Relaxing With The Classics Review

Relaxing With The ClassicsI was looking for seomthing new to listen to during massage, and I like classic music.What I realized when I listened to this and several more like it, is that it is all kind of boring.The reason I suppose is because there were only a limited number of composers in the last couple of centures, especially 17th through 19th centuries, so we've all heard it all before...

Nevertheless, this is a nice CD, very pleasant versions of classic works.

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Great Melodies of the Classics Review

Great Melodies of the ClassicsI bought this cd set years ago and they're still my favorite cds.Each cd follows a genre (baroque, classical, romantic, or modern and impressionist) and gives a great sampling of some of the strongest pieces in that genre.I don't know what I'd do without these cds.

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Bella Ragazza Review

Bella RagazzaAmong opera singers there is often a role associasted with a singer (for example, Callas/Tosca, Bastianini/Carlo Gerard, Gobi/Scarpia)..But in time others attempt the same role with various degrees of success, and sometimes even unseat the front runner!...Not so with Carlo Buti...there will never be another popular song interpreter like him, who has been imitated but never equaled. Every song in this collection - some of which are very hard to find - is recommended 100% by one who has heard him in person as well as in recordings. Bravo Buti, Bravissimo!

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Simple Gifts Review

Simple GiftsWhat a lovely CD!Ms. VonStade as usual was in fine voice, and it was about time the Mozart "Laudate Dominum" was sung by a mezzo.This was just simply beautiful singing!Her performance of the Gluck "Che faro" was a lovely surprise - excellent performance in all aspects, from vocal color to drama to tempo changes and dynamics. The Mormon Tabernacle Choir gave some vocally impressive performances and did what many smaller choirs fail to do - these people actually enunciate each word so that the listener can understand the text!!!Beautiful orchestral playing, wonderful choral singing, and the lush voice of VonStade.You can't go wrong.

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A Tribute [Import][Original recording remastered] Review

A Tribute [Import][Original recording remastered]Kathleen Ferrier has one of the most instantly recognizable voices in music.And it's a voice that might take you time to love.As an eight year old I heard her version of Blow the Wind Southerly many times on British radio and intensely disliked it.I wasn't sure if it was a man or a woman, adult or child, such is the nature of her contralto.But over the years, especially hearing Ferrier sing Handel and Mahler, I've come to treasure her recordings alongside Callas, Sutherland, Flagstad and Baker.This two disc set contains performances which are about 45-55 years old.Many favourites are here especially the folk songs and selections from Bach, Handel and Mahler.The sound quality is excellent.The sleeve notes mention that Ferrier's vocal delivery may sound old fashioned to our ears.But her remarkable voice which stirs one's deepest emotions, transcends any thought of quaintness or mannerism.She is, quite simply, the greatest contralto ever.This selection will have you seeking out her other recordings on Amazon.com. And it might also lead you to Virginia Rodrigues, a Brazilian contralto with a superb voice who, like Ferrier, makes everything she sings, her own.

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Italian Treasury: Liguria-Polyphony of Ceriana [Original recording remastered] Review

Italian Treasury: Liguria-Polyphony of Ceriana [Original recording remastered]Even in 1954, when Alan Lomax made his enthnographic field recordings of Italian folk music from Liguria to Sicily, that music was on the brink of being swept away, extinguished by the same technology of electronic mass culture that made the recordings possible. Lomax himself realized that he had arrive not "a moment too soon."

This recording features the singing of the "Compagnia Sacco", a group of villagers from Ceriana (near the French border) and its agricultural environs who identified themselves by their characteristic lunch sack, carried over their shoulders when they worked in the fields (shown in the cover picture). Originally they had sung together in their communal work times in the fields. Although the members of the Compagnia self-consciously proclaim the millennial antiquity of their music, the Compagnia was formally organized in 1926, and some of the original members were still singing. The voices you will hear are plainly the voices of older people; the prime virtue of their singing, generously stated, is "rude vigor." The model for their Company is indeed ancient; the Compagnia Sacco is fundamentally a "confraternity", a fraternal order of the type that played a huge role in the society of Renaissance Europe, not only in Italy but also in the North. A confraternity was a voluntary association of men (and sometimes of women) dedicated to the maintenance of a cult of worship of a specific saint or saintly image in a specific chapel. Confraternities in urban communities typically cut across lines of family, guild, and even social class. Supervision of festivities associated with the cult was part of their 'mandate.' If you've ever visited an urban cathedral in Italy, you've seen that the high altar and the screened choir belongs to the tourists these days, while the side chapels are often closed to the public. In the Renaissance, the main altar belonged to the clergy, while the side chapels were the focus of popular devotion and community worship, including music. The confraternities were the providers of music for the people, and at least partly by the people.

The fourth track, Lauda da Madona da Vila, is a 1954 relic of confraternal music of the Renaissance. The structure is a kind of improvisatory polyphony, with a vocal drone to establish the mode. Yes, this music is vestigially modal! A traditional melody is the basis for improvised ornamentation, though obviously the ornamentation is also tradition-bound, not utterly new and free with each improvisation. Such "lauda" melodies form the 14th & 15th centuries have been preserved in the songbooks of two Tuscan confraternities, along with financial records that show several interesting facts. One, the melodies were often commissioned compositions from literate clerical musicians; in other words, this 'pop' music was written by elites. Two, professional singers and instrumentalists were often hired; the members of the confraternity no doubt participated in the singing but did not dominate it.

I mention all this because my chief interest in ethnographic recordings like Lomax's is not in the quality of the performance but in the insight to be gained about the evolution of music - in all its aspects - over the centuries of European history. A little knowledge of that history, in this case, illuminates the fact that folk music is not always as ancient, unchanging, and preliminary to 'composed music' as the ethnographers propose. In the case of Liguria, the flow of musical DNA seems to have been from the center to the isolated outskirts, from the elite to the folk.

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Tribute to Peter Maag [Box set] Review

Tribute to Peter Maag [Box set]This set is a compilation of Peter Maag's late recordings, featuring the complete symphonies of Beethoven and Mendelssohn, the late symphonies of Mozart, all of Schumann's works for piano and orchestra and Gluck's opera Orfeo e Eurydice.All of these have been released separately and reviewed elsewhere here on amazon.These are all fine performances, mostly with lesser-known and not-quite-top-flight orchestras.The Beethoven in particular has raised some concerns because Maag uses a true chamber-orchestra (about 35-40 players) rather than the normal large symphony-orchestra, but even here, no-one doubts the quality of musicianship and heart he brings to the works at hand.

Maag was one of the most consistently interesting conductors of the second half of the 20th century.On his way to a career similar to Karajan's, he left the concert stage in the early 1960's and spent two years in a Buddhist monestary restoring his spirit and rediscovering his deep spiritual commitment to the music itself.That decision deep-sixed his international star career but brought him greater satisfaction.He spent the rest of his days conducting regional orchestras in Europe, primarily in his native Switzerland and in his adopted Italy.These recordings from late in his career (1990's to early 2000's) show maturity and depth of insight as well as absolute command of the conductor's craft.

Arts' recording quality confounds me.It sounds great on sophisticated, analog-sounding equipment (smooth, warm, detailed, spacious) and not nearly as good on less-sophisticated, "digital"-sounding equipment (harsh, cold, forward).With the right equipment, however, you have some very very fine recordings here.

At this price, the set is a steal.Highly recommended.

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