All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Solti Centenary ConcertLive recording from Symphony Center, Chicago, 2012
Hosted by Valerie Solti The Solti Centenary Concert in Chicago celebrated Sir Georg Solti’s 100th birthday on October 21, 2012, featuring the World Orchestra for Peace. This unique ensemble owes its existence to the vision of its founder, Sir Georg Solti, who believed passionately in peace and the power of music and musicians to be ambassadors for peace. Charmingly hosted by Solti’s widow, Lady Valerie Solti, and featuring soloists such as Angela Gheorghiu and René Pape as well as members of the Georg Solti Accademia, this memorable evening presents musical highlights, all of which played a significant role in Solti’s life and career. Besides excerpts from Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro, Die Zauberflöte and Don Giovanni or Verdi’s La Traviata and Rigoletto, this concert finds lovely musical moments in the 'Adagietto' from Mahler’s Fifth Symphony, Strauss’ Don Juan and Bartók’s masterful Concerto for Orchestra. Sousa’s Stars and Stripes Forever as the encore closes the performance with a smash. Conductor Valery Gergiev was a good friend of his advisor Georg Solti. Together with Lady Valerie Solti and the World Orchestra for Peace he carries on Solti’s vision and maintains his memory. Special Bonus Feature: “Solti’s Vision”, a film about the World Orchestra for Peace Sound Format: PCM Stereo, DD 5.1, dts-HD Master Audio 5.1 Format: DVD 9 / NTSC Subtitle Languages: DE, FR / DE (Bonus) Running Time: 112 mins + 21 mins (Bonus) FSK: 0 Worldwide available “In one sense, this is as much a record of an occasion as of a concert, though the music-making is top class throughout...the high point here is probably the quartet from Rigoletto...quite a nice package, nicely captured and presented.” BBC Music Magazine, July 2013 **** | 
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| |  | Karajan Adagio: Music To Free Your Mind
Albinoni: | Adagio for Strings and Organ in G minor | Bach, J S: | Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D major, BWV1068: Air ('Air on a G String') | Bizet: | L'Arlesienne Suite No. 1: III. Adagietto Carmen: Entr'acte to Act III (Intermezzo) | Chopin: | Les Sylphides - Nocturne Arr. Roy Douglas | Debussy: | Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune | Gluck: | Orfeo ed Euridice (Orphée et Euridice): Dance of the Blessed Spirits | Grieg: | Peer Gynt: Solveig's Song Peer Gynt: Ase's Death | Handel: | Concerto grosso, Op. 6 No. 12 in B minor, HWV330: III - Aria | Mahler: | Symphony No. 5 in C sharp minor - Adagietto | Mascagni: | Cavalleria Rusticana: Intermezzo | Massenet: | Meditation (from Thaïs) | Mozart: | Serenade No. 13 in G major, K525 'Eine kleine Nachtmusik': Romance (Andante) | Offenbach: | Barcarolle (from Les Contes d'Hoffmann ) Arranged by M. Rosenthal | Pachelbel: | Canon | Puccini: | Humming Chorus (from Madama Butterfly) | Ravel: | Pavane pour une infante défunte | Respighi: | Ancient Airs and Dances, Suite No. 3, P. 172: III. Siciliana | Sibelius: | Valse Triste, Op. 44 No. 1 Lemminkäinen Suite, Op. 22: The Swan of Tuonela (No. 2) | Tchaikovsky: | Romeo & Juliet - Love Theme Serenade for strings in C major, Op. 48: III. Élégie | Verdi: | La traviata: Prelude to Act 3 | Vivaldi: | Winter from The Four Seasons (extract) Rain Concerto in A minor for Two Violins, RV 523: Largo | Wagner: | Mild und leise 'Isolde's Liebestod' (from Tristan und Isolde): orchestral version |
