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This is Dudamel’s first CD with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, recorded live at LA’s famed Disney Concert Hall as part of their epic 2012 Mahler Project, celebrating one of the most energetic and exciting musical partnerships of our times - The coming together of the very finest American orchestra, led with passion and vision by the unique force of nature that is Gustavo Dudamel. Mahler’s magisterial Ninth Symphony was completed in 1909; tragically, he died in May 1911, without ever hearing it performed. Dudamel and the LA Phil toured Europe with Mahler 9 in 2011, garnering widespread critical acclaim: the Guardian praised them for “a refinement and expressivity that touched the sublime”. “It wins a special place among many fine Mahler Symphony No. 9 recordings with its unflinching clarity and general spciousness...That may have something to do with the unflappable demeanour of the LA Phil; these top American players rarely get in a lather.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2013 **** “Dudamel live in 2012 coaxes polished, full-throated playing in every department, brass strong and sure, strings positively luscious, woodwind responsive to every italicising demand...Many will appreciate Dudamel's boisterous engagement notwithstanding a tendency to pass over the longer line and with it Mahler's sense of foreboding” Gramophone Magazine, May 2013 “Dudamel's tempos are excellently judged as a basis and the orchestral playing at times approaches the superlative level...Time and again, throughout Dudamel's performance, one is impressed by the sheer musicianship and commitment of the playing” International Record Review, May 2013 “Dudamel lovingly shapes this vast landscape, bringing to it an affirming view. He keeps everything moving along nicely, at least until those moments of the finale when all energies ebb away and we are left with those halting, bare lines.” Sunday Times, 24th February 2013 “This new, live, Mahler 9 sounds impressive – microphones are closely placed and you really feel in the thick of things...Each precipitous climax is paced with mature skill, the tension cannily ratcheted up...It’s really, really good, and Mahler anoraks will fondly recall Giulini’s similarly broad 1970s recording.” The Arts Desk, 16th March 2013 “Although “the Dude” can be stilted in the first two movements, there are many compensations: gorgeous textures, powerfully rhetorical gestures and superb clarity. In the ethereal finale he doesn’t reach the heights of Abbado or Haitink, but if you want a young man’s view of mortality, this can’t be bettered.” The Times, 23rd February 2013 **** | 
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| |  | Dances and Waves: Sommernachtskonzert Schonbrunn 2012
Gustavo Dudamel, Gramophone magazine’s "Artist of the Year" 2011 and Grammy award winner 2012, leads the classical summer live and TV event of 2012: The Summer Night Concert with the Vienna Philharmonic. The concert takes place on June 7th in the gardens of Schönbrunn Palace. Last year’s Summer Night Concert was a huge success. In 2012 a total of 62 countries on five continents will share in the spectacle, including a BBC4 broadcast in the UK. This year the main theme is Dances and Waves, a programme showcasing symphonic and operatic highlights. “Dudamel conducts a popular but substantial programme, evoking the VPO's vividness and warmth” BBC Music Magazine, Christmas 2012 ***** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Beethoven: Symphony No. 3 & Overtures
Gustavo Dudamel and the Simón Bolívar Orchestra bring their unique energy to one of the summits of the orchestral repertoire - Beethoven’s mighty Symphony No.3, the “Eroica”. Beethoven’s third symphony is not only one of his most personal works – powerful in both grandeur and pathos – but also the source of some of classical music’s most instantly recognizable melodies. The album also includes two of Beethoven’s best-loved overtures, Egmont, inspired by Goethe’s play, and the ballet, The Creatures of Prometheus. No longer a ‘youth orchestra’, the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela is a world-class ensemble in its own right, touring the world’s great concert halls as ambassadors for their country’s unique system of musical education, ‘El Sistema’. The combination of powerful, accessible repertoire, Dudamel’s irrepressible charisma and the remarkable story of the Simón Bolívar Orchestra make this recording not only desirable for Dudamel fans and those of Beethoven’s music, but a must for anyone wishing to discover the power of classical music at its very best. Feted like a rockstar in his homeland, Gustavo Dudamel was recently awarded a Grammy for Best Orchestral Recording of 2011. His epic cycle of Mahler symphonies in Los Angeles and Caracas made him front page news in The New York Times and his record-setting Mahler 8 was shown live in hundreds of cinemas around the world. Gustavo made a stellar debut in the Wiener Philharmoniker’s prestigious subscription concerts in December and takes the Berliner Philharmoniker on tour this Spring. “you can tell from the athletic and muscular first movement of Beethoven’s Eroica that Gustavo Dudamel’s esteemed musicians are still youthful in spirit.
