Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Mozart - Famous String Quartets
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| |  | Mozart: Great Piano Concertos Volume II
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Salzburg Festival production | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Evelyn Glennie à Luxembourg
Recorded live at the Grand Théâtre de la Ville de Luxembourg, September 2004 | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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Open Air Production from the Festival of St. Margarethen | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Yehudi Menuhin in "Concert Magic"
Yehudi Menuhin (violin), Adolph Baller, Marguerite Campbell, Jakob Gimpel (pianos) & Eula Beal (contralto) Symphony Orchestra of Hollywood, Antal Dorati Recorded at Charlie Chaplin Studios, Hollywood, 1947 | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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Subtitles: English, German, French “The performance itself [is] undeniably a high standard…..the recorded sound is vivid and immediate… everyone is having fun.”International Record Review | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Jacques Loussier Trio plays BachJazz arrangements of Bach, Debussy, Satie and Ravel.
Jacques Loussier Trio - Jacques Loussier (piano), Bennoit Dunoyer de Segonzac (bass), André Arpino (drums) Recorded: 28-Jul-2004 live St Thomas's Church Leipzig "Overall, it's difficult not to be inspired by work like this. Loussier's arrangements, as Schwab puts it, 'give back to Baroque music, with its tendency towards rhythmic uniformity, a vitality and spontaneity that makes it sound fresh and alive to our modern ears.' And, aside from viewing the live performance, it doesn't get much fresher than on a DVD like this. A beautifully filmed, beautiful performed and beautifully presented concert, I truly cannot recommend this enough." - Robert Gibson, Musicweb International | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Subtitles: English, German, French “While visually handsome, the amount of stage magic in this very commendable production of Lully's Persée (composed 1682) is fairly minimal: Mercure and Venus appear, appropriately enough, on elaborate flying clouds, but dramatic tension evaporates when Andromède is menaced by a sea monster that would not have been out of place in an episode of The Clangers. Musically there is much to admire: singing and playing are enjoyably idiomatic.” BBC Music Magazine, September 2005 *** “A warm welcome to the first opera by Lully to appear on DVD. Staged performances of his tragédies lyriques being rare, at least in the UK, it's good to be able at last to assess one of them as a drama. Persée, to a libretto by Philippe Quinault, Lully's usual collaborator, was first performed in 1682, a year before Phaëton. As with all such works the purpose was to flatter, none too subtly, the person and the reign of Louis XIV; indeed, the subject was chosen by the Sun King himself, and the sycophantic composer made an explicit comparison between Louis and Perseus in the dedication. The story, taken from Ovid's Metamorphoses, is a conflation of two legends: Perseus' slaying of Medusa and his rescue of Andromeda. Cassiopeia has incurred the wrath of Juno, who sends Medusa to terrorise the country. With Medusa dead, Juno causes Cassiopeia's daughter, the princess Andromeda, to be chained to a rock at the mercy of a monster. Perseus swoops from the sky to kill the monster, Venus descends as a dea ex machina to take the hero, his beloved and her parents up to heaven, and everybody lives happily ever after. Everybody, that is, except for Merope, fruitlessly in love with Perseus, who dies accidentally; and Phineus, Andromeda's betrothed, whom Perseus turns to stone with Medusa's head. As a drama, then, there's not much going for Persée, especially as Perseus benefits from divine assistance: a sword from Vulcan, a shield from Athena, a helmet from Pluto, not to mention the presence of Mercury, who sends Medusa to sleep. But there's much pleasure to be had from the choral and balletic contributions to the divertissements and from individual scenes. This production from Toronto is dressed and choreographed in traditional style and the direction is both lively and respectful, the characters encouraged to gesture expressively. Monica Whicher and Alain Coulombe are good as the disappointed lovers; Olivier Laquerre, stentorian as Andromeda's father, has a fine old time camping up the transvestite role of Medusa. Cyril Auvity's Perseus, rather pinched in tone, is outsung by Colin Ainsworth's Mercury, who is nonsensically given a solo belonging to one of the mortals. Hervé Niquet is a sympathetic conductor, moving seamlessly through recitative, air and ensemble; the orchestra suffers from a recorded balance that favours the theorbo. A short scene for Medusa's fellow Gorgons is pointlessly cut. The entire allegorical Prologue is omitted, too; no great loss, perhaps, but it should have been mentioned in the booklet. But let's not end on a carping note: this enterprising issue is cause for celebration.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Great Stars of OperaLive in Concert
| | Favorite Arias and Scenes by Rossini, Mozart, Bizet, J. Strauss II, Puccini, Cilea, Verdi & Lehar |
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