Karajan Adagio is the most successful classical collection of all time with nearly 4 million units sold since 1993. It has now been re-engineered, re-titled, and newly compiled for the 21st century. “Adagio Karajan” was the ORIGINAL CLASSICAL CHILL-OUT ALBUM. Over two-and-a-half hours of the world’s most relaxing music – from the most accomplished conductor of all time. Emphasizing classical music’s unique power in transporting the listener away from the stresses and strains of modern-day living - All over the world, consumers are searching for an escape, and the soothing sounds of “Karajan Adagio” can provide that. “Adagio” – the literal translation is “at ease”, with a slowness, with a tranquillity, and with a longing – the perfect antidote to the relentless pace of modern global living. | 
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| |  | Mahler: Symphony No. 1
This series of DVDs will make the publicly broadcast BSO concerts from this era available for the first time since they were broadcast. This rare material represents some of the earliest televised concerts with the Boston Symphony and Erich Leinsdorf, and has been restored using the greatest care and state-of-the-art techniques. It is of exceptional musical interest and historic value. The BSO’s Music Director for seven seasons, Leinsdorf had a long and distinguished career, having worked with Toscanini and Walter, conducting at the Metropolitan Opera, New York City Opera, Cleveland Orchestra and Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra in addition to his tenure at the BSO. Born in Mahler’s city, just over eight months after the composer’s death, Leinsdorf began his career as assistant to Mahler’s own assistant and protégé, Bruno Walter. He played an important role in building an audience for Mahler’s symphonies during his tenure at the BSO, which came just before the Mahler boom in the 1960s. Leinsdorf recorded all of Mahler’s symphonies apart from the Fourth for RCA Victor; recordings which became the benchmark both for sound and performance quality. Intense, warm and expressive, his performance of Mahler’s First Symphony is an intensely personal account whilst Till Eulenspiegel – which was a party piece for the BSO during his tenure - is performed with great precision and finesse. Two of ICA’s BSO DVDs featuring Charles Munch as conductor, have been awarded the Diapason d’Or in France’s Diapason magazine. 1DVD Sound format: LPCM Mono Picture format: 4:3 Running time: 78’ Subtitles: n/a Menu languages: English Booklet languages: E/F/G Region code: 0 Territory Restrictions: None “Leinsdorf is efficient in Mahler's First Symphony and Till Eulenspiegel” BBC Music Magazine, January 2012 *** “it is possible to see how Leinsdorf offers a supple approach to tempo, which offers appropriately spacious phrasing throughout. His cues give a sense of the style that he wanted from the players, and the result is evident in the performance...Part of the success of the interpretation comes from Leinsdorf’s decision not to use the baton, and so his hands offer a clue to the ways in which he made this performance expressive.” MusicWeb International, December 2012 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | 150th Anniversary Box - Mahler's Adagios
Expressing the hopes and fears of our age, the music of Gustav Mahler has gained a powerful hold over music-lovers everywhere. His genius achieved a new level of appreciation with Luchino Visconti’s 1971 film, Death in Venice and its soundtrack of the sublime Adagietto from the Symphony No 5. This collection brings together the contemplative slow movements of all ten of Mahler’s symphonies, interpreted by legendary orchestras and master conductors. Gustav Mahler was born on 7th July 1860 in Kalischt (now Kalište), a small village in the Royal Province of Bohemia, then part of the Austrian Empire, the second child of a Jewish family; seven of their fourteen children died in infancy. His childhood was spent in the local town of Iglau (now Jihlava) where the family had moved not long after his birth. Noticing his talent early his parent arranged piano lessons when he was six. It cannot