Richard Wagner: Parsifal, Act 3
On this CD:
1. Parsifal, opera, WWV 111 Act 3~Einleitung
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Opera Orchestra
with Cornelis Bronsgeest, Ludwig Hofmann, Gotthelf Pistor
2. Parsifal, opera, WWV 111 Act 3~Heil Mir, Daß Ich Dich Wieder Finde
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Opera Orchestra
with Cornelis Bronsgeest, Ludwig Hofmann, Gotthelf Pistor
3. Parsifal, opera, WWV 111 Act 3~Du Wuschest Mir Die Füße
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Opera Orchestra
with Cornelis Bronsgeest, Ludwig Hofmann, Gotthelf Pistor
4. Parsifal, opera, WWV 111 Act 3~Mein Erstes Amt Verricht' Ich So
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Opera Orchestra
with Cornelis Bronsgeest, Ludwig Hofmann, Gotthelf Pistor
5. Parsifal, opera, WWV 111 Act 3~Mittag: Die Stund' Ist Da (Verwandlungsmusik)
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Opera Orchestra
with Cornelis Bronsgeest, Ludwig Hofmann, Gotthelf Pistor
6. Parsifal, opera, WWV 111 Act 3~Geleiten Wir Im Bergenden Schrein Den Gral
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Opera Orchestra
with Cornelis Bronsgeest, Ludwig Hofmann, Gotthelf Pistor
7. Parsifal, opera, WWV 111 Act 3~Ja, Wehe! Wehe! Weh' Über Mich!
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Opera Orchestra
with Cornelis Bronsgeest, Ludwig Hofmann, Gotthelf Pistor
8. Parsifal, opera, WWV 111 Act 3~Enthüllet Den Gral!
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Opera Orchestra
with Cornelis Bronsgeest, Ludwig Hofmann, Gotthelf Pistor
9. Parsifal, opera, WWV 111 Act 3~Nur Eien Waffe Taugt
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Opera Orchestra
with Cornelis Bronsgeest, Ludwig Hofmann, Gotthelf Pistor
Richard Wagner: Parsifal, Act 3, Music, Cornelis Bronsgeest, Ludwig Hoffmann, Ludwig Hofmann, Richard Wagner, Opera Orchestra, Gotthelf Pistor, Classical, German/Austrian Romantic Opera, Opera, Opera/Operetta
Average customer rating:
- Wonderful collection and price!
- Awesome collection!
- Helicopters? Marines?
- A great addition to my music collection
- Quintessential Wagner
|
Twilight of the Gods: The Essential Wagner Collection
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Wagner
| Wagner, Richard
| ( W )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Romantic
| Symphonies
| Forms & Genres
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General Modern
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra
| ( B )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
London Philharmonic Orchestra
| ( L )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
National Philharmonic Orchestra London
| ( N )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
New York Philharmonic Orchestra
| ( N )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Symphonies
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
German
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Deutsche Grammophon: Music
| Specialty Stores
| Music
Similar Items:
- Wagner: Overture & Preludes
- The Best Of Wagner
- Wagner: The "Ring" Without Words
- Wagner without Words
- 25 Thunderous Classics
ASIN: B000009ON7
Release Date: 1998-08-11 |
Tracks:
- The Valkyries: Ride Of The Valkyries
- Twilight Of The Gods: Siegfried's Funeral March
- Lohengrin: Prelude to Act III
- The Flying Dutchman: Overture
- The Flying Dutchman: Sailors' Chorus
- The Rheingold: Journey Down To Nibelheim
- The Mastersingers Of Nuremberg: Overture
- Tannhauser: Overture
- Tannhauser: Entry Of The Guests
- Tannhauser: Tannhauser's Pilgrimage
- Siegfried: Act III Orchestral Interlude
- Twilight Of The Gods: Siegfried's Rhine Journey
- Twilight Of The Gods: Finale
- The Rheingold: Entry Of The Gods Into Valhalla
Tracks:
- Lohengrin: Prelude To Act I
- Lohengrin: Bridal Chorus
- Parsifal: Prelude to Act I
- Parsifal: Good Friday Music
- Parsifal: Transformation Scene
- Tannhauser: Venusberg Music
- Tannhauser: Pilgrims Chorus
- The Mastersingers Of Nuremburg: Prelude To Act III
- The Rheingold: Vision Of Valhalla (Scene II Introduction)
- Siegfried Idyll
- Siegfried: Brunnhildes Awakening
- Tristan And Isolde: Prelude To Act III
- Tristan And Isolde: Death Of Isolde
Amazon.com
