All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Sir Adrian Boult conducts Elgar & Holst
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| |  | Pierre Monteux conducts Dvorak & Elgar
Two beloved Romantic orchestral works in stellar performances, return to the catalogue in beautiful transfers. Pierre Monteux (1875-1964) often bemoaned the fact that he was associated with the French and Russian repertoires, to the exclusion of music from outside of those traditions. He could hardly help it; after all, it was Monteux who conducted the first and famously chaotic performance of Stravinsky’s Le Sacre du printemps in 1913. Nevertheless, he recorded all of Beethoven’s symphonies (some of them more than once) and all of Brahms’s, with the exception of the Fourth. He made only one recording of Elgar’s Enigma Variations, and one of the Dvořák Seventh. These came late in his career – 1958 and 1959, respectively – and were the only recordings he made of works by their respective composers. Elgar’s work frequently appeared in the conductor’s concert programs during this ‘Indian summer’. In fact, his last American concerts, in December 1963 with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, featured the Enigma Variations, along with works by Vaughan Williams, Beethoven and Sibelius. In his recording of Dvořák’s Seventh, Monteux is clearly responsive to the symphony’s connections with Brahms – a composer for whom he had special affection. “great warmth of feeling … The recorded sound is still fresh and vivid … played with plenty of dash and vigour as well as considerable poetic feeling … a wonderfully sympathetic interpretation” Gramophone Magazine (Dvorak) “Monteux gives a thoroughly idiomatic and perceptive account of the Enigma Variations and the LSO play marvellously for him. They are extremely well recorded and the stereo is sonorous and detailed” Gramophone Magazine (Elgar) “highly distinctive … there is a marvelous freshness about Monteux’s approach – what a remarkably versatile musician he was – and the music is obviously deeply felt. He secures a real pianissimo at the beginning of Nimrod, the playing hardly above a whisper, yet the tension electric” Penguin Guide *** (Elgar) | | | (Sorry, download not available in your country) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Vernon Handley conducts Elgar & Vaughan Williams
Produced by EMI Classics in partnership with the prestigious National Gallery in London, The National Gallery Collection is a budget-price catalogue series bringing together the very best in fine art and classical music. The collection features a selection of classical masterworks in celebrated recordings from the EMI Classics catalogue, brought together with great artworks from The National Gallery’s permanent collection. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Elgar: Enigma Variations & Pomp & Circumstance Marches
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| |  | Elgar: Enigma Variations
Roger Norrington and the Radio-Sinfonieorchester Stuttgart de SWR present a programme of works by the most English of composers, Edward Elgar. Included is “In the South”, a somewhat neglected masterwork which has rarely been recorded. “Norrington captures the humour, the mercurial changes in mood and shading very plausibly. While one may miss the ripe, luxurious sound of a modern string section, the clarity that emerges has a lot to tell us about Elgar's textures - in this, one may well be reminded of Elgar's own recordings.” BBC Music Magazine, October 2011 **** “the SWR RSO is evidently a fine orchestra, but Norrington's insistence on such a chaste string sound inevitably brings a coolness to music that demands more expressive warmth. In other respects, these performances are uncontroversial” The Guardian, 20th October 2011 *** | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Sir Adrian Boult conducts Elgar & Brahms
plus: John Douglas Todd interviews Sir Adrian Boult (extract from 85th birthday broadcast) BBC STUDIOS, 25 MARCH 1974
Sir Adrian Boult (1889–1983), one of the great British conductors of the 20th century, who studied under the legendary Arthur Nikisch in Berlin which make his Brahms interpretations so special. This fiery 1976 Prom stereo broadcast of Brahms 1 is the only authorised live account available. He recorded the symphony three times in the studio. The live stereo broadcast of Elgar’s Enigma Variations was sourced from the Royal Albert Hall Centenary Concert on 29 March 1971 and features the alternative organ part played by George Thalben-Ball, one of the most celebrated organists of his time. The CD is completed by an extract of an interview Boult gave on the occasion of his 85th birthday where he talks about the art of interpretation. SAMPLE TRACK Brahms Symphony No.1 – 1st movement “These performances would surpass all superlatives under any circumstance, but what makes them especially incredible is that, despite Boult being in his nineties, they sound like the interpretations of a young man...Many recordings have been released since these first appeared, and yet one would be hard-pushed to name any that can truly top them.” Classic FM Magazine, August 2011 **** “this Brahms 1 is superbly paced: hard-driven yet flexible, virile yet richly expressive. The opening’s 6/8 — relentless, tragic — has, rightly, the same pulse as the ensuing allegro (where Boult, unusually, observes the repeat). In Elgar, Boult could sometimes misjudge tempo, but not here. From the theme onwards (exquisitely judged), his touch is sure and masterly.” Sunday Times, 15th May 2011 | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | British Ballet Music