be said that his was a happy childhood as his father, who had persuaded his parents-in-law to force their daughter to marry him, vented his anger against her for all the actual and perceived wrongs done during his attempts to improve his life. Mahler later summed up his family’s plight thus: I am thrice homeless, as a native of Bohemia in Austria, as an Austrian among Germans, and as a Jew throughout all the world. Everywhere an intruder, never welcomed. At 15 Mahler was admitted to the Vienna Conservatoire to study harmony and composition as well as piano; three years later Mahler attended Anton Bruckner’s lectures at Vienna University. It was during this period that the two works which survive from his teenage compositions were written: The movement for Piano Quartet (1876?-1878?) and Das klagende Lied which was submitted for a competition in 1880 where the jury was led by Brahms, but failed to win a prize. Over the next few years he revised the latter work and wrote a number of songs but he was obtaining more work as a conductor and at successively larger opera houses. In Leipzig he made such a success with parts of Der Ring des Nibelungen when Arthur Nikisch fell ill that both critics and public alike sang his praises. He became music director of the opera in Budapest for three years in 1888, the following year the city hosted the premiere of his first symphony, then in five movements. Hamburg was next to secure his services from 1891 to 1897 during which time he revised the first, wrote the second and sketched the third symphony. These three together with the fourth are sometimes referred to as the “Wunderhorn” symphonies owing to their use of or containing influences of the songs which appear in Des Knaben Wunderhorn (The Youth’s Magic Horn). He was then offered the most prestigious post in music in the Austrian Empire, that of Director of the Vienna State Opera. Mahler, who had never been a devout Jew, converted to Roman Catholicism in preparation for the appointment. He had sung in a Catholic choir as a boy and would set the hymn Veni Creator Spiritus as the first part of his eighth symphony. In March 1902 he had married Alma Schindler, twenty years his younger, and she gave birth to two daughters. His work at this time was spent on three symphonies and songs set to poems by Friedrich Rückert. It was alas all too prophetic to compose songs on deaths of children, Kindertotenlieder, when you have two young children as his first daughter died of diphtheria at the age of four – thought to be represented by the first of two hammer-blows in the last movement of his sixth and most bleakly tragic symphony. The songs are bound up musically with these symphonies especially the fifth which contains the famous Adagietto. The second hammer-blow is thought to refer either the diagnosis of his heart disease or his resignation from the opera caused by obstinacy in artistic matters leading to increasingly nasty anti-semitic attacks; there was a third – for his own death? – but this was removed in the revisions. He needed to get away from Europe and luckily a generous offer from the Metropolitan Opera gave him the 1908 season in America, but then he was replaced by Toscanini. Back in Europe his marriage was collapsing owing to Alma’s infidelity. These were the days of the completion of Das Lied von der Erde and the ninth symphony but such was Mahler’s fixation of the ninth (Beethoven’s last symphony – also for Bruckner and Dvorák) that he regarded Das Lied as a symphony with voices and therefore the next one would be the tenth! He began yet another one but left it incomplete and performing versions have been written by various composers. Some people criticise Mahler for being so preoccupied by death but, in reality, he was really full of life. His symphonies should, he said, “take in the whole