All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Classical 2013
Beethoven: | Fidelio Overture Op. 72c Otto Klemperer | Bizet: | Carmen: Prelude to Act I Berliner Philharmoniker, Sir Simon Rattle Les tringles des sistres tintaient (from Carmen) Magdalena Kozena (mezzo) Berliner Philharmoniker, Sir Simon Rattle La fleur que tu m'avais jetée (from Carmen) Jonas Kaufmann (tenor) Berliner Philharmoniker, Sir Simon Rattle | Delibes: | Les filles de Cadix Tine Thing Helseth (trumpet) | Fauré: | Sicilienne, Op. 78 Gautier Capucon (cello) | Gluck: | Che faro' senza Euridice? (from Orfeo ed Euridice) Kathleen Ferrier (contralto) Divinités du Styx (from Alceste) Maria Callas (soprano) | Handel: | Atalanta: Overture Alison Balsom (trumpet) English Concert, Trevor Pinnock | Heggie: | This journey...This journey to Christ (from Dead Man Walking) Joyce DiDonato (mezzo) | Leoncavallo: | Qual fiamma avea nel guardo!.... Hui! Stridono lassù (from I Pagliacci) Angela Gheorghiu (soprano) | Leontovich: | Carol of the Bells Libera | Liszt: | Bist du!, S277 Diana Damrau (soprano) | Puccini: | Donde lieta usci (from La Bohème) Angela Gheorghiu (soprano) | Purcell: | Sound the trumpet, beat the drum, Z335 Alison Balsom (trumpet) English Concert, Trevor Pinnock | Rachmaninov: | Vocalise, Op. 34 No. 14 - arrangement for orchestra Vasily Petrenko | Rodgers, R: | The King And I: Overture The John Wilson Orchestra, John Wilson | Verdi: | Ingemisco (from Requiem) Rolando Villazon (tenor) | Vivaldi: | Vedro con mio diletto (from Giustino) Philippe Jaroussky (countertenor) |
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| |  | Philippe Jaroussky: La voix des rêvesGreatest Moments on Concerts
Philippe Jaroussky, described by Germany’s Die Zeit as “the Apollo of countertenors’, stands out among his many talented contemporaries as much for the soprano-like beauty of his tone as for the elegance and insight of his interpretations and his adventurous and erudite approach to repertoire – whether unearthing neglected scores by little-known composers or venturing beyond the Baroque into the 19th and 20th centuries. Established as one of Virgin Classics’ bestselling artists, Jaroussky, now aged 34, has been honoured three times in the Victoires de la Musique awards in his native France and has also received Germany’s most prominent music prize, the Echo Klassik. His diverse achievements are saluted in two new collections on Virgin Classics – the 2CD set “The Voice” and the DVD and Blu Ray “La Voix des rêves: Greatest moments in Concert”. “LA VOIX DES RÊVES - Greatest Moments in Concert” (available on DVD & Blu Ray) features video footage from a number of occasions and venues – including items from a concert given among the crystal chandeliers of the splendid Galerie des Glaces in the palace of Versailles, and works by Handel and Vivaldi performed in another jewel of French Baroque architecture, the sumptuously decorated Chapelle de la Trinité in Lyon. Also included are exclusive interviews an array of fellow musicians: Jean-Christophe Spinosi, Emmanuelle Haïm, Christina Pluhar; Jérôme Ducros, Quatuor Ebène, Gautier Capuçon, Marie-Nicole Lemieux and Renaud Capuçon. Jaroussky and his appeal were aptly summarised in a recent profile in the French magazine Balthazar: “Philippe Jaroussky alternates between opera and recitals, bringing his sensual, graceful voice and matinee idol looks, and this has made him a key star of classical music. But his recordings also reveal a skilled musicologist who has revived numerous forgotten artists like the castrato Carestini [and the composers] Johann Christian Bach and Caldara. Jaroussky simply glows. Anyone who has had the opportunity to meet him will find it hard to forget his enthusiastic conversation and his magnetic gaze.” The singer made his passions clear in an interview with Crescendo magazine, revealing that “I don’t like being told I have the ‘voice of an angel’, because that would just mean that it sounds pretty and takes people out of themselves … I want to be able to evoke more human emotions too: sorrow, despair, jealousy.” Speaking to the leading French newspaper Le Monde, he went into more detail on his philosophy as a maturing singer: “Ten years into your career, you reach a certain level of purity in your approach. You are always set on improving – strengthening your high notes, your low notes, your projection or your expressivity – but you also accept what it means to be an artist.” | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Philippe Jaroussky: La voix des rêvesGreatest Moments on Concerts