Bliss: | Checkmate - Suite Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Vernon Handley | Elgar: | Enigma Variations, Op. 36 London Symphony Orchestra, Sir Adrian Boult | Holst: | The Perfect Fool, Op. 39/H 150: Ballet Music London Symphony Orchestra, André Previn | Sullivan, A: | Pineapple Poll Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Charles Mackerras | Tyrwhitt-Wilson: | A Wedding Bouquet: Tango & Waltz Orchestra & Chorus of the Royal Opera House, Robert Irving/ | Walton: | Façade Orchestral Suite No. 1 City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Louis Frémaux Façade Orchestral Suite No. 2 City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Louis Frémaux |
This collection of music from 20th-century ballets features such master conductors of British repertoire as Boult, Previn, Handley and Mackerras – who also, drawing on the works of Sir Arthur Sullivan, wrote Pineapple Poll for John Cranko. Dame Ninette de Valois choreographed the chessboard machinations of Bliss’s Checkmate, here complemented by Elgar’s much-loved Enigma Variations, Walton’s witty Façade, elemental dances from Holst’s opera The Perfect Fool, and colourful pieces by Berners, Lambert and Gordon. “Some sparkling playing here, especially Pineapple Poll under its arranger Charles Mackerras” BBC Music Magazine, September 2011 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Elgar: Symphony No. 2 & Enigma Variations
Solti recorded Elgar’s Symphony No.2 (along with the Cockaigne Overture) on audio around the same time as the Royal Festival Hall performance, to great acclaim. Solti’s recordings were always the recommended version of each work he performed – he had a deep understanding of the repertoire. This DVD is the first audiovisual recording to feature Solti performing Elgar 2, and has never been released before. The Second Symphony is also a record of the first concert Solti conducted as the London Philharmonic’s Chief Conductor in 1975. James Mallinson, one of Solti’s record producers, commented that his audio recordings of the two Elgar symphonies are probably two of his finest recordings due to his open and fresh approach. Solti’s quote at the time of broadcasting the Enigma Variations: “I love Elgar, and for me the Enigma Variations is his masterpiece.” 1DVD Sound format: LCPM mono Picture format: 4:3 Running time: 84’ Subtitles: n/a Menu languages: English Booklet languages: E/F/G Region code: 0 Territory Restrictions: None “It is, quite simply, a codument to treasure, with the LPO...galvanised to thrilling effect by Solti's prodigiously energetic presence on the podium...Both the picture quality and full-blooded (mono) sound are perfectly acceptable...The direction, too, is mercifully undistracting throughout. Most rewarding - and a genuine tonic to boot.” Gramophone Magazine, August 2011 “A highlight of the new ICA Classics Legacy series, Solti's LPO Elgar remains fresh, the passionate vigour of his Second Symphony balanced by one of the most loving Enigma Variations on disc.” BBC Music Magazine, July 2011 ***** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Elgar - Enigma Variations
“Lithe, athletic, confident, and spaciously recorded...A top Elgar recommendation.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2010 ***** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | The Barbirolli English Music Album
anon.: | The Irish Ho Hoane arr: John Barbirolli | Barbirolli: | An Elizabethan Suite | Bax: | The Garden of Fand recorded 21 June 1956, Free Trade Hall, Manchester | Bull, J: | The King's Hunt arr: John Barbirolli | Butterworth, G: | A Shropshire Lad - Rhapsody recorded 20 June 1956, Free Trade Hall, Manchester | Byrd: | Pavana "The Earle of Salisbury" arr: John Barbirolli | Elgar: | Enigma Variations, Op. 36 Recorded 12 May 1947 Houldsworth Hall, Manchester HMV previously unpublished Bavarian Dance No. 2 Recorded 30 May 1947 Kingsway Hall, London HMV unpublished take | Farnaby, G: | A Toye arr: John Barbirolli Giles Farnaby’s Dreame arr: John Barbirolli | Ireland: | The Forgotten Rite - Prelude recorded 31 May 1949, No.1 Studio, Abbey Road, London Mai-Dun recorded 31 May 1949, No.1 Studio, Abbey Road, London These Things Shall be recorded 1 May 1948, Houldsworth Hall, Manchester with Parry Jones (tenor) Hallé Choir | Purcell: | Suite for strings, woodwind and horns arr: John Barbirolli | Vaughan Williams: | Fantasia on Greensleeves recorded 26 February 1948 Houldsworth Hall, Manchester Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis recorded 6 June 1946 Houldsworth Hall, Manchester |
This BARBIROLLI ENGLISH MUSIC ALBUM contains something of a scoop in that the recording of Elgar’s Enigma Variations was made on 12 May 1947, the first time Barbirolli recorded the work. For some undiscoverable reason, the discs were never issued and the work was re-recorded on 23 October of the same year (also issued on CD by the Barbirolli Society on SJB1017). His affection for this inexhaustible masterpiece shone through every performance of it he gave as he gloried in the piquancy of the illustration of Elgar’s “friends pictured within” — and he liked to remind Michael Kennedy that the Variations and JB were born in the same year, 1899. Elgar’s genius was to weld his series of vignettes into a large-scale composite portrait — of himself. This gift for writing a miniature which was a microcosm of a big work is illustrated also in the second (the exquisite Lullaby) of the Three Bavarian Dances, a previously unpublished take, recorded on 30 May 1947. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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