This is a performance with plenty of powerful cut and thrust, though not enough structural planning...[in the Egmont Overture] Dudamel builds the music’s argument to a genuinely exciting conclusion.” The Times, 27th July 2012 *** “Take it for granted that the playing of the Simon Bolivar orchestra is very good. But Gustavo Dudamel isn't pre-eminent in confronting and realising the transcendence of a work totally new in its day.” Gramophone Magazine, October 2012 “This is the best conducting I have heard from Gustavo Dudamel, and the best playing from the Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra...The playing on this disc is tremendous, with the orchestra providing a glowing central European sound.” BBC Music Magazine, March 2013 **** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Gustavo Dudamel: Discoveries (Deluxe Edition)CD & DVD
1. Beethoven, Symphony No.5, 1. Allegro con brio 2. Tchaikovsky, Symphony No.5, 3. Valse 3. Tchaikovsky, Der Nussknacker, Trepak 4. Bruckner, Sympony No.9, 2. Scherzo 5. Shostakovich, Festive Overture, Op.96 6. Saint-Saens, Bacchanale from Samson et Delila 7. Mahler, Symphony No.5, 4. Adagietto 8. Mendelssohn, Symphony No.3, 2. Vivace non troppo 9. Márquez, Danzon No.2 10. Revueltas, La Noche de los Mayas, 2. Noche de Jaranas 11. Stravinsky, Le Sacre du Printemps, Sacrificial Dance 12. Márquez, Conga del fuego 13. Bernstein, West Side Story, Mambo
Discoveries, Grammy award winner Gustavo Dudamel's first ‘Best of’ album, features favourites from Beethoven to Bernstein and several Dudamel tracks never before released on CD including highlights from Mendelssohn’s ‘Scottish’ Symphony and the ‘Bacchanale’ from Saint-Saëns’ Samson et Delila. This project is released in two formats: CD stand alone and CD+DVD. The DVD component on the CD + DVD features the prize-winning, critically-acclaimed documentary by Enrique Sánchez Lansch: The Promise of Music. Discoveries covers many aspects of Gustavo Dudamel's fascinating musical story so far: the story of his roots in Venezuela’s El Sistema (on The Promise of Music), and recordings with many of the orchestras with which he is most closely associated: The Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra, the Vienna Philharmonic, the Berlin Philharmonic and the Gothenburg Symphony. “With my orchestras,” says Dudamel, “we think of music like jet fuel. It’s pure adrenaline – and I think you can hear it.” The track with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra (Vivace non troppo from Mendelssohn’s Symphony No.3) is taken from the brand new charity LP. This is a first and ONLY release on CD. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Rite
Gustavo Dudamel elicits high octane playing from his Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela in these two full-frontal force orchestral pieces. Both Stravinsky’s Le Sacre du Printemps and Revueltas’s La noche de los Mayas are revealed as models of revolutionary music making. In Le Sacre du Printemps, Stravinsky transformed painter Nicholas Roerich’s fleeting vision of a pagan ritual in which a young girl dances herself to death as a sacrifice to the god of Spring into a musical simulation of barbaric primality. La noche de los Mayas, originally scored for a 1939 film, is one of Mexico’s musical treasures. This concert suite, edited by José Ives Limantour, dating to 1961, evokes a mystical lost world. “Dudamel adopts a romantic view of the 20th-century landmark...[in La Noche de los Mayas] Dudamel hustles his young charges through juggernaut drumming, craggy chords and sassy melodies of a kind Copland mimicked in El Salón México.” The Times, 4th June 2010 “The Venezuelan players are well drilled. In Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring they play with drive and force; they follow the contours of the music; they do the things that the score implies. They are impressive in the visceral climaxes and propulsive rhythms...if Revueltas is a passion, the CD is a must.” The Telegraph, 13th June 2010 *** “...a Rite that develops thrilling momentum twice over, fast but without haste. It's the outcome of well-judged pacing and an awareness that extremes of pace and weight have to be kept for real climaxes...Details are fine, unexaggerated, and they add up...Astonishing playing; astonishing music.” BBC Music Magazine, August 2010 ***** “...the verve of these performers is quite incredible. But can they convincingly handle The Rite, with its batty accelarations and daringly skewed rhythmic idiosyncracies? Happily, the answer is resoundingly positive throughout. Alongside the gusto and through the joie de vivre of this orchestra, they are truly microscopic in their detail.” Daniel Ross, bbc.co.uk, 7th June 2010 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Fiesta