If you like your Wagner served up in bleeding chunks or if you're simply in a hurry to hear the tunes, then this compilation is for you. The performances, drawn from the Polygram (mainly Deutsche Grammophon) back catalog, are for the most part authoritative. They feature the likes of Herbert von Karajan, with the Berlin Philharmonic, and Karl Böhm, with the Bayreuth Festival Orchestra (and chorus), in extracts from recordings of complete operas, and conductors Giuseppe Sinopoli, Otto Gerdes, and Antal Doráti in some of the more familiar overtures and preludes. Singing, without which it is impossible to get the full flavor of Wagner's work, is skirted whenever possible: this is an unapologetic tribute to Wagner the orchestral genius. At times the salesmanship is a little overblown--the glitzy packaging includes a cover shot of the helicopters from Apocalypse Now--and the sound, some of it from very good originals, seems to have been juiced with a little added digital reverb, resulting in an overall glassiness. The gaps between tracks are minimized, disco style, so there's no dead air, and the whole thing has an Entertainment Tonight feel to it. Were he around, Wagner would have screamed bloody murder, then happily taken his cut of the action. For today's on-the-go listener, this may well be the most practical way to enjoy Wagner's music, but we won't be happy until it motivates at least one newcomer to seek out a recording of a complete opera. Anyone who does that will find out what "apocalypse" really means. --Ted Libbey
Customer Reviews:
Wonderful collection and price!.......2007-05-11
I found this to be a nice collection of favorites, especially to keep in the car and listen to. It is a variety of well known compilations. Although not encompassing, it is perfect as a review for driving, relaxing, and enjoyment. Plus, the price is right!
Awesome collection!.......2007-01-10
This is a great collection of some of Wagner's most memorable songs for those of you who do not want to buy the whole opera's for some of his works.
Helicopters? Marines?.......2006-12-05
Do those infotainment marketing mavens ever get it right? Talk about Hollywood disconnect! Not only are the helicopters irrelevant, but to quote from the gushy drivel on the jacket, "The gripping power of Richard Wagner's music was demonstrated with spectacular effect in...Apocalpse Now, when the "Ride of the Valkyries' became synonymous with the chilling journey of Marine 'Huey' helicopters into battle..."
Marine? Marine? Them Hueys in the movie was ARMY Air Cav, slick! "First of the ninth--air mobile." If you're going to dally down that primrose path, at least get it right.
Better yet, drop the choppers. Most people who listen to Wagner probably realize that quality of an artistic work has a mystically inverse relationship to the number of helicopters contained in it.
As for the music, it is good, but the operatic equivalent of sound bites, which may be just right for people who are new to Wagner or just can't take very much of him. Hmm...perfect for a helicopter ride, perhaps?
A great addition to my music collection.......2006-07-20
This CD takes the place of all my other Wagner music. VERY well done. Somehow I didn't realize that there were two cds in the package--what a pleasant surprise! Of the two cds, I like the first one best, but they are both good. I listen to this cd daily on my way to work. Stirring! I am so glad that I purchased this. Some purists might have a problem with the fact that some of the selections are not there in their entirety. I have no problem with that though. I recommend this to anyone who loves Wagner.
Quintessential Wagner.......2006-05-15
Okay, so I like Wagner. I LOVE "Ride Of The Valkyries". Do I want to go out and buy every single stinkin thing Wagner did? No. If you are a die-hard Wagner fan you probably will not think much of this collection.
But if you like Wagner and appreciate "Ride Of The Valkyries", and maybe require it in just a little more substance than what is included in "Apocolypse Now Redux", then this is what you want. The extra tracks are bonuses and are quite good. Meets my needs, presentation great, performance excellent. I recommend it for anyone that needs a Wagner fix.
Average customer rating:
- A well-kept secret
- Essential Wagner
- Excellent Wagner from a surprising source ... or maybe not!
