Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Ballets RussesRussian Dances and Ballets
Although folk dances have a special place in Russian music, being raised to the status of character dances in works for the stage, the more classical forms taken over from the west are not neglected. During the nineteenth century the waltz, for example, tended more and more towards ‘pure’ music, giving rise to some highly virtuosic works in the manner of those by Weber or Liszt. Thus, in 1856 Glinka (1804-1857), founder of the Russian nationalist school, produced the definitive version of a Valse which had already aroused the enthusiasm of Berlioz. Its slightly melancholy principal theme reappears as a refrain between episodes in various keys, which give rise to passages of instrumental dialogue and to such bold strokes such as the cantabile for solo trombone in the third episode. Witty or ironic comments by the flutes or strings turn it virtually into a fantasia – which Shostakovich was to recall later. Scenes at parties and balls abound in opera. Tchaikovsky composed the waltz for Act Two of Eugene Onegin (1877) – with a chorus in its original version – so as to reflect the humdrum pretentiousness of the lesser, countrified aristocracy: it is closer to the waltz in Faust than to those he was to write for his ballets. This is in clear contrast to the majestic Act Three Polonaise, with its trio incorporating the traditional mazurka, which as the dance of aristocratic St Petersburg receptions is in a different class altogether. Marius Petipa, who became chief ballet master at the imperial ballet in 1869, restored to the art of dance the nobility and charm which had been killed off by an emphasis on technique. Tchaikovsky provided him with music suffused with the poetic inspiration lacking in the more straightforwardly rhythmic scores of composers like Drigo and Pugni. He was, however, criticised by those ballet-lovers who found his music too symphonic; his waltzes, refined rather than brilliant and frivolous, are often tinged with dramatic lyricism, even a sense of anxiety. The unusual flavour of the Waltz of the Flowers from The Nutcracker (1892) is largely created by the mysterious other-worldly horn-calls answered by rippling clarinet figures. Raymonda (1898) is a medieval romance choreographed by Petipa to music by Glazunov. Always melodious, subtle and graceful, it is sometimes highly evocative, as in the trance-like atmosphere in the dreamy slow-motion accompanying the heroine’s sleep (andante sostenuto) in the interlude before the second scene. The tradition of the grand ballet d’action persisted right up to the revolution brought about by Sergei Diaghilev. Reacting against the ‘double pirouettes and detestable sets of thirty-two fouettés’, the director of the Ballets Russes sought the character of the various folk-dances of Russia and other countries, which he remodelled for the stage using a basically classical technique. In his Parisian season in 1909 he presented the second act of Prince Igor (1887) against the background of a tawny-coloured desert steppe. The Polovtsian Dances, alternating spellbinding movements for the women and pounding, savage rhythms for the warriors, were directed by Mikhail Fokine: when a tumultuous wave of dancers rushed downstage at the end, stopping dead just short of the footlights, it brought the house down! Even Anatole Liadov, the composer of backwoods Russia, gave in to the infatuation of the Russian intelligentsia of around 1900 with ancient Greece. His Dance of the Amazon (1910), for Ida Rubinstein, employs two Greek chants, heavily reworked: the first theme suggests the Amazon riding on horseback, the second (meno mosso) emphasises the oriental atmosphere; brass and percussion suggest warlike activity – ushered in by a fanfare. After the 1917 Revolution it was thought that the creations of the Tsarist era would be unappealing to the sensibilities of the new Bolshevik listener. New themes and characters – stadiums and factories, sportsmen and workers – figured in ‘futurist’ (that is, revolutionary) musical experiments. In Shostakovich’s ballet The Golden Age (1930), which portrays the misadventures of a Soviet football team in a capitalist country, a clownish polka caricatures decadent western society. In Tahiti Trot (1928) Shostakovich pulled off the challenge of re-orchestrating Vincent Youmans’ Tea for Two in record time, and in so doing exploited all the expressive and comic possibilities, as well as the shock tactics, of avant-garde experiments. But offerings like these, from an enfant terrible ‘who had nothing to say to the people’, led the Communist Party, around 1932, to rein back cultural activity and reinstate a classical, academic aesthetic, which also extended to opera and ballet. The music of Prokofiev’s Love for Three Oranges (Chicago, 1921; Leningrad, 1927), precise, sturdily constructed and freshly coloured – as in the festive march from Act Two – was perfectly accessible, and yet it was later ignored in the USSR because of its libretto, which makes a feature of absurdity. Romeo and Juliet (1935/6, staged in 1940), on the other hand, with its universal subject, gained unanimous acceptance. The characterisation was exemplary: in the sombre, hieratic Dance of the Knights, with its great sweeps of sound, the menacing thrusts of the basses and brass powerfully convey the arrogance of a clan – as against the fresh sensitivity of youth portrayed by the central theme. Although Khachaturian was also suspected of ‘formalism’, his artistic approach always coincided with that of the regime. His incidental music for a 1940 production of Lermontov’s The Masked Ball portrays well the spiritual emptiness of imperial society: the entirely unsentimental waltz turns like a roundabout, relentlessly driven forward by the pursuit of pleasure. With Gayaneh (1943) Khachaturian goes back to his native Armenia. Part of the ballet’s final celebrations honouring the upbeat heroine of the ‘happy collective farm’ is the frenzied Sabre Dance, the middle section of which recalls an earlier pas de deux. It is an authentic piece of Transcaucasian folklore. Following his Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk district, Shostakovich had fallen victim, in 1936, to official criticism. He attempted to redeem himself, or at least to behave himself, by writing lighter works, frothier, more facile – i.e. proletarian – for films, ballets, variety stages and what the USSR referred to as ‘jazz’ orchestras, which are more like our light music ensembles. The Suite No.2 for jazz orchestra (1938) was composed for one such group, run by Victor Knushevitsky. The main, somewhat sentimental, theme in its Waltz No.2, played on the saxophone, ends in a sort of good-natured refrain. This piece was used as music for film commercials in the West – and then as title music for Stanley Kubrick’s last film: what finer example of popularity could there be? | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Experience: Live from New York
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| |  | Ballets RussesRussian Dances and Ballets
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| |  | Liebesfreud & LiebesleidEncores for the cello
Bach, J S: | Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D major, BWV1068: Air ('Air on a G String') (arr. J. Starker for cello & piano) Arioso (Largo) from Keyboard Concerto in F minor, BWV1056 (arr. J. Starker for cello & piano) | Brahms: | Liebestreu, Op. 3 No. 1 (arr. N. Salter and D. Geringas for cello & piano) Wie Melodien zieht es mir, Op. 105 No. 1 (arr. N. Salter and D. Geringas for cello & piano) Feldeinsamkeit, Op. 86 No. 2 (arr. N. Salter and D. Geringas for cello & piano) Wiegenlied, Op. 49 No. 4 (Lullaby) (arr. N. Salter and D. Geringas for cello & piano) | Dvorak: | Rondo in G minor for cello & piano, Op. 94, B. 171 | Elgar: | Nimrod (from Enigma Variations) Salut d'amour, Op. 12 | Fauré: | Après un rêve, Op. 7 No. 1 (arr. R. Howat for cello & piano) Romance in A major for cello & piano, Op. 69 Romance sans paroles, Op. 17 No. 3 (arr. R. Howat for cello & piano) Berceuse, Op. 16 (arr. R. Howat for cello & piano) | Kreisler: | Liebesfreud (arr. W. Drahts for cello & piano) Liebesleid (arr. W. Drahts for cello & piano) | Massenet: | Meditation (from Thaïs) (arr. J. Delsart for cello and piano) | Rachmaninov: | Vocalise, Op. 34 No. 14 (arr. L. Rose) | Saint-Saëns: | Allegro Appassionato in B minor Op. 43 (arr. S. Isserlis and S.T. Ratner for cello & piano) Le carnaval des animaux: Le Cygne (arr. S. Isserlis and S.T. Ratner for cello & piano) | Sarasate: | Zigeunerweisen, Op. 20 (arr. W. Thomas-Mifune for cello & piano) | Shostakovich: | Jazz Suite No. 2 - Waltz No. 2 (arr. E. Kaufmann for cello & piano) |