Philippe Jaroussky, described by Germany’s Die Zeit as “the Apollo of countertenors’, stands out among his many talented contemporaries as much for the soprano-like beauty of his tone as for the elegance and insight of his interpretations and his adventurous and erudite approach to repertoire – whether unearthing neglected scores by little-known composers or venturing beyond the Baroque into the 19th and 20th centuries. Established as one of Virgin Classics’ bestselling artists, Jaroussky, now aged 34, has been honoured three times in the Victoires de la Musique awards in his native France and has also received Germany’s most prominent music prize, the Echo Klassik. His diverse achievements are saluted in two new collections on Virgin Classics – the 2CD set “The Voice” and the DVD and Blu Ray “La Voix des rêves: Greatest moments in Concert”. “LA VOIX DES RÊVES - Greatest Moments in Concert” (available on DVD & Blu Ray) features video footage from a number of occasions and venues – including items from a concert given among the crystal chandeliers of the splendid Galerie des Glaces in the palace of Versailles, and works by Handel and Vivaldi performed in another jewel of French Baroque architecture, the sumptuously decorated Chapelle de la Trinité in Lyon. Also included are exclusive interviews an array of fellow musicians: Jean-Christophe Spinosi, Emmanuelle Haïm, Christina Pluhar; Jérôme Ducros, Quatuor Ebène, Gautier Capuçon, Marie-Nicole Lemieux and Renaud Capuçon. Jaroussky and his appeal were aptly summarised in a recent profile in the French magazine Balthazar: “Philippe Jaroussky alternates between opera and recitals, bringing his sensual, graceful voice and matinee idol looks, and this has made him a key star of classical music. But his recordings also reveal a skilled musicologist who has revived numerous forgotten artists like the castrato Carestini [and the composers] Johann Christian Bach and Caldara. Jaroussky simply glows. Anyone who has had the opportunity to meet him will find it hard to forget his enthusiastic conversation and his magnetic gaze.” The singer made his passions clear in an interview with Crescendo magazine, revealing that “I don’t like being told I have the ‘voice of an angel’, because that would just mean that it sounds pretty and takes people out of themselves … I want to be able to evoke more human emotions too: sorrow, despair, jealousy.” Speaking to the leading French newspaper Le Monde, he went into more detail on his philosophy as a maturing singer: “Ten years into your career, you reach a certain level of purity in your approach. You are always set on improving – strengthening your high notes, your low notes, your projection or your expressivity – but you also accept what it means to be an artist.” | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Alison Balsom: Sound The TrumpetRoyal Music of Purcell and Handel
In the year of Queen Elizabeth II’s Diamond Jubilee, Alison Balsom celebrates the heroic era of the Baroque trumpet in works by George Frideric Handel (1685-1759) and Henry Purcell (1658 or 1659-1695), whose anthems, odes, sinfonias and operas have provided the music for numerous royal celebrations from their own day to the present. Joining forces with Trevor Pinnock, harpsichordist, conductor and pioneer of historical performance, and with the English Concert orchestra that he founded, Balsom demonstrates the versatility and expressive power of her valve-less instrument in original works and new arrangements. These include Purcell’s Sound the trumpet and Handel’s Eternal Source of light divine in