- Go For Boult
- Memorable and dramatic- A must have for Wagner fans
|
Wagner: Overtures & Preludes
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Wagner
| Wagner, Richard
| ( W )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
London Philharmonic Orchestra
| ( L )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
German
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Wagner: Tristan und Isolde/Parsifal/Die Meistersinger Von Nürnberg/Lohengrin/Tannhäuser
- The Best Of Wagner
- Twilight of the Gods: The Essential Wagner Collection
- Rimsky-Korsakov: Scheherazade; Capriccio Espagnol; Russian Easter Overture
- Wagner: The "Ring" Without Words
ASIN: B000002S08
Release Date: 1992-09-29 |
Tracks:
- Tannher: Overture
- Tannher: Grand March
- Der Fliegende Holler: Overture
- Tristan und Isolde: Prelude to Act 1
- Tristan und Isolde: Prelude to Act 3
- Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: Overture
- Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: Prelude to Act 3
- Lohengrin: Prelude to Act 1
Tracks:
- Lohengrin: Prelude to Act 3
- Parsifal: Prelude to Act 1
- Parsifal: Act 1 Transformation scene
- Parsifal: Prelude to Act 3
- Parsifal: Good Friday Music
- Das Rheingold: Entrance of the Gods
- Die Walkure: Ride of the Walkyries
- Siegfried: Forest murmurs
- Gotterdammerung: Siegfried's Rhine Journey
- Gotterdammerung: Siegfried's Funeral March
Customer Reviews:
A well-kept secret.......2007-05-18
Everyone wants to have a crack at the "bleeding chunks" eventually, and while I love the flashier Stoky and Furtwangler approach, I wouldn't want to be without the Boult. He's a great Wagnerian, strange as it may seem. Who could blame him for not wanting to go down in history merely as the finest Holstian? As long as this stays in print, Ormandy will still be considered the least sexy conductor. (I heard CBS researchers found an Ormandy fan once!)
Essential Wagner.......2006-06-17
As a child, this set was my first experience of Wagner's music, and it made quite an impression on me. However, as I grew older and began to collect the full operas I felt I could surely do better than Adrian Boult and the British for a collection of the preludes, overtures, and orchestral music from the operas. I was wrong. I have yet to here any recordings that can match the power and intensity as demonstrated in these discs from Boult and the LSO (and LPO). The Meistersinger prelude alone is worth the price, and the only version of the prelude to Tristan which outdoes the one here is Bohm's live 1966 Tristan. The Solti, Karajan, and Klemperer highlight discs have their moments (and truthfully, I do prefer Solti and Karajan for the "Ring" highlights), but their contributions are greatest in the full operas, and overall, they simply can't muster the power and intensity that Boult brings to these preludes, overtures, etc.
Even if you have other compilations of Wagner's music in "bleeding chunks", I can assure you they don't come close to this one; and with two discs (the second containing mostly music from Parsifal and the "Ring") at 14 bucks, there is absolutely no excuse not to have this essential recording. So go ahead and buy this disc, never buy another Wagner compilation again, and with the money you save get started on the more important task at hand: the full operas.
Excellent Wagner from a surprising source ... or maybe not!.......2004-09-27
Does Sir Adrian Boult conjure up of images of Gustav Holst and Ralph Vaughn Williams, but not Wagner? You're not alone! Nevertheless, this is a double CD set not to be missed! Many years ago, I was listening to a classical radio music station in NYC that was playing the music of Wagner. The performance was so good, that I wouldn't leave the radio until I found out the name of the conductor. When the announcer said the conductor was Sir Adrian Boult, I was quite surprised. I had recordings of English music from Sir Adrian on Angel/EMI, but I never associated that conductor with Wagner. Having been blessed with a friend who had knowledge of classical music way beyond his years, I gave him a call to find out more about the recording. He told me that, Boult had solid expertise in the area of Germanic music, but, in England, had been overshadowed in that repertoire by Otto Klemperer. He told me not to be surprised about Boult's very fine Wagner, it was an excellent recording to purchase and, indeed, search out Sir Adrian's wonderful performance of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony (now available on Vanguard). Fast-forward many years and I find myself browsing through Amazon for a recording of Wagner's Overtures and Preludes. Like everyone else I know, I foolishly jettisoned my LPs in the 1990s and have been "back-filling" ever since. Well, I was able to obtain this splendid set for less than $7 per CD! There are a total of 18 selections covering most of Wagner's operas including five excerpts from the Ring Cycle. The performances are excellent coming from no less than three British orchestras, and the sound is top-shelf EMI. Sir Adrian's pacing is measured and his vision is broad and sensitive, highlighting the beauty and grandeur --rather than just the fire-- of this glorious music. I heartily recommend this two-CD set, and at this price, I think it's a steal.