Michael Hell (cello) & Micaela Gelius (piano) | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Dandy
Bataclan’s latest project immerses the listener into the fin d’époque atmosphere in cities such as Paris, London and Berlin at the dawn of the 20th century. Bataclan’s unique combination of instruments; bandoneón, bassoon and harpsichord provides a wonderful combination for this music. | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | The Classical Album 2011
Bach, J S: | Concerto for Two Violins in D minor, BWV1043: Largo ma non tanto Julia Fischer (violin) Toccata & Fugue in D minor: Toccata Simon Preston (organ) | Beethoven: | Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67: 1. Allegro con brio Gustavo Dudamel Piano Sonata No. 14 in C sharp minor, Op. 27 No. 2 ‘Moonlight': Adagio sostenuto Daniel Barenboim (piano) Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' - Rondo (Allegro) Hélène Grimaud (piano) | Bellini: | Casta Diva (from Norma) Cecilia Bartoli (mezzo) | Brahms: | Hungarian Dance No. 1 in G minor Iván Fischer | Capua: | O sole mio Luciano Pavarotti (tenor) | Chopin: | Waltz No. 6 in D flat major, Op. 64 No. 1 'Minute Waltz' Alice Sara Ott (piano) Nocturne No. 2 in E flat major, Op. 9 No. 2 Vladimir Ashkenazy (piano) | Daquin: | Le Coucou Trevor Pinnock (harpsichord) | Fauré: | Après un rêve, Op. 7 No. 1 Nicola Benedetti (violin) Sicilienne, Op. 78 Neville Marriner | Grieg: | In the Hall of the Mountain King (from Peer Gynt) Herbert Blomstedt | Haydn: | Trumpet Concerto in E flat major, Hob. VIIe:1 (3rd movement) Håkan Hardenberger (trumpet) | Hérold: | La Fille mal gardée: Clog Dance | Khachaturian: | Sabre Dance from Gayane Valery Gergiev | Lara, Augustin: | Granada Plácido Domingo (tenor) | Liszt: | Liebestraum, S541 No. 3 (Nocturne in A flat major) Lang Lang (piano) Grande Étude de Paganini, S. 141 No. 3 'La Campanella' Yundi Li (piano) | Massenet: | Meditation (from Thaïs) Anne Sophie Mutter (violin) | Mozart: | Vesperae Solennes de Confessore, K339: Laudate Dominum Danielle De Niese (soprano) Non piu andrai, farfallone amoroso (from Le Nozze di Figaro) Bryn Terfel (bass-baritone) Voi che sapete (from Le nozze di Figaro) Magdalena Kozená (mezzo) | Orff: | Carmina Burana: Ecce gratum Riccardo Chailly | Puccini: | O mio babbino caro (from Gianni Schicchi) Anna Netrebko (soprano) E lucevan le stelle (from Tosca) Jonas Kaufmann (tenor) Che gelida manina (from La Bohème) Roberto Alagna (tenor) Un bel di vedremo (from Madama Butterfly) Renée Fleming (soprano) | Rachmaninov: | Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, Op. 43 (extract) Tamás Vásáry (piano) | Rodrigo: | Fantasia para un Gentilhombre: Danza de las hachas Carlos Bonell (guitar) | Satie: | Gnossienne No. 1 Pascal Rogé (piano) | Schumann: | Kinderszenen, Op. 15: Traümerei Nelson Freire (piano) | Shostakovich: | Jazz Suite No. 2 - Waltz No. 2 Riccardo Chailly | Strauss, J, II: | Frühlingsstimmen Walzer Op. 410 Willy Boskovsky | Tárrega: | Recuerdos de la Alhambra Eduardo Fernández (guitar) | Tchaikovsky: | The Nutcracker: Chinese Dance Charles Dutoit | Vivaldi: | The Four Seasons: Summer, RV315 - Presto Neville Marriner | Wagner: | Die Walküre: Ride of the Valkyries Sir Georg Solti | Williams, John: | Schindler's List - theme Janine Jansen (violin) |
This stunning collection showcases the greatest stars of classical music with dazzling performances from Gustavo Dudamel, Cecilia Bartoli, Lang Lang and Anna Netrebko, to name but a few... Also includes legendary performances from some of the greatest artists of all time, including Luciano Pavarotti, Sir Georg Solti, Plácido Domingo and Daniel Barenboim. Introducing the exciting talents of a number of rising stars such as Jonas Kaufmann, Danielle De Niese, Julia Fischer and Alice Sara Ott With 40 tracks and over 2½ hours of music this collection is outstanding value for money, providing the foundation for a library of classical music. | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Waltzing Classics
