I would like to start a thread, similar to Orpheus’ jazz site, for lovers of classical music. I will list some of my favorite recordings, CDs as well as LP’s. While good sound is not a prime requisite, it will be a consideration. Classical music lovers please feel free to add to my lists. Discussion of musical and recording issues will be welcome.
I’ll start with a list of CDs. Records to follow in a later post.
Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique. Chesky — Royal Phil. Orch. Freccia, conductor. Mahler: Des Knaben Wunderhorn. Vanguard Classics — Vienna Festival Orch. Prohaska, conductor. Prokofiev: Scythian Suite et. al. DG — Chicago Symphony Abbado, conductor. Brahms: Symphony #1. Chesky — London Symph. Orch. Horenstein, conductor. Stravinsky: L’Histoire du Soldat. HDTT — Ars Nova. Mandell, conductor. Rachmaninoff: Symphonic Dances. Analogue Productions. — Dallas Symph Orch. Johanos, cond. Respighi: Roman Festivals et. al. Chesky — Royal Phil. Orch. Freccia, conductor.
All of the above happen to be great sounding recordings, but, as I said, sonics is not a prerequisite.
I rarely encounter a man so mature and deep in all fields of human interest than Pascal...
Reading him is a stunning awakening on all scale...And he was the greatest prose french writer , he transform french prose in an "art of the fugue"...
There is a deep link between Bach music and Pascal thinking...Even if more than 20 years separate the death of one and the birth of the other...
The audible presence of God in the music of Bach answer to the more than probable existence of the Designer in his famous mathematical "wager" and the inner heart consuming fire of love in man....
The wager idea was never understood clearly by most thinkers....Most said that this was a very simplistic argument about God existence...
But it was never intended to be an argument, but a little spark of fire able to ignite the whole world... Why?
Because if someone is able to think about the infinite only one time he will never be able to erase the idea or this experience after it was born in him...
The wager is the wood, and the stones which rubbed with one another will ignite a fire...it is more potent than the St Anselm ontological argument, because it is an appeal to an existential gesture of the thinking...Not only a logical argument....
If you create the idea of infinity one time in your imagination, going back before this moment will become for ever impossible...
Like in the history of mathematic the creation by Cantor of the infinite actualities...
I am surprized that there is no musical work i know of dedicated to Pascal....
Leibniz improved the computing machine created by Pascal and designed his own one and created the calculus after reading Pascal..Leibniz was very admirative of Pascal genius ...
What is stunning is less the I.Q. of Pascal than his very mature deep thinking in all matter, spirituality included... Even Kafka or Borges could have learned from Pascal imagination of the infinites manifested in every day life mysteries....
Brahms is so great musician and serious spirit i am not surprized that he appeciated Pascal....His creation for chorus are my favorite works...And i am in love with Zymerman/Bernstein concerto number 2 for piano....Because of Zymerman subtle magical touch more than for Bernstein whom is great here for sure...
This work for me embodied late popular 19 century "salon" romanticism...Just a so beautiful concerto that make shadow on many others ...Some work are so perfect that listening anything ressembling them after them is very difficult...I never was able to replace this concerto by anything else in my heart....
This particular flabbergasting and imperative supreme interpretation save me from my Brahms obsession about my favorite piano concerto the second one...
Played like this Beethoven shine like perhaps never before and like rarely after....The pianist is mature and stupendous by his sense of hues and power ... At the level of the few giants of the piano...
Andras Schiff has a very well respected Brahms twin piano concertos that I can really relate to. I think he plays a nearly period Bosendorfer but to hear it you wouldn't know it.
I might have already mentioned this work somewhere in this thread, but try Symphony No. 1 by Florence Price. Available on Idagio in a surprisingly good-sounding recording on DGG. She's an African-American composer who worked in the early 20th Century. The symphony is filled with great tunes and is constructed with eminent skill and heart. Think of Dvorak...
Schubert Symphony No. 8 (9) in C major. "The Great." Ricardo Muti and the Vienna Phil. Currently listening to it on Idagio. One of the sweetest, most spacious DG orchestral recordings I’ve heard. Singing. Beautifully paced.
I could only find it on EMI-Warner. That might also account for the unexpectedly fine SQ. IIRC Muti has been under contract to them for most of his career.
I have just came upon Leonidas Kavakos new recording of Bach's Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin on Idagio and am very impressed by them. I find him to have a totally original approach to them in that he uses decorations in the repeats which no other present day soloists do according to the ones I have heard in the last few years. His intonation is perfect with no portamentos to slide up to the correct note. I find his violin tone to be not so penetrating and sterile as a few I could mention. He starts of with the E major Partita and ends with the D minor partita so he knows how to get the ball rolling and end on a high. His rendition of the great Chaconne in D Minor is an awesome piece of recording a violin to give it's utmost tone and purity. If you are going to try any of them do watch the volume control as Sony's recording misses nothing.
Chopin's Nocturnes. I have four versions (Ohlsson, Moravec, Arrau, Lisieki) and just ordered two more (Freire, Pires). But kinda bummed that I can't get a CD of Engerer anywhere at a reasonable price. Seems like the other one that everyone should hear. And no, I don't stream.
Tuning in to the zeitgeist, for about the last month I've been listening to a lot of Shostakovich, particularly the symphonies. Listening to, for example, the Eleventh Symphony, you can imagine Russian troops in action. Or you could just turn on the news.
Of the versions of Shostakovich's 11th Symphony I possess on CDs -- Nelsons, Stokowski and Barshai -- I'd recommend Barshai. It has the feeling of an invasion.
@jim5559 Yes my friend the ship was on it's way to St. Petersburg filled with new cars but I'm betting that's not all it was filled with. I am really fearful for the people of Ukraine as that swine Putin is mad and bad enough to do anything , and do remember he was head of the KGB and other black operations so he knows every trick in the book.
Talked to my man in Berlin. Germany always has a problem because of what the nation did , To their credit EVERYTHING is thought in every German school ,
Today they lifted their face up and sent 1,000 anti-tank and 500 air missiles to Ukraine .
Diary of One Who Disappeared, by Leos Janacek. Claudio Abaddo, Berlin Phil and various vocal soloists. A DGG CD I fished off my shelf. Bought used. In a generic jewel box with no liner notes. Did I buy it at Amoeba Records in Hollywood? At Moby Disc in Sherman Oaks? Anyway, utterly lovely music. Shockingly good 3D fidelity. A DG EQ but still eminently inviting. I'm listenin' pretty via my Sony player.
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