Go For Boult.......2003-07-08
Sir Adrian Boult is best known for his recordings of the British repertoire, and his performances, particularly of Holst's "The Planets" and Elgar's Symphonies and Orchestral Works, are legendary. But Boult was also an excellent conductor of Beethoven, Brahms and Wagner, and this 2-CD set collects the Overtures and Preludes of the latter German titan. These stereo recordings from the early to mid-1970s with the New Philharmonia Orchestra, and London Philharmonic and Symphony Orchestras are truly first rate. EMI's set compares nicely in terms of price, quality and musical offerings with competing sets by DG (Bohm, Kubelik, et al) and Sony (Ormandy & Szell). You might have reservations about getting German music conducted by a Brit, but you really can't go wrong with Boult.
Memorable and dramatic- A must have for Wagner fans.......2000-03-20
I bought this cd for the following reasons: 1 I'm a Wagner fan, 2 the cover looks exquisite and 3 I wanted to hear a "prelude" since it sounds fancy and never heard one. The result is great cd. The Tannhauser overture, Tristan and Isolde prelude and Lohengrin Prelude to act 3 are all very excellent. Excerpts from the Ring of the Nibelunge aren't as good as I had anticipated but are still enjoyable. The music speaks the tales of Wagner's operas. Just hear it, as slow and irksome as they maybe, these preludes make you feel the tragic love of Tristan and Isolde, the epic odyssey of Lohengrin and the holy, heavenly spirit in Parsifal as he discovers the Holy Grail. Buy this CD and you won't regret it. Except that one bit from Gotterdammerung, Siegfried's Funeral March. It does'nt quite have the feel of grand disaster as it did in John Boorman's film Excalibur. If you're hoping to find that version(which is better) stick with the Classics Go To The Movies Vol 2 cd. But all the other pieces on this CD are excellent. Go and buy this CD- now !
Average customer rating:
|
The Very Best of Régine Crespin
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Berlioz
| Berlioz, Hector
| ( B )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Canteloube, Joseph
| ( C )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Fauré, Gabriel
| ( F )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
All Works by Massenet
| Massenet, Jules
| ( M )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
All Works by Poulenc
| Poulenc, Francis
| ( P )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
All Works by Puccini
| Puccini, Giacomo
| ( P )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
All Works by Robert Schumann
| Schumann, Robert
| ( S )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
All Works by Verdi
| Verdi, Giuseppe
| ( V )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
All Works by Wagner
| Wagner, Richard
| ( W )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
All Works by Rossini
| Rossini, Gioacchino
| ( R )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Chamber Music
| Forms & Genres
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Vocal & Song
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Chamber Music
| Forms & Genres
| Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Vocal & Song
| Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Romances
| Classical (c.1770-1830)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
French
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
German
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Italian
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
General
| Songs & Lieder
| Vocal Non-Opera
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Legend: Régine Crespin [CD & DVD]
- Berlioz: Les Nuits d'été; et al / Crespin, Ansermet
- Italian Opera Arias
- Very Best of
- The Very Best of Lucia Popp
ASIN: B0006VYEJQ
Release Date: 2005-04-26 |
Tracks:
- Ils S'Eloignent Enfin...Sombre Foret
- D'Amour L'Ardente Flamme
- Les Grecs Ont Disparu...Malheureux Roi!
- Nous Avons Vu Finir...Chers Tyriens
- Je Vais Mourir...Adieu, Fiere Cite
- Ah! Salome! Dans Ce Palais...Il Est Doux, Il Est Bon
- Je Souffre
- Mes Cheres Filles, J'Ai Encore A Vous Dire
- Soir
- Le Secret
- Apres Un Reve
- Clair De Lune
- Lo Fiolaire
- Lou Coucut
- Coeur En Peril
- Berceuse Creole
Tracks:
- Einsam In Truben Tagen
- Euch Luften, Die Mein Klagen
- Eine Waffe Lass Mich Dir Weisen...Der Manner Sippe
- Ich Sah Das Kind
- I. Der Engel
- II. Stehe Still!
- III. Im Treibhaus
- IV. Schmerzen
- V. Traume
- I. In Der Fremde
- II. Intermezzo
- III. Waldesgesprach
- Timor Di Me?...D'Amor Sull'Ali Rosee
- Ecco L'Orrido Campo...Ma Dall'Arido Stelo Divulsa
- Tu Che Le Vanita
- D'Art Et D'Amour
Album Description
Details TBA. EMI. 2005.
Customer Reviews:
Sensuality Personified!.......2005-04-27
This is one of the best collections of Regine Crespin. Of course, her Berlioz/Ravel set with Ansermet is definitive, but the beauty and soft womanliness of her voice can be heard in all the selections on this disc. The engineers went for her vocal best and they created a fine collection aptly titled "The Best of..." One would be unduly captious to find Crespin "brittle" of tone here.
