Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | A Musical Journey: Russia & UkraineSt Petersburg, Crimea & Odessa
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| |  | Paleau De Les Arts Valencia, 2011
Kristine Opolais (Tatyana), Lena Belkina (Olga), Artur Rucinski (Onegin), Dmitri Korchak (Lensky), Günther Groissböck (Gremin),Margarita Nekrasova (Filipyevna), Helene Schneiderman (Larina), Emilio Sanchez (Triquet), Toni Navarrate (Guillot), Aldo Heo (Captain), Simon Lim (Zaretsky) Orquestra De La Comunitat Valenciana & Cor De La Generalitat Valenciana, Omer Meir Wellber In his first year as Music Director of Valencia’s Palau de les Arts, the exciting young conductor Omer Meir Wellber has scored a triumph with Tchaikovsky’s beloved opera Eugene Onegin. Film maker Mariusz Trelinski’s timeless production consists of a series of surrealist tableaux of great suggestive beauty. Omer Meir Wellber leads a superb young cast headed by Artur Rukiński as Onegin and Kristīne Opolais as Tatyana. Picture: 16:9, HD Sound: DVD: DTS 5.1, PCM Stereo Running Time: 155 minutes Subtitles: English, German, French, Spanish, Chinese, Korean, Japanese Available worldwide excl. USA and POLAND “The stand-out onstage, Dmitry Korchak...sing with impeccable style, looks handsome and can fill an empty stage with personality...Rucinski is velvet-voiced...but until Act 3 the singing is frustratingly uninflected...Opolais is exceptionally committed dramatically, not quite compensating for singing that, although pristine in tone, remains oddly anonymous.” International Record Review, May 2013 | 
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| |  | Teatro alla Scala: The Ballet Classics
Adam: | Giselle Live Recording from The Teatro Alla Scala, 2005. Choreographers: Jean Coralli & Jules Perrot & Choreographic Restaging: Yvette Chauviré Svetlana Zakharova (Giselle) & Roberto Bolle (Albrecht) David Coleman | Glazunov: | Raymonda, Op. 57 Live Recording from The Teatro Alla Scala, 2011. Choreographer: Marius Petipa & Choreographic Revival and Staging: Sergej Vikharev Olesia Novikova (Raymonda), Friedemann Vogel (Cavaliere Jean de Brienne) & Mick Zeni (Abdéráhman) Michail Jurowski | Tchaikovsky: | Swan Lake, Op. 20 Live Recording from The Teatro Degli Arcimboldi, Milan, 2004. Choreographers: Vladimir Burmeister & Lev Ivanov Svetlana Zakharova (Odette / Odile) & Roberto Bolle (Prince Siegfried) James Tuggle (conductor) & Florence Clerc/Frédéric Olivieri (stage directors) |
Sound Format: PCM Stereo, DD 5.1 (Raymonda) / + DTS 5.1 (Swan Lake, Giselle) Picture Format: 16:9 DVD Format: 3 x DVD 9 / NTSC Subtitles Bonus: GB, DE, FR, ES, IT (Swan Lake) Running Time: 392 mins + 13 mins Bonus (Swan Lake) FSK: 0 | 
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| |  | The Ballet BoxTchaikovsky: Swan Lake, Sleeping Beauty & The Nutcracker
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| |  | GermanyA Musical Tour of Bavaria
Music for the tour is by Telemann, a friend and contemporary of Johann Sebastian Bach, founder of the Leipzig Collegium Musicum later directed by Bach, godfather to Bach’s second son and for many years in charge of music in Hamburg, where he was later succeeded by his godson. The music here includes a Suite for recorder and strings, and two concertos from his Tafelmusik, one for three violins and the other for two horns. Bavaria, in south Germany, in earlier times ruled by an Elector, whose capital was Munich, is a region of the greatest variety. The places seen here start with the Bavarian Forest and its traditional craft of glass-blowing. Other scenes are of the great palace of the Thurn und Taxis Princes at Regensburg and the fine baroque monastery church of St George and St Martin at Weltenburg. Aspect Ratio 4:3 NTSC – No Region Coding DTS 5.1 • Dolby Digital 5.1 • PCM Stereo 2.0 | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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Ghyslaine Raphanel, Alain Gabriel & Jean-Philippe Courtis Orchestre Symphonique de la Radio et de la Télévision de Cracovie, Michel Swierczewski The fourth release in ‘L’Opéra Français Collection’ series of DVDs, covering the diverse repertoire of French Opera. This DVD, with a duration of 197 mins, comes in glowing 5.1 surround sound plus English subtitles. | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Joan Sutherland: Bell Telephone Hour Performances 1961-68
