All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Thames Diamond Jubilee PageantThe Official Album
Recorded at Henry Wood Hall, London on 7 & 8 March 2012. The London Philharmonic Orchestra takes part in the Thames Diamond Jubilee Pageant on 3 June as part of the 1000 boat flotilla celebrating the Queen’s 60th anniversary. Its musicians will play works chosen for their association with British history and London landmarks, recorded here to capture the spirit of the occasion and to serve as a memento of a unique day. Highlights of the music include Percy Grainger’s Country Gardens, Jupiter from Gustav Holst’s The Planets, Thomas Arne’s Rule, Britannia!, the James Bond Theme, The Dam Busters by Eric Coates and two works by Elgar – Nimrod from Enigma Variations and Pomp & Circumstance March No. 1. The CD closes out with a performance of the National Anthem. “You don’t have to be ravingly patriotic to enjoy this, but it helps. When the Jubilee flotilla travels down the Thames on June 3, the London Philharmonic will be on board. This CD gives a foretaste of what to expect...The music is crisply delivered under David Parry.” The Times, 12th May 2012 | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | 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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| |  | English String Music
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| |  | Sir John Barbirolli conducts English String Music
"In the Introduction and Allegro, Sir John shows his love of the score clearly enough and his is an experienced, masterly performance. The Serenade is warm and affectionate also, but the work’s calm serenity is nevertheless skilfully preserved." Gramophone Magazine EMI MASTERS celebrates the full glory of the greatest performances from the world's greatest catalogue of recorded music. Digitally remastered at Abbey Road Studios direct from the original master tapes, these classic recordings emerge with unparalleled immediacy. You will be left in no doubt that you are in the presence of legendary musicians and ageless interpretations. “This is almost certainly the very finest recording of English string music...Moreover it might also be considered one of Barbirolli's very finest records” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Vaughan Williams
Vaughan Williams: | Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis Sinfonia of London, Sir John Barbirolli Fantasia on Greensleeves Sinfonia of London, Sir John Barbirolli The Wasps Overture London Philharmonic Orchestra, Vernon Handley The Lark Ascending Sarah Chang (violin) London Philharmonic Orchestra, Bernard Haitink Flos Campi Christopher Balmer Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Choir, Vernon Handley Five Variants of ‘Dives and Lazarus' Jacques Orchestra, Sir David Willcocks Norfolk Rhapsody No. 1 New Philharmonia Orchestra, Sir Adrian Boult On Wenlock Edge Ian Partridge Music Group of London Silent Noon Anthony Rolfe Johnson, David Willison Songs of Travel Anthony Rolfe Johnson, David Willison Serenade to Music (original version with 16 soloists) Norma Burrowes, Sheila Armstrong, Susan Longfield, Marie Hayward (soprano), Alfreda Hodgson, Gloria Jennings, Shirley Minty, Meriel Dickinson (contralto), Ian Partridge, Bernard Dickerson, Wynford Evans, Kenneth Bowen (tenor), Richard Angas, John Carol Case, John Noble & Christopher Keyte (bass) London Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Adrian Boult |
Now rightfully acknowledged as a towering figure, Vaughan Williams was the first composer to write in the English language, using folksong in the Norfolk Rhapsody, a Tudor hymn in the Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, and absorbing and transforming his influences in the stunningly beautiful Serenade to Music. During the 16th and 17th centuries England had been a leading participant in the delevopment of European music, but after the early death of Purcell in 1695, music in England came to be dominated by musicians of foreign origin: notably Handel and Mendelssohn. Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) is the best-known of a new generation of composers that came after Elgar and made up what became known as the English Musical Renaissance. Along with Gustav Holst, Vaughan Williams travelled the country collecting and preserving English folksong traditions, and was largely responsible for the revival of interest in folksong. So strong was his interest in the subject that, like Holst, folksong was absorbed into his compositional style and was to influence his concert music, giving it a uniquely English quality. Starting with the evocative Thomas Tallis Fantasia, (RVW's look back at his great 16th-century predecessor) this set contains some of the composer's best-known and most-loved music, including the popular Fantasia on Greensleeves and the beautiful Lark Ascending. | | | 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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| |  | Vaughan Williams - Symphony No. 5 & Serenade to Music
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| |  | The Essential Vaughan Williams
Vaughan Williams: | The Lark Ascending Hugh Bean (violin) New Philharmonia Orchestra, Sir Adrian Boult Linden Lea words by William Barnes) Dame Janet Baker (mezzo-soprano) & Gerald Moore (piano) Fantasia on Greensleeves Sinfonia of London, Sir John Barbirolli Silent Noon Ian Bostridge (tenor) & Julius Drake (piano) English Folk Song Suite (orch. Gordon Jacob) London Symphony Orchestra, Sir Adrian Boult The Vagabond (from Songs of Travel) Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor) & David Willison (piano) Serenade to Music (original version with 16 soloists) Norma Burrowes, Sheila Armstrong, Susan Longfield, Marie Hayward (soprano), Alfreda Hodgson, Gloria Jennings, Shirley Minty, Meriel Dickinson (contralto), Ian Partridge, Bernard Dickerson, Wynford Evans, Kenneth Bowen (tenor), Richard Angas, John Carol Case, John Noble & Christopher Keyte (bass) London Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Adrian Boult Prelude on 'Rhosymedre' Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields, Sir Neville Marriner Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis Sinfonia of London, Sir John Barbirolli The Wasps Overture London Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Adrian Boult Loch Lomond Ian Partridge (tenor) London Madrigal Singers, Christopher Bishop Ca' the Yowes Ian Partridge (tenor) London Madrigal Singers, Christopher Bishop Five Variants of ‘Dives and Lazarus' Jacques Orchestra, Sir David Willcocks O Taste and See James Lancelot (organ) & Ivan Sharpe (treble) Winchester Cathedral Choir, Martin Neary Bushes and Briars Baccholian Singers of London Wassail Song Baccholian Singers of London For all the saints (Sine nomine) John Scott Whiteley (organ) York Minster Choir, Philip Moore The truth sent from above Choir of King's College, Cambridge, David Willcocks Little town of Bethlehem (Forest Green) The Lamb Ian Partridge (tenor) & Janet Craxton (oboe) Scherzo from Symphony No. 7 'Sinfonia antartica' London Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Adrian Boult Orpheus With His Lute (first setting) David Daniels (countertenor) & Martin Katz (piano) Mass in G minor – Kyrie John Eaton (treble), Nigel Perrin (alto), Robin Doveton (tenor) & David van Asch (bass) Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, Sir David Willcocks The blessed Son of God Bach Choir, Sir David Willcocks Come down, O Love divine (Down Ampney) (trans. R. F. Littledale – v.4 arr. Williamson) Thomas Williamson (organ) The Old Hundredth Psalm Tune 'All people that on earth do dwell' (William Kethe – Louis Bourgeois arr. RVW; version for brass ensemble and organ by Roy Douglas) Benjamin Bayl (organ) Choir of King’s College, Cambridge, Stephen Cleobury |
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| |  | Vaughan Williams - Orchestral Works
“The sound of the LSO strings in 1910 must remain largely a matter of conjecture but this beautifully textured account on gut-string instruments cuts to the heart of the score and Wordsworth's impeccable Boultian pedigree is evident throughout.” Gramophone Magazine, September 2008 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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