Delibes: | Sylvia - Pizzicato Coppélia: Mazurka | Hérold: | La Fille mal gardée: Clog Dance | Khachaturian: | Masquerade: Waltz | Lanner: | Die Schönbrunner Waltzer, Op. 200 | Lehár: | Ballsirenen (on themes from `Die lustige Witwe`) Gold und Silber Walzer, Op. 79 | Loewe, F: | I Could Have Danced All Night (My Fair Lady) | Meyerbeer: | Les Patineurs | Offenbach: | Orphée aux Enfers Overture | Piazzólla: | Libertango | Ponchielli: | Dance of the Hours (from La Gioconda) | Prokofiev: | Montagues And Capulets (from Romeo and Juliet) | Shostakovich: | Jazz Suite No. 1: Waltz Jazz Suite No. 2 - Waltz No. 2 | Strauss, J, I: | Radetsky March, Op. 228 | Strauss, J, II: | An der schönen, blauen Donau, Op. 314 Tritsch-Tratsch Polka, Op. 214 Frühlingsstimmen Walzer Op. 410 Kaiser-Walzer, Op. 437 Champagner-Polka, Op. 211 | Tchaikovsky: | Swan Lake - Waltz from Suite Op. 20, No. 2 The Nutcracker: Waltz of the Flowers The Nutcracker: Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy Waltz from Eugene Onegin, Op. 24 Pas de quatre The Sleeping Beauty, Op. 66: Rose Adagio | Waldteufel: | Les Patineurs - Valse, Op. 183 | Weber: | Invitation to the Dance, Op. 65 | Ziehrer: | Loslassen - Polka schnell, Op. 386 |
Classic FM is inviting you to the dance with its brand new double album Waltzing Classics, the ultimate collection of your favourite waltzes and other dances. This wonderful album is packed with the world’s most famous dancing pieces, with waltzes including Khachaturian’s ‘Waltz from Masquerade Ball’, Strauss’ ‘The Blue Danube’, and Meyerbeer’s ‘Skater’s Waltz’. Also included are many other famous dances, including Piazzolla’s fiery ‘Libertango’, Herold’s mischievous ‘Clog Dance’, Prokofiev’s powerful ‘Dance of The Knights’, Ziehrer’s elegant ‘Losslassen’ Polka, and beautiful pieces from the world of ballet including Tchaikovsky’s ‘The Nutcracker’ and ‘Swan Lake’. Waltzing Classics transports the listener to a magical world of the classical ballroom and will appeal to lovers of dancing and classical music alike. “No duds here. The Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra under Neeme Järvi is smooth, glistening and joyous in Waldteufel's The Skater's Waltz, whilst Ashkenazy and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra provide the tense contrast of Prokofiev's Dance of the Knights...The Vienna Philharmonic demonstrates its prowess as orchestra of the waltz capital of the world, playing Strauss's fizzing Champagne Polka with light, ebullient precision.” Classic FM Magazine, May 2011 **** | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Andre Rieu: Forever Vienna
Lehár: | Dein ist mein ganzes Herz (from Das Land des Lächelns) Viljalied (from Die lustige Witwe) | Ravel: | Boléro | Shostakovich: | Jazz Suite No. 2 - Waltz No. 2 | Strauss, J, I: | Radetsky March, Op. 228 | Strauss, J, II: | An der schönen, blauen Donau, Op. 314 Frühlingsstimmen Walzer Op. 410 Wiener Blut Waltz, Op. 354 Perpetuum Mobile, Op. 257 Wein, Weib und Gesang, Op. 333 Unter Donner und Blitz, Op. 324 Der Zigeunerbaron Overture | Strauss, Josef: | Auf Ferienreisen - Polka schnell, Op. 133 |
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“Shostakovich's piano concertos were written under very different circumstances, yet together they contain some of the composer's most cheerful and enlivening music. The First, with its wealth of perky, memorable tunes, has the addition of a brilliantly conceived solo trumpet part (delightfully done here by Philip Jones) that also contributes to the work's characteristic stamp. The Second Concerto was written not long after Shostakovich had released a number of the intense works he had concealed during the depths of the Stalin era. It came as a sharp contrast, reflecting as it did the optimism and sense of freedom that followed the death of the Russian dictator. The beauty of the slow movement is ideally balanced by the vigour of the first, and the madcap high spirits of the last. The poignant movement for piano and orchestra from the Suite from the 1951 film The Unforgettable Year 1919, 'The assault on beautiful Gorky', provides an excellent addition to this disc of perceptive and zestful performances by Alexeev. He's most capably supported by the ECO under Maksymiuk, and the engineers have done them proud with a recording of great clarity and finesse. A joyous issue.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “The digital recording is in every way excellent and score over most of its competitors in clarity and presence. Artistically, Alexeev has more personality than his rivals, and he has the advantage of sensitive and idiomatic support from the ECO and Maksymiuk.” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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