It is by now, very difficult to imagine anyone singing "Il est doux" with more apt expression of the line than La Crespin. Wagner's Wesendonk lieder is simply sublime from start to finish and the Faure takes on new meaning. That she is comical, melancholy, fun and happy by turns singles her out. This collection captures all her awesome talent. Underneath it all seems to be a very, if I may, sexual energy.
Crespin must be heard to be believed and the miracle lies in that even her softest tones are really enveloping, never thin. All tones are open and this is why there are enough colors in Regine Crespin's delicious voice to paint the world a thousand times, but it may also be why she infamous for being short and edgy on top but I remind, never here is she such. She is a relaxed singer in superb voice, comfortable in her own olive skin and makes the most out of every word those poets wrote.
The whole collection is unique in pace, style, and voice. It is Regine Crespin...in a nutshell fabulous!
Average customer rating:
- A Grand Lady, A Grand Collection
|
Legend: Régine Crespin [CD & DVD]
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Berlioz
| Berlioz, Hector
| ( B )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
All Works by Wagner
| Wagner, Richard
| ( W )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Romances
| Classical (c.1770-1830)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
French
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
German
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- The Very Best of Régine Crespin
- Regine Crespin Sings Berlioz, Schumann, Schubert, and Poulenc
- Italian Opera Arias
- Russian Album
- Songs by Mahler, Handel & Peter Lieberson
ASIN: B0009275XO
Release Date: 2005-07-19 |
Tracks:
- I. Der Engel
- II. Stehe Still!
- III. Im Treibhaus
- IV. Schmerzen
- V. Traume
- Einsam In Truben Tagen
- Euch Luften, Die Mein Klagen
- Eine Waffe Lass Mich Dir Weisen
- Ich Sah Das Kind
- Dich, Teure Halle
- Allmacht'ge Jungfrau
- D'Amour L'Ardente Flamme
- Nous Avons Vu Finir... Chers Tyriens
- Ah, Je Vais Mourir... Adieu, Fiere Cite
Customer Reviews:
A Grand Lady, A Grand Collection.......2005-09-28
Few who have had the privilege of seeing and hearing Régine Crespin in person will be able to pass this fine album by. A beautiful voice, a beautiful presence, an intelligent and sensitive mind all informed her singing whether on the grand stages of opera or in recitals. Who could ever forget her inimitable Berlioz' 'Les Nuits d'été or Ravel's 'Shéhérazade'? Indeed, Crespin is a legend.
In this very fine album we hear a stunning 'Wesendonck Lieder' of Wagner with Georges Prêtre conducting the Orchestre National de la Radiodiffusion Française. While some singers find these songs matronly Crespin infuses the poems with frail and tender love. Staying with Wagner (she was after all a reigning Sieglinde in her day) she offers arias from 'Lohengrin', 'Die Walküre', 'Parsifal', and 'Tannhäuser' (with Otto Ackermann
conducting the Orchestre du Théâtre National de l'Opéra de Paris)
demonstrating that this very French singer could produce a huge sound that easily sails over Wagner's orchestration. Finally she is heard in Berlioz' 'Les Troyens' and 'La Damnation de Faust' (again with Otto Ackermann). There is not a weak moment in these selections.
Included with this CD is a well-produced DVD of Crespin singing French art songs, showing the poise and involvement she brought to every performance. This is a treasureable package and certainly commands the respect of the title 'Legend. It is brilliant! Highly recommended. Grady Harp, September 05
Average customer rating:
- The ultimate Wagner orchestral music
- Magical
- 5 stars for Klemp and Wagner!
- Excellent
- "Mistah Klemps" is a Winner, Here!