duet with countertenor Iestyn Davies and Purcell’s The Plaint from The Fairy Queen in duet with soprano Lucy Crowe. Further repertoire includes suites from Purcell’s semi-operas King Arthur (1691) and The Fairy Queen (1692) in new arrangements by Balsom and Pinnock, Handel’s Water Piece in D Major HWV 341 and his Oboe Concerto No. 1 in B-flat Major HWV 301 transposed into C Major. Alison Balsom is one of today’s most popular classical musicians. Having managed to break through to the mainstream without abandoning her musical integrity, she continues to draw ever-wider audiences for her performances and recordings of diverse repertoire. “This charming disc contains some of the most imaginative and polished trumpet playing you're ever likely to hear...Born-again authenticists may cavil at Balsom's vented trumpet, a modern development aiding intonation. But her flexible tuning, scrupulously focused to blend with the harmony, is a relief from the compromised tuning needed to play certain notes on true 18th-century instruments.” BBC Music Magazine, January 2013 ***** “when the instrument is played as fluidly agreeably as it is here, nobody could doubt that it is the right tool for the job...And it all works. This is rattling good music, and so easily does the trumpet fit into it that often it is hard to recall what the original scorings were anyway. Balsom, too, sounds utterly at home...and [is] wonderfully backed by the English Concert and the bright natural musicianship of Trevor Pinnock” Gramophone Magazine, December 2012 “Up at the top of her range, or down below, fast or slow, she is in superb control and form...the lightness of the string accompaniments, the calm attention to springy rhythms, the unobtrusive sensitivity of the phrasing, all done without exaggerated emphasis or anachronistic flamboyance, are a sheer delight...[Pinnock] is surely a national treasure” International Record Review, December 2012 “the music-making is a joy from beginning to end. Alison Balsom’s playing is stunning. The tone and intonation are fabulous; the lip trills, ornaments and runs simply staggering. How she achieves this level of technical assurance on an instrument without valves is remarkable...Crowe’s rendition of The Plaint from Purcell’s The Fairy Queen is sensitively and beautifully sung and it’s obvious that there’s an equal musical partnership captured here” MusicWeb International, April 2013 “Her distinctive tone remains clearly recognisable, despite the instrument's limitations. The timbre is sweeter, less aggressively strident than that of the modern trumpet, and she’s paired with Trevor Pinnock and the English Concert, providing crisp, bouncy support.” The Arts Desk, 1st December 2012 “For historical accuracy, she plays the valve-less “natural” trumpet: it really does appear to offer a more direct access to the human voice, a quality confirmed when she duets with countertenor Iestyn Davies” The Independent, 13th October 2012 **** “The music is glorious; so is Balsom’s artistry as she weaves a flawless path alongside Trevor Pinnock’s English Concert” The Times, 19th October 2012 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mahler: Kindertotenlieder
Gluck: | Chiamo il mio ben così (from Orfeo ed Euridice) Charles Bruck Orfeo ed Euridice: 'Deh placatevi con me' (Orfeo) Orchestra & Chorus of the Netherlands Opera, Charles Bruck Che puro ciel (Orfeo ed Euridice) Charles Bruck Che faro' senza Euridice? (from Orfeo ed Euridice) Charles Bruck | Greene, M: | O praise the Lord arr. Roper Gerald Moore (piano) I will lay me down in peace arr. Roper Gerald Moore (piano) | Handel: | Spring is coming (from Ottone) Gerald Moore (piano) Come to me, soothing sleep (from Ottone) Gerald Moore (piano) | Mahler: | Kindertotenlieder Wiener Philharmoniker, Bruno Walter | Mendelssohn: | Ich wollt' meine Lieb' ergösse sich, Op. 63. No. 1 sung in English as ' I would that my love' Gerald Moore (piano), Isobel Baillie (soprano) Gruss, Op. 63 No. 3 sung in English as 'Greeting' Gerald Moore (piano), Isobel Baillie (soprano) | Purcell: | Sound the trumpet, beat the drum, Z335 Gerald Moore (piano), Isobel Baillie (soprano) Let us Wander not Unseen (from The Indian Queen, Z630) Gerald Moore (piano), Isobel Baillie (soprano) Shepherd, shepherd, cease decoying (from King Arthur) Gerald Moore (piano), Isobel Baillie (soprano) |
