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“Here is 1920s French music directed by a conductor who's completely in the spirit of it, and plenty of spirit there is, too. Except for Ibert's Divertissement, this is ballet music. Poulenc's suite from Les biches, written for Diaghilev's ballet company and first heard in Monte Carlo, is fresh and bouncy and stylishly played here, although Chandos's warm recording, good though it's, takes some edge off the trumpet tone; the genial nature of it all makes us forget that it's a unique mix of 18th-century galanterie, Tchaikovskian lilt and Poulenc's own inimitable street-Parisian sophistication and charm. As for Ibert's piece, this is uproariously funny in an unbuttoned way, and the gorgeously vulgar trombone in the Waltz and frantic police whistle in the finale are calculated to make you laugh out loud. Milhaud's Le boeufsur le toit also has Parisian chic and was originally a kind of music-hall piece, composed to a scenario by Cocteau. It was while attending a performance of it in London in 1920 that the composer first heard the American jazz orchestra that, together with a later experience of New Orleans jazzmen playing 'from the darkest corners of the Negro soul' (as he later expressed it), prompted him to compose his masterly ballet La création du monde. Tortelier and his orchestra understand this strangely powerful music no less than the other pieces. This is a most desirable disc.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “a splendid, modern, digital version of Ibert's sparklingly witty Divertissement. Verve is combined with much delicacy of detail” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Tea for twoA Selection of European Delicacies
The details are unclear, but one thing is certain: our couple loves classical music. This recording tells a love story with a happy ending, through a number of short but elegant compositions. Even small-scale works can be great in their own way and, compiled in such a creative manner and performed by such excellent musicians, they offer the listener an hour of sheer amazement and amusement. From Jacques Ibert's Divertissement for chamber orchestra (when the couple first meet), via Anton Heberle's Concerto in G major (the wedding music) through to Peter Heidrich's Variations on Happy Birthday (the happy ending and final celebration), the orchestra accompanies the couple not only when they indulge their liking of tea during their honeymoon, but adding music from all eras as a backdrop to their relationship. Since its establishment in 1935, the Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana has enjoyed a status as one of Switzerland's best-known orchestras, working regularly with renowned conductors and prestigious soloists. On this recording, the ensemble is conducted by the English conductor Howard Griffiths, who has guest conducted many leading orchestras worldwide and is currently GMD of the Brandenburg State Orchestra. The soloists are Maurice Steger (recorder), who was hailed in The Independent newspaper as "the world's leading recorder virtuoso", and the pianist Davide Cabassi, finalist at the 2005 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. | 
| | | Scheduled for release on 24 June 2013. Order it now and we will deliver it as soon as it is available. |
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| |  | Christopher Warren-Green conducts Ravel, Fauré, Poulenc & Ibert
The LCO return to disc on Signum with a new programme of French orchestral works by Ravel, Fauré, Poulenc and Ibert. Their ‘LCO Live’ series captures the vibrant, exciting performances they give at their London home of St. John’s, Smith Square. Singled out as one of the capital’s (and the nation’s) leading ensembles, the LCO and their Music Director Christopher Warren-Green performed for the wedding service of TRHs The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge earlier this year. “The concerts of Warren-Green and the London Chamber Orchestra at St John’s, Smith Square aren’t often noticed in the press, but their large regular audience knows that they are some of the most exciting in London.” The Times “The latest of the LCO Live series offers an engaging and varied programme of French Romanticism...The centrepiece of the programme is Poulenc's "Piano Concerto", the opening section of which alone seems to incorporate more disparate styles than most composers cover in a career.” The Independent, 12th August 2011 ***** “with this programme of combined charm and exuberance, the London Chamber Orchestra deliver a crowd pleaser. Pascal Rogé has become something of Poulenc expert, and his sympathetic yet witty playing makes sense of Poulenc's profusion of ideas in the centrepiece Piano Concerto, getting the right balance between fun and musical sophistication.” Classic FM Magazine, November 2011 **** | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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| |  | Ibert: Orchestral Works
Ibert: | Divertissement City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Louis Frémaux Pièces brèves (3) for wind quintet Dennis Brain Escales Orchestre National de la Radiodiffusion Française, Leopold Stokowski Symphonie marine City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Louis Frémaux Invitation to the Dance - Dance of the Clowns Sinfonia of London, Robert Irving Concerto for Flute & Orchestra Emmanuel Pahud (flute) Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich, David Zinman Ouverture de fete Orchestre National ORTF, Jean Martinon Chansons (4) de Don Quichotte José Van Dam Orchestre de l'Opéra National de Lyon, Kent Nagano Louisville Concerto City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Louis Frémaux Tropismes pour des amours imaginaires Orchestre National ORTF, Jean Martinon Bacchanale City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Louis Frémaux |
Paris in the twenties is conjured up in the witty Divertissement, whilst Escales paints pictures of sun-drenched Mediterranean ports. Film music for Chaliapin and Gene Kelly rubs shoulders with jazz and fugues in the music of the many-sided Ibert. | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Sir John Barbirolli conducts French Music
By having an Italian father, a French mother and by being born in Victorian Bloomsbury, it seems that John Barbirolli set himself up for a life with a natural affinity for Italian, French and English music. It was an ideal pedigree for a poetic and sensitive musician. The performances of French music on this disc were made during the 1950s – a vintage period with the Hallé Orchestra. His supreme conducting of Debussy can be heard in the Prélude – rich with poetic detail and a strong surge of sensuality floods the string tone, with red-blooded brass playing. There are plenty of musical jokes in Ibert’s Divertissement – Barbirolli extracts the fun but leaves the music with its own dignity. The waltz-skit on The Blue Danube is an example of Ibert’s wit and who can resist the final chase with police whistles being blow amid the chaos? The Carnival of the Animals – a ‘grand zoological fantasy’ – was a popular item in the repertory of the famous piano duo Rawicz and Landauer. They are heard here in the 1954 HMV recording. Unusually, the famous Swan – a dignified and beautiful melody – is scored here for the whole cello section. When Anna Pavlova danced the famous ‘Dying Swan’ at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1920, the solo cellist was none other than John Barbirolli. She was so pleased with his playing that she asked to meet him. When recounted the incident in later years he said: ‘She had a grip of iron – nearly broke all my fingers!’. | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Chausson & Ibert: Orchestral Works
| | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Offenbach - Gaite Parisienne
Offenbach leads the way in opéra-bouffe – the blend of burlesque and highly tuneful music that would eventually evolve into the Broadway musical. Gaîté Parisienne is a ballet score collection of Offenbach melodies from his operettas, arranged and orchestrated by the French composer Manuel Rosenthal. It contains many famous tunes such as the Cancan from Orphée aux enfers, and Barcarolle from Les contes d’Hoffmann. Also included in the disk is Jacques Ibert (1890-1962)’s Divertissement for Small Orchestra. | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Saint-Saens: Carnival of the Animals
Victor Aller (piano), Harry Sukman (piano), Eleanor Aller (cello), Arthur Gleghorn (flute) Concert Arts Orchestra, Felix Slatkin | |
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| |  | French Orchestral Music
| | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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