miles away....
outdoors and several miles away....
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Re: What are you listening to?
It´s raining in Mexico City too, so I´d better stay home and listen to some 3 and a half hours of Cavalli.
This is a live recording from the Antwerp Opera, and Dynamic has released it in both, cd and dvd formats.
The star is the young countertenor Christophe Dumaux, but the large cast acquits very well.
Conductor Federico Maria Sardelli, a baroque specialist, manages to make the musicians of the Antwerp Opera play like life-long hip players.
The opera is gorgeous.
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Re: What are you listening to?
Brahms - Hungarian Dances Nos.1, 3, 5, 10, 16, 18-21 (John Eliot Gardiner, NDR-Sinfonieorchester, Deutsche Grammophon)
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Re: What are you listening to?
Bruckner - Symphony No.1 (Riccardo Chailly, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Decca)
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Re: What are you listening to?
Beethoven - Symphony No.7 (Karl Bohm, Wiener Philharmoniker, Deutsche Grammophon)
Re: What are you listening to?
I only have a small amount of music by Cavalli but I really like it I must say.Jose Echenique wrote:
It´s raining in Mexico City too, so I´d better stay home and listen to some 3 and a half hours of Cavalli.
This is a live recording from the Antwerp Opera, and Dynamic has released it in both, cd and dvd formats.
The star is the young countertenor Christophe Dumaux, but the large cast acquits very well.
Conductor Federico Maria Sardelli, a baroque specialist, manages to make the musicians of the Antwerp Opera play like life-long hip players.
The opera is gorgeous.
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?
bombasticDarren wrote:Bruckner - Symphony No.1 (Riccardo Chailly, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Decca)
I will be asking you for your thoughts on that set in due course Darren!
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?
I have plunged straight into listening to this new arrival with the two-part and three-part inventions....
Apart from the impeccable playing I was just pondering the two-part and three-part inventions themselves. These two works comprise 30 tracks in total and if one can use a food analogy one would be quite satisfied after any single track of the 30 the quality of the music is so good IMHO.
Apart from the impeccable playing I was just pondering the two-part and three-part inventions themselves. These two works comprise 30 tracks in total and if one can use a food analogy one would be quite satisfied after any single track of the 30 the quality of the music is so good IMHO.
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