world”. It cannot be denied that the music he wrote for the “final departure” is so achingly beautiful and heartfelt that one should just listen and be moved, hopefully, to tears as he no doubt was as he penned the final notes. According to Alma his last word was “Mozartl” (a diminutive, corresponding to ‘dear little Mozart’); he is buried in Grinzing Cemetery outside Vienna. Mahler’s influences on subsequent generations have been extensive and wide – Zemlinsky, Schönberg, Berg and Webern in Austria, Shostakovitch in Russia, Britten in Britain and Copland in America are just a few to acknowledge their debt. He also spread beyond the limits of classical music with Paul McCartney writing “I have always adored Mahler, and Mahler was a major influence on the music of The Beatles. John and me used to sit and do the Kindertotenlieder and Wunderhorn for hours, we’d take turns singing and playing the piano. We thought Mahler was great.” | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Remasterpiece
Chris Coco and Sacha Puttnam | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Clytus Gottwald: Alma Mahler & Gustav MahlerTranscriptions for a Capella Choir
At the turn of the 19th to the 20th century the interest of the composers for a cappella choir music seemed to be weakening; Mahler and Debussy wrote for choir, then promptly included them into orchestral works. The a capella music of the 1920s was influenced by the polyphonic tradition of the 16th century. In the 1960s Ligeti opened up new perspectives with his piece for choir Lux aeterna. Gottwald’s transcriptions refer to Ligeti’s work giving us ultimately better understanding of the contemporary choir music. “Eminently suited to this repertoire the SWR Vokalensemble Stuttgart display consistent unison producing a sound that often feels blissful. Meticulous preparation combined with subtlety of dynamic shading and unerring accuracy make for highly satisfying listening.” MusicWeb International, 24th May 2013 | 
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| |  | Solti Centenary ConcertLive recording from Symphony Center, Chicago, 2012
Hosted by Valerie Solti The Solti Centenary Concert in Chicago celebrated Sir Georg Solti’s 100th birthday on October 21, 2012, featuring the World Orchestra for Peace. This unique ensemble owes its existence to the vision of its founder, Sir Georg Solti, who believed passionately in peace and the power of music and musicians to be ambassadors for peace. Charmingly hosted by Solti’s widow, Lady Valerie Solti, and featuring soloists such as Angela Gheorghiu and René Pape as well as members of the Georg Solti Accademia, this memorable evening presents musical highlights, all of which played a significant role in Solti’s life and career. Besides excerpts from Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro, Die Zauberflöte and Don Giovanni or Verdi’s La Traviata and Rigoletto, this concert finds lovely musical moments in the 'Adagietto' from Mahler’s Fifth Symphony, Strauss’ Don Juan and Bartók’s masterful Concerto for Orchestra. Sousa’s Stars and Stripes Forever as the encore closes the performance with a smash. Conductor Valery Gergiev was a good friend of his advisor Georg Solti. Together with Lady Valerie Solti and the World Orchestra for Peace he carries on Solti’s vision and maintains his memory. Special Bonus Feature: “Solti’s Vision”, a film about the World Orchestra for Peace Sound Format: PCM Stereo, DD 5.1, dts-HD Master Audio 5.1 Picture Format: 16:9, 1080i FULL HD Subtitle Languages: DE, FR / DE (Bonus) Running Time: 112 mins + 21 mins (Bonus) FSK: 0 Worldwide available “In one sense, this is as much a record of an occasion as of a concert, though the music-making is top class throughout...the high point here is probably the quartet from Rigoletto...quite a nice package, nicely captured and presented.” BBC Music Magazine, July 2013 **** | 