Joan Sutherland (soprano) The Bell Telephone Hour Orchestra & Chorus, Donald Voorhees In the early 1960s, the Australian soprano Joan Sutherland emerged as an opera star of the first magnitude, setting new standards of vocal excellence in the bel canto repertoire that have yet to be matched. Fortunately, Miss Sutherland's American career included numerous television appearances, prominent among them her performances on the Bell Telephone Hour, from 1961to 1968. The earliest of these telecasts marked Miss Sutherland's American television debut, less than a month after her New York debut (in a concert performance of Bellini's Beatrice di Tenda) and well before her Metropolitan Opera debut (as Lucia, on November 26, 1961). | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | (opera in two acts)
Lassi Virtanen, Esa Ruuttunen, Eeva-Liisa Saarinen, Merja Wirkkala, Aki Alamikkotervo, Andrus Mitt Viva Vox Chorus, New Young Chamber Orchestra, Kari Tikka Subtitles: English, German, Swedish, Finnish | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Tippett’s re-telling of part of the original epic legend of Troy follows the Homeric characters through their love, loyalties and vengeance – leading to the final slaughter of King Priam at the altar of his burning city. Recorded in 1985
Recording Date: 1985
Running Time: 138 min
Picture Format: 4:3
Sound Format: PCM Stereo
Language: GB
Menu Languages NTSC: D, F, GB, SP
Subtitle Languages NTSC: D, F, GB, SP
“A film version of Tippett's second opera, brilliantly directed by Nicholas Hytner with a fine Kent Opera cast. The opera is gritty, fierce, and the total effect is grimly powerful.” BBC Music Magazine, February 2008 **** “Many listeners – even or especially those who had been beguiled by The Midsummer Marriage – could once take refuge in the harsh assessment of Tippett's biographer, Ian Kemp, that KingPriam was 'the most didactic and theoretical of his works'. This Kent Opera production proved them wrong. The Royal Opera premiere in Coventry had been overshadowed by the acclaim for Britten's War Requiem, first heard the following night, and the big voices and grand, clangorous manner of the fine Decca recording (based on a later Covent Garden production) are fully operatic in scale and projection. By contrast, Roger Norrington and the young Nicholas Hytner push right into the claustrophobic citadel of the drama to find out, in the composer's words, 'what happens when the psychological balance symbolised by marriage is knocked awry by responsibilities, war and fate'. Acoustic, camera and microphones are close, oppressively and rightly so. We are but a few feet from Rodney Macann's piercing blue eyes as his Priam rebels against the choices that Tippett so relentlessly adumbrates: to smother Paris or love him, to sacrifice Helen or Troy, to confront Achilles or retain his royal dignity – how different from the hopeless determinism of Britten and Owen, where men are 'the foolish toys of time', to quote Eric Crozier for St Nicolas. Robin Lough's direction for TV uses the tricks of the medium sparingly, and to most telling effect in the blood-lust of the Trojans' vengeance trio at the end of Act 2, answered by Achilles' war-cry with Verdian immediacy. All the principals have the measure of their roles. If Sarah Walker's Andromache, Neil Jenkins's Achilles and Macann's Priam do most to stop us in our tracks, perhaps it is their painfully human heroism that Tippett was most interested in himself. In the brief but demanding role of the boy Paris, Nani Antwi-Nyanin also deserves a special mention: Tippett was not in the habit of writing down for younger performers. Kent Opera sank in 1989, no longer kept afloat by government subsidy. There could be no more imposing memorial to the power of its work, and to the determination of its artistic director, Norman Platt, who died in 2004.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “Roger Norrington and the young Nicholas Hytner push right into the claustrophobic citadel of the drama… Robin Lough's direction for TV uses the tricks of the medium sparingly, and to most telling effect in the bloody-lust of the Trojans' vengeance trio at the end of Act 2, answered by Achilles' war-cry with Verdian immediacy. All of the principals have the measure of their roles.” Gramophone Magazine, March 2008 “...a superlative production of what increasingly proves itself to be Tippett’s greatest opera.” New Statesman | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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