Gustavo Dudamel and his Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela (SBYOV) have stunned audiences worldwide with their explosive Latin-American showpieces. This is a unique album: no other conductor or orchestra in the world could deliver a recording like this. Passion and excitement are guaranteed! The recording captures the excitement of the live experience, juxtaposing contrasting showpieces such as the Stravinsky-like rhythmic drive of Revueltas’s Sensemaya, the expansive lusciousness of Danzón no. 2 by Marquez, the vibrant ballet suite Estancia by Ginastera and Bernstein’s well known Mambo. The moment when the musicians are revealed dressed in their national colours has become the signature of the SBYOV, as is the blistering energy and exuberance with which they perform these pieces. “Anybody who has been lucky enough to experience Gustavo Dudamel and his remarkable orchestra in a concert will want to hear this collection, a live recording from Caracas which captures the sheer joy and panache of their music-making...Dudamel has patented his own unique brand of music-making that is very special indeed.” The Guardian, 6th June 2008 ***** “The playing is polished and spirited and, if you relish catchy rhythms and vivid colours interlaced with some brooding Latin passion, then this disc is for you.” The Telegraph, 16th April 2009 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Tchaikovsky - Symphony No. 5Live Recording
“As usual, the forces wielded in this live recording from Caracas approach the gargantuan: they include 17 trumpets, 15 trombones and a mere 96 strings. And again the playing quality is exceptional. Brass shining like gold; velvet, purring double-basses; gambolling woodwinds; killer percussion; violinists with 20 fingers, never afraid whatever the speed.” The Times, 6th February 2009 **** “The playing packs a passionate punch, the aching pangs of the first movement delivered with palpable anguish, the outbursts charged with hot-blooded fury. Dudamel's pacing of the andante slow movement might tax any solo horn-player's reservoir of breath, but the youngster allotted the part here takes it mellifluously in his stride.” The Telegraph, 18th February 2009 “Though Gustavo Dudamel's achievements with his remarkable young Venezuelans may be one of the musical wonders of our time, their charisma seems to work far better live than on disc. The collection released last year was a wonderful memento of the Simón Bolívar's performances of the same pieces in concert, but their earlier recording of Mahler and Beethoven symphonies with Dudamel had been much less convincing. Though this latest Tchaikovsky release has moments of huge excitement, it doesn't begin to compete with the finest accounts of the Fifth Symphony already available. Predictably, perhaps, it's the finale of the symphony that shows Dudamel and his orchestra at their best, when they generate tremendous intensity; but until then it moves in fits and starts. The orchestral fantasy Francesca da Rimini fares no better, with the slower music under-characterised and other sections too brassily assertive. Dudamel's army of fans will get over it, of course, but he's a more satisfying interpreter than he allows himself to be here.” The Guardian, 6th March 2009 *** “A sinewy, uninhibited Tchaikovsky Fifth - you'd expect nothing less from this source. Dudamel and his young players feed on one another; the exchange of energy is extraordinary. As for the finale… the allegro vivace comes off the starting-blocks at such a blistering pace as to register a nanosecond of disbelief that such a tempo is even possible. But the real disbelief is still to come. To better this account of Francesca da Rimini you need to go back to Stokowski or Bernstein's underrated Israel Philharmonic recording. As if the descent into Dante's inferno isn't intense enough - Dudamel's pacing of this lengthy introduction is quite masterly - the whirlwind at its core glows white hot with astonishing virtuosity displayed from every department.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2009 “These are remarkably well-played accounts of the E minor symphony and Francesca da Rimini for a youth orchestra” Sunday Times, 8th March 2009 *** “A sinewy, uninhibited Tchaikovsky Fifth – you'd expect nothing less from this source. Dudamel and his young players feed on one another; the exchange of energy is extraordinary. Tchaikovsky's impulsive changes of tempo feel more naturally impetuous while the phrasing is directly reflected in the sound: just listen to the yearning second theme of the Allegro con anima and the way that the sheen on the violin sound intensifies with the release. But as with their famous Prom a few years back, it's not just the fireworks but the inwardness of this performance that brings the biggest surprises. The great