“An outstandingly beautiful performance … Kathleen Ferrier, under Bruno Walter’s inspired direction, sings these songs as, one feels, Mahler must have imagined them.” Gramophone Magazine | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Andreas Scholl: Purcell - O Solitude
Purcell: | If music be the food of love, Z379 Sound the trumpet, beat the drum, Z335 with Christophe Dumaux (countertenor) Strike the Viol (from Come Ye Sons of Art, Z323) Fairest Isle (from King Arthur) Chacony, Z628 What power art thou? (from King Arthur, Z628) Chacony in G minor - for Two Violins, Viola and Bass Z730 One charming night (from The Fairy Queen, Z629) Sweeter than Roses (from Pausanius, the Betrayer of his Country, Z585) [Pausanius, the Betrayer of his Country. (1695), Z585 original version] An Evening Hymn 'Now that the sun hath veiled his light', Z193 Pavan for Three Violins and Bass in G minor - Z752 O solitude, my sweetest choice, Z406 O dive custos Auriacae domus, Z504 with Christophe Dumaux (countertenor) Music for a while, Z583 Here the deities approve, Z339 original version The Gordion Knot Untied - incidental music, Z597 When I am laid in earth (from Dido and Aeneas) |
The greatest countertenor of today, Andreas Scholl returns to the Decca label with a recording of vocal jewels by the great baroque composer, Henry Purcell. This is Andreas Scholl's first ever recording of the music of Purcell and his uniquely beautiful voice is perfectly suited to the English composer's plangent melodies. The album includes pieces written for the stage, the church and the private chamber, some of which Andreas Scholl has sung in recital for many years, and some he sings for the first time. Andreas Scholl's long-standing collaborators, ‘Accademia Bizantina’ bring out the Italian influence in Purcell's instrumental writing, and contribute orchestral items to the programme. 'O Solitude' is Andreas Scholl's first Decca album since the chart-topping ‘Handel: Arias For Senesino' in 2006. The album includes the well known lament 'When I Am Laid In Earth' - recently voted the UK's No.1 favourite aria in a BBC Radio 3 poll - written for the character of Dido in Purcell's opera, Dido and Aeneas. Andreas Scholl is joined for two duets by French countertenor Christophe Dumaux. “Ethereal yet visceral, Scholl's voice is the dream vehicle for Purcell...Stefano Montanari coaxes thrilling playing from Accademia Bizantina, who dance and swagger, throb and pulsate with true Latin passion. Their continuo realisations - here delicate and intimate, there audaciously jazzy - are an unceasing delight.” BBC Music Magazine, January 2011 ***** “that famously otherworldly tone [is] often breathtakingly in evidence...His decision to tackle Dido's lament has generated controversy: in fact, his performance is extraordinarily haunting...O Dive Custos is arguably the disc's high point. The Academia Bizantina, meanwhile, are on fine form for Stefano Montanari” The Guardian, 13th January 2011 **** “Scholl understands the importance of words and remains the countertenor of choice: it’s not so much the intelligence and grace that make his artistry so instantly recognisable, as the hypnotically soothing quality of his voice...Among the many joys of this exceptional recital are the accompaniments by Accademia Bizantina.” Financial Times, 21st January 2011 ***** “Few counter-tenors maintain the width of repertoire or vocal acumen of this artist...his Cold Song from “King Arthur” [is] a shivering, juddering triumph, and the entire package pleases.” The Times, 22nd January 2011 **** “his way with words has strengthened...the two countertenors combine marvellously in O dive custos” Gramophone Magazine, March 2011 “There's no doubt about the theatrical intent driving Scholl's interpretations and the flamboyant work of Italian period