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| |  | Classical Music for Meditation - 50 of the Best
Allegri: | Miserere mei, Deus | Bach, J S: | Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D major, BWV1068: Air ('Air on a G String') | Beethoven: | Triple Concerto for Piano, Violin, and Cello in C major, Op. 56 - Largo Romance No. 1 for Violin and Orchestra in G major, Op. 40 Symphony No. 2 in D major, Op. 36: Larghetto Piano Concerto No. 3 in C minor, Op. 37 - Largo | Borodin: | String Quartet No. 2: 3rd Movement (Notturno) | Brahms: | Intermezzo in E flat major, Op. 117 No. 1 | Chopin: | Prelude Op. 28 No. 15 in D flat major ‘Raindrop' Mazurka No. 6 in A minor, Op. 7 No. 2 Prelude Op. 28 No. 13 in F sharp major | Corelli: | Concerto grosso Op. 6 No. 8 in G minor 'fatto per la notte di Natale': Pastorale | Debussy: | Petite Suite: En bateau | Delius: | On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring | Fauré: | Sicilienne from Pelléas et Mélisande | Gluck: | Orfeo ed Euridice (Orphée et Euridice): Dance of the Blessed Spirits | Gounod: | Ave Maria (after Bach's Prelude No. 1, BWV846; version for flute and harp) | Grieg: | Peer Gynt: Morning Våren, elegiac melody for strings, Op. 34 No. 2 (version for orchestra) Piano Concerto in A minor Op. 16: Adagio | Haydn: | Symphony No. 24 in D major: Adagio | Lauridsen: | O magnum mysterium | Liszt: | Liebestraum, S541 No. 3 (Nocturne in A flat major) | Mahler: | Symphony No. 5 in C sharp minor - Adagietto | Massenet: | Meditation (from Thaïs) (version for violin and piano) | Mendelssohn: | Symphony No. 4 in A major, Op. 90 'Italian': Andante con moto | Mozart: | Piano Concerto No. 23 in A major, K488 - Adagio Ave verum corpus, K618 Divertimento No. 2: Adagio | Parry: | Lady Radnor's Suite: 5th movement, Slow Minuet | Poulenc: | Elegie | Rachmaninov: | Melodie in E Major, Op. 3 No. 3 | Ravel: | Piano Concerto in G major: Adagio assai | Respighi: | Ancient Airs and Dances, Suite No. 3, P. 172 | Rodrigo: | Concierto de Aranjuez: Adagio | Satie: | Gymnopédie No. 1 (orch. Debussy) | Schubert: | String Quintet in C major, D956 - Adagio | Schumann: | Kinderszenen, Op. 15: Traümerei Fantasie in C major, Op. 17: Langsam getragen | Vaughan Williams: | The Lark Ascending | Vivaldi: | The Four Seasons: Winter - Largo | Warlock: | Capriol Suite: Pieds-en-l'air | Weber: | Clarinet Concerto No. 1 in F minor, Op. 73: Adagio | Whitacre: | Lux aurumque |
(and excerpts from Albinoni: Concerto for 2 Oboes in F major, Op. 9, No. 3; Boccherini: Cello Concerto in B flat major; Telemann: Concerto TWV 51:G9 in G major for viola, strings & b.c.; Schubert: Schwanengesang, D. 957; di Lasso: Missa Bell' Amfitrit' altera; )
Anthony Camden (oboe), Jeno Jando (piano), Dong-Suk Kang (violin), Maria Kliegel (cello), Idil Biret (piano), Ludovit Kanta (cello), Ladislav Kyselak (viola), Michael Volle (baritone), Ulrich Eisenlohr (piano), Francois-Joel Thiollier (piano), Gerald Garcia (guitar), Takako Nishizaki (violin), Konstantin Scherbakov (piano), Ernst Ottensamer (clarinet), Norbert Kraft (guitar), Judy Loman (harp), Nora Shulman (flute), David Greed (violin), Havard Gimse (piano), Stefan Vladar (piano), Irina Zaritzkaya (piano), Katarina Andreasson (violin), Bjorn Gafvert (harpsichord), Bernd Glemser (piano), Alexandre Tharaud (piano), Francois Chaplin (piano) BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Oxford Camerata, London Symphony Orchestra, London Virtuosi, Nicolaus Esterhazy Sinfonia, Capella Istropolitana, Elora Festival Singers, Concentus Hungaricus, RTE Sinfonietta, Oxford Schola Cantorum, Ireland National Symph, Jerzy Maksymiuk, Jeremy Summerly, James DePreist, John Georgiadis, Bela Drahos, Peter Breiner, Jaroslav Krcek, Noel Edison, Richard Edlinger, Matyas Antal, Reinhard Seifried, Antoni Wit, Adrian Leaper, Bjarte Engeset, Johannes Wildner, Kenneth Jean, Jun M | |