Andante cantabile horn theme (so soft and consoling) emerges almost imperceptibly from the somnolent harmonies of the lower strings at the start of the movement. It's like discovering Romeo and Juliet before the unwelcome dawn – the atmosphere is extraordinarily charged. And what sweep the Simón Bolívar string-players lend the second theme, not least in the climactic return. As for the finale – well, there's nothing like headstrong youngsters to reignite an old favourite: the allegrovivace comes off the starting-blocks at such a blistering pace as to register a nanosecond of disbelief that such a tempo is even possible. But the real disbelief is still to come. To better this account of Francesca da Rimini you need to go back to Stokowski or Bernstein. As if the descent into Dante's inferno isn't intense enough – Dudamel's pacing of this lengthy introduction is quite masterly – the whirlwind at its core glows white hot with astonishing virtuosity displayed from every department. Then the loveliest of all Tchaikovsky's lyric creations brings a limpid melancholy from the solo clarinet – truly times of happiness recalled in misery. And though Dudamel's tempo rubato in the string-led approach to the climax may not be as abandoned as Bernstein's, it's still pretty brave. Hearing is believing in the coda as the trombones and trumpets tumble into the abyss. Exciting? Deliriously so.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Beethoven - Symphonies Nos. 5 & 7
The fiery and gifted young maestro might have chosen lesser-known Latin American works for his debut on Deutsche Grammophon. Instead he opted for two of the most fequently recorded staples of the repertory: Beethoven's Fifth and Seventh Symphonies. The gamble has certainly paid off. The members of the Caracas-based Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra . . . combine youthful enthusiasm, technical finesse and mature profundity: a rare combination, and an ideal one to capture the urgency and optimism of Beethoven's Fifth. From the works sinister opening motif through the lyrical second movement to the spirited final allegro, there is a refreshing sense of excitement. Since this is, presumably, the first time most of theses young musicians have played the work, their polished reading is all the more impressive. In Beethoven's Seventh Symphony, Mr. Dudamel again elicits gorgeous phrasing from strings and winds. The hused, beautifully shaded Allegretto is particularly lovely, and the spirited Allegro comes off with unbridled brio.
Record Review / Vivien Schweitzer, The New York Times / 27 August 2006 “There's a scarcely believable freshness and virtuosity in the playing…” BBC Music Magazine, October 2006 **** “On the evidence of these performances - a vibrant, glowing Seventh and a poorly thought-out, run-of-the-mill Fifth - Dudamel is a born conductor but an unpractised interpreter. His style suggests a longing to return to the glory days of an era which ended with the deaths of Bernstein, Karajan and Solti. The sound is full-bodied and carefully groomed; there is no antiphonal division of the violins; repeats are in short supply. Yet who can entirely object when the playing is as glorious as much of this? The Fifth is bedevilled by a lack of a through pulse in the first movement development and coda, and otiose broadenings of the motto at the end. ...the Seventh... brings out the best in Dudamel's conducting; it's visceral energy, its generosity of spirit (and phrasing), its heart-warming nurturing of a belief that every note matters. The orchestra responds nobly to his demands. The finale is a dead ringer for Karajan's 1983 Berlin version, which is saying something. For these young musicians to come within hailing distance of so fabled an ensemble is an earnest of just how special they are.” Gramophone Magazine, November 2006 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Gustavo Dudamel: Discoveries (Standard Edition)
1. Beethoven, Symphony No.5, 1. Allegro con brio 2. Tchaikovsky, Symphony No.5, 3. Valse 3. Tchaikovsky, Der Nussknacker, Trepak 4. Bruckner, Sympony No.9, 2. Scherzo 5. Shostakovich, Festive Overture, Op.96 6. Saint-Saens, Bacchanale from Samson et Delila 7. Mahler, Symphony No.5, 4. Adagietto 8. Mendelssohn, Symphony No.3, 2. Vivace non troppo 9. Márquez, Danzon No.2 10. Revueltas, La Noche de los Mayas, 2. Noche de Jaranas 11. Stravinsky, Le Sacre du Printemps, Sacrificial Dance 12. Márquez, Conga del fuego 13. Bernstein, West Side Story, Mambo