instrument band, Accademia Bizantina. The latter's lively continuo group and multi-hued sounds certainly catch the full flavour...few singers...can match him for style and intelligent musicianship in this repertoire.” Classic FM Magazine, March 2011 **** “[The disc] contains much in the way of sympathetic vocal and instrumental colouring, not to mention some very fine singing and playing, full-stop...Stefano Montanari's stylish violin-playing [in Fairest Isle], as elsewhere, is a treat in itself...Scholl [brings] an animated, urgent quality to his performance, the tone rich and resonant, the diction razor-sharp.” International Record Review, April 2011 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | The Art Of Alfred DellerClassic Vanguard Recordings
anon.: | Sumer is icumen in | Byrd: | Come, pretty babe | Despres: | La Déploration de Johannes Ockeghem | Handel: | Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne HWV74 'Eternal source of light divine' | Lasso: | Matona mia cara | Monteverdi: | Lamento d'Arianna 'Lasciatemi morire' | Morley: | Now is the month of maying In Dew of Roses | Parsons, R: | Pandolpho | Passereau: | Il est bel et bon | Purcell: | Music for a while, Z583 I attempt from love's sickness to fly in vain (from The Indian Queen) Sound the trumpet, beat the drum, Z335 One charming night (from The Fairy Queen, Z629) Mystery’s Song (from The Fairy Queen, Z629) Fairest Isle (from King Arthur) If music be the food of love, Z379 | Saracini: | Da Te Parto | Schütz: | Erhöre mich, wenn ich rufe, SWV 289 | trad.: | The Three Ravens The Cuckoo Barbara Allen Hey, Ho, the Wind and the Rain I will give my love an apple The Oak and the ash (A north country lass) King Henry Greensleeves | Weelkes: | To shorten winter's sadness | Wilbye: | Thus Saith My Cloris Bright |
Alfred Deller, Desmond Dupré (lute), Walter Bergman (harpsichord), Gustav Leonhardt (harpsichord) The Deller Consort, Oriana Concert Choir and Orchestra, Ensemble of Baroque Instruments, Leonhardt Baroque Ensemble | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Trio X: Traumerei
Trio X is one of Sweden’s foremost improvisational groups. | 
| | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Baroque Voices 29 - Amour & MascaradePurcell & Italy
anon.: | The furies masque The Fairey Masque Cupararee or Graysin The Ladies Masque The Goates masque The second Witches dance | Frescobaldi: | Canzon terza Canzona quinta Canzon prima (1628) Canzon sesta, from In partitura, il promo libro delle canzoni, 1628 | Mancini, F: | Quanto dolce è quell’ardore Largo Recitatif Allegro | Purcell: | Bid the virtues (from Come ye Sons of Art, Z323) O dive custos Auriacae domus, Z504 Plainte - O, Let Me Weep (from The Fairy Queen, Z629) Sound the trumpet, beat the drum, Z335 |
A new and fresh light on pieces by Henry Purcell, interspersed with music by Frescobaldi, Mancini, and several anonymous composers. | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Purcell - Here Let my Life and other songs
Maute: | Concerto on the Death of Henry Purcell | Purcell: | Sound the trumpet, beat the drum, Z335 Crown the altar (from Celebrate this Festival - Birthday Ode for Queen Mary, Z321) Music for a while, Z583 Here let my life (If ever I more riches did desire, Z544) Plainte - O, Let Me Weep (from The Fairy Queen, Z629) In the black dismal dungeon of despair, Z190 Abdelazer or The Moor's Revenge: incidental music, Z570 If music be the food of love, Z379 |
“Taylor Bowman…complement each other as perfectly as coffee and cream. A close-recorded perspective ensure the words cut through with compelling detail.” BBC Music Magazine, March 2008 **** “James Bowman has been around for decades, whereas Daniel Taylor is a comparative newcomer; despite the age difference, they are equals in all respects. They are heard together in "Sound the trumpet" and "In vain the am'rous flute", the fullness of Bowman's voice nicely offset by Taylor's leaner tones.” Gramophone Magazine, March 2008 | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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