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| |  | Gustav Mahler, Vol. 4 (1936-1952)
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| |  | 50 Best Smooth Classics
Albinoni: | Concerto Op. 9 No. 3 for two oboes & strings in F major: Adagio | Allegri: | Miserere mei, Deus | Bach, J S: | Concerto for Two Violins in D minor, BWV1043: Largo ma non tanto Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D major, BWV1068: Air ('Air on a G String') | Barber, S: | Adagio for Strings, Op. 11 | Beethoven: | Piano Sonata No. 14 in C sharp minor, Op. 27 No. 2 ‘Moonlight': Adagio sostenuto | Brahms: | Wiegenlied, Op. 49 No. 4 (Lullaby) (arr. P. Nagy) | Canteloube: | Songs of the Auvergne: Baïlèro | Chopin: | Prelude Op. 28 No. 15 in D flat major ‘Raindrop' (two versions) | Debussy: | Claire de lune (song) Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune Arabesque No. 1 | Delibes: | Coppelia - Waltz of the Doll Lakmé: Dôme épais (Flower Duet) | Dvorak: | Symphony No. 9 in E minor, Op. 95 'From the New World' - Largo | Elgar: | Nimrod (from Enigma Variations) Serenade for Strings in E minor, Op. 20 - Allegretto | Fauré: | Pavane, Op. 50 Requiem: Pie Jesu Dolly Suite, Op. 56: No. 5, Tendresse (orch. H. Rabaud) | Finzi: | Eclogue, Op. 10 | Giazotto: | The Albinoni Adagio | Gluck: | Orfeo ed Euridice (Orphée et Euridice): Dance of the Blessed Spirits | Grieg: | Våren, elegiac melody for strings, Op. 34 No. 2 Peer Gynt: Morning | Handel: | Ombra mai fu (from Serse) | Holst: | Venus, the Bringer of Peace (The Planets) | Howells: | Salvator mundi | Lauridsen: | O magnum mysterium | Mahler: | Symphony No. 5 in C sharp minor - Adagietto | Mascagni: | Cavalleria Rusticana: Intermezzo | Mendelssohn: | A Midsummer Night's Dream: Nocturne | Mozart: | Flute & Harp Concerto in C major, K299 - Andantino Ave verum corpus, K618 | Puccini: | Humming Chorus (from Madama Butterfly) | Rachmaninov: | Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini - Variation 18 Bogorodice Devo Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18: 2 - Adagio sostenuto | Saint-Saëns: | Le carnaval des animaux: Le Cygne | Satie: | Gymnopédie No. 1 (version for guitar and orchestra) | Shostakovich: | Romance (from The Gadfly) Piano Concerto No. 2 in F major, Op. 102 - Andante | Stanford: | The Blue Bird, Op. 119 No. 3 | Tárrega: | Recuerdos de la Alhambra | Tavener: | Song for Athene | Tchaikovsky: | Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74 'Pathétique' - Allegro con grazia | Vaughan Williams: | The Lark Ascending Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis | Whitacre: | Sleep |
Francois-Joel Thiollier (piano), Takako Nishizaki (violin), Alexander Jablokov (violin), Adriana Kohutkova (soprano), Denisa Slepkovska (mezzo-soprano), Bernd Glemser (piano), Peter Nagy (piano), Veronique Gens (soprano), Mats Bergstrom (guitar), Anthony Camden (oboe), Peter Donohoe (piano), Irina Zaritzkaya (piano), Klara Kormendi (piano), Idil Biret (piano), David Greed (violin), Jeno Jando (piano), Lisa Beckley (soprano), Colm Carey (organ), Carys-Anne Lane (soprano), Jiri Valek (flute), Hana Mullerova (harp), Michael Houstoun (piano), Jozef Cejka (oboe), Gerald Garcia (guitar) Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, St. John's College Choir, Cambridge, Capella Istropolitana, Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, Lille National Orchestra, London Virtuosi, Northern Sinfonia, F, Andrew Mogrelia, Marin Alsop, Christopher Robinson, Oliver Dohnanyi, Johannes Wildner, Gyorgy Lehel, James DePreist, Jean-Claude Casadesus, Richard Edlinger, Keith Clark, John Georgiadis, Howard Griffiths, Eric-Olof Soderstrom, Anthony Bramall, Alexander | |
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