Discoveries, Grammy award winner Gustavo Dudamel's first ‘Best of’ album, features favourites from Beethoven to Bernstein and several Dudamel tracks never before released on CD including highlights from Mendelssohn’s ‘Scottish’ Symphony and the ‘Bacchanale’ from Saint-Saëns’ Samson et Delila. This project is released in two formats: CD stand alone and CD+DVD. The DVD component on the CD + DVD features the prize-winning, critically-acclaimed documentary by Enrique Sánchez Lansch: The Promise of Music. Discoveries covers many aspects of Gustavo Dudamel's fascinating musical story so far: the story of his roots in Venezuela’s El Sistema (on The Promise of Music), and recordings with many of the orchestras with which he is most closely associated: The Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra, the Vienna Philharmonic, the Berlin Philharmonic and the Gothenburg Symphony. “With my orchestras,” says Dudamel, “we think of music like jet fuel. It’s pure adrenaline – and I think you can hear it.” The track with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra (Vivace non troppo from Mendelssohn’s Symphony No.3) is taken from the brand new charity LP. This is a first and ONLY release on CD. “the sheer gusto with which they attack the "Danse Russe" from The Nutcracker is exhilarating enough; and following it with the Gothenburg Symphony's scherzo from Bruckner's 9th demonstrates how ably Dudamel transfers his energy to another vehicle.” The Independent, 14th July 2012 **** | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | The Classical Album 2011
Bach, J S: | Concerto for Two Violins in D minor, BWV1043: Largo ma non tanto Julia Fischer (violin) Toccata & Fugue in D minor: Toccata Simon Preston (organ) | Beethoven: | Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67: 1. Allegro con brio Gustavo Dudamel Piano Sonata No. 14 in C sharp minor, Op. 27 No. 2 ‘Moonlight': Adagio sostenuto Daniel Barenboim (piano) Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' - Rondo (Allegro) Hélène Grimaud (piano) | Bellini: | Casta Diva (from Norma) Cecilia Bartoli (mezzo) | Brahms: | Hungarian Dance No. 1 in G minor Iván Fischer | Capua: | O sole mio Luciano Pavarotti (tenor) | Chopin: | Waltz No. 6 in D flat major, Op. 64 No. 1 'Minute Waltz' Alice Sara Ott (piano) Nocturne No. 2 in E flat major, Op. 9 No. 2 Vladimir Ashkenazy (piano) | Daquin: | Le Coucou Trevor Pinnock (harpsichord) | Fauré: | Après un rêve, Op. 7 No. 1 Nicola Benedetti (violin) Sicilienne, Op. 78 Neville Marriner | Grieg: | In the Hall of the Mountain King (from Peer Gynt) Herbert Blomstedt | Haydn: | Trumpet Concerto in E flat major, Hob. VIIe:1 (3rd movement) Håkan Hardenberger (trumpet) | Hérold: | La Fille mal gardée: Clog Dance | Khachaturian: | Sabre Dance from Gayane Valery Gergiev | Lara, Augustin: | Granada Plácido Domingo (tenor) | Liszt: | Liebestraum, S541 No. 3 (Nocturne in A flat major) Lang Lang (piano) Grande Étude de Paganini, S. 141 No. 3 'La Campanella' Yundi Li (piano) | Massenet: | Meditation (from Thaïs) Anne Sophie Mutter (violin) | Mozart: | Vesperae Solennes de Confessore, K339: Laudate Dominum Danielle De Niese (soprano) Non piu andrai, farfallone amoroso (from Le Nozze di Figaro) Bryn Terfel (bass-baritone) Voi che sapete (from Le nozze di Figaro) Magdalena Kozená (mezzo) | Orff: | Carmina Burana: Ecce gratum Riccardo Chailly | Puccini: | O mio babbino caro (from Gianni Schicchi) Anna Netrebko (soprano) E lucevan le stelle (from Tosca) Jonas Kaufmann (tenor) Che gelida manina (from La Bohème) Roberto Alagna (tenor) Un bel di vedremo (from Madama Butterfly) Renée Fleming (soprano) | Rachmaninov: | Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, Op. 43 (extract) Tamás Vásáry (piano) | Rodrigo: | Fantasia para un Gentilhombre: Danza de las hachas Carlos Bonell (guitar) | Satie: | Gnossienne No. 1 Pascal Rogé (piano) | Schumann: | Kinderszenen, Op. 15: Traümerei Nelson Freire (piano) | Shostakovich: | Jazz Suite No. 2 - Waltz No. 2 Riccardo Chailly | Strauss, J, II: | Frühlingsstimmen Walzer Op. 410 Willy Boskovsky | Tárrega: | Recuerdos de la Alhambra Eduardo Fernández (guitar) | Tchaikovsky: | The Nutcracker: Chinese Dance Charles Dutoit | Vivaldi: | The Four Seasons: Summer, RV315 - Presto Neville Marriner | Wagner: | Die Walküre: Ride of the Valkyries Sir Georg Solti | Williams, John: | Schindler's List - theme Janine Jansen (violin) |
This stunning collection showcases the greatest stars of classical music with dazzling performances from Gustavo Dudamel, Cecilia Bartoli, Lang Lang and Anna Netrebko, to name but a few... Also includes legendary performances from some of the greatest artists of all time, including Luciano Pavarotti, Sir Georg Solti, Plácido Domingo and Daniel Barenboim. Introducing the exciting talents of a number of rising stars such as Jonas Kaufmann, Danielle De Niese, Julia Fischer and Alice Sara Ott With 40 tracks and over 2½ hours of music this collection is outstanding value for money, providing the foundation for a library of classical music. | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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