|
Wagner: Orchestral Music
Richard Wagner , Otto Klemperer , and Philharmonia Orchestra
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Symphonies
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Wagner: Orchestral Music
- Wagner: Extracts from the operas
- EMI Great Recordings of Century - Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 1-4/Klemperer
- Beethoven: Fidelio
- Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde
ASIN: B00006I0AU
Release Date: 2002-09-17 |
Tracks:
- Overture
- Overture
- Act.3/Prelude
- Act.1/Prelude
- Act.3/Prelude
- Prelude
- Act.3: Dance Of The Apprentices & Entry Of The Masters
- Act.1/Prelude
Tracks:
- Overture
- Scene 4: Entry Of The Gods Into Valhalla
- Act.3: Ride Of The Valkyries
- Siegfried-Idyll
- Act.2: Forest Murmurs
- Interlude: Siegfried's Rhine Journey
- Act.3: Siegfried's Funeral March
- Prelude
Customer Reviews:
The ultimate Wagner orchestral music.......2006-02-05
I have these CDs for almost 15 years before they became a 2-CD set and still play them regularly. Got to know Wagner from the classical Furtwangler cycle, for many the best Wagner music ever recorded. Although Furtwangler is exceptional I do not think that it can surpass these accounts of Klemperer's Wagner. The sound of my CDs is not that great (something that probably has been fixed in these CDs) but the music is illumining in every instance. If you listen to this Tannhuaser you will understand what I am talking about. The Philharmonia Orchestra under Klemperer works miracles as always. A must have for every music-lover, even if you hate Wagner.
Magical.......2005-03-15
I've loved and cherished these performances for nearly 35 years. Much has been said about Wagner's merits (or lack of them) for over a century and a half. When the music is played as Klemperer and his orchestra play it here, there's little doubt as to why The Master had such an enormous impact on so many in his time.
Just sample the Entry of the God's into Valhalla or Siegfried's Funeral March or the incandescent Prelude to Parsifal. They're among the most sublime, noble, and epic recordings of anything you'll ever hear. Rather sad that within the vast bulk of the recent film version of The Lord of the Rings there's not a single moment that equals these three short pieces. What's the point in all that we create these days if we can't plumb a depth now and then?
5 stars for Klemp and Wagner!.......2004-12-16
This set is indispensible for any Wagnerite or Klemperite! It contains glorious playing of the finest calibre, with much weight, energy and beauty.
A definite in anyone's collection.
Excellent.......2004-08-11
There is absolutely nothing wrong with Klemperer's interpretation of this music and, for the most part, the playing of the orchestra. However, when performing to such a high standard, the playing of the Philharmonia Orchestra should be seamless - as it frequently is. But there is alarming sloppiness on exposed wind entrances sometimes and even disunity on such exits, which make this wind-player's ears cringe.
Other than that, I joyfully recommend this recording along with James Levine's MET "Wagner Orchestral music" and "Wagner Overtures and Preludes", which have much of the same music in modern sound and with spotless technique in the orchestra. A comparison between the two interpretations is worthy; Klemperer's approach is spacious a deep, while Levine, though calling for similar tempi in many places, leans tremendously forward.
Summary: some inexcusable blurbs in the winds, but more than worth the price of admission overall.
"Mistah Klemps" is a Winner, Here!.......2004-04-03
As many others, I normally do not care for Wagnerian "bleeding chunks", but when performed as wonderfully as in these fabulous performances, I can more than merely accept them. To pick out some examples, the Meistersinger Prelude is taken surely at the broadest pace I have ever heard, but there is a lightness of touch and sunniness to the interpretation that is absolutely irresistable. Teh Tannhaeuser Overture is overwhelmingly majestic in the Pilgrims' Chorus and volatile in the Venusberg sections. Siegfried goes off on a surprisingly swift Rhine Journey, and the Funeral March has the kind of cataclismic force that Knappertsbusch brought to his famous 1951 Bayreuth performance. The Siegfried Idyll is performed in its original chamber group version, and has more charm than any other I have heard. And the Tristan Prelude and Liebestod has an urgency and sheer erotic impulse that not even Furtwaengler surpassed. These wonderful renditions make one regret that Big Otto never recorded any of the later Wagner Operas complete.
Average customer rating:
- The best collection of Wagner excerpts from Furtwangler
- This deserves 5 stars, plus!
- Sublimity for the Ages
- Wondrous Wagner
|
Wagner: Extracts from the operas
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Wagner
| Wagner, Richard
| ( W )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General Modern
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra
| ( B )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
London Philharmonic Orchestra
| ( L )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
| ( V )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
German
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Furtwangler Conducts Beethoven - Beethoven: symphonies no 3,4,5, & 9, Leonore
- Wagner: Tristan und Isolde
- Furtwängler conducts Wagner
- Great Recordings Of The Century - Beethoven: Symphony no 9 / Furtwangler, Schwarzkopf
- Wagner: Orchestral Music
ASIN: B00064N8RM
Release Date: 2005-01-11 |
Tracks:
- Overture
- Prelude To Act 1
- Ride Of The Valkyries (Act 3)
- Prelude: Siegfried's Rhine Journey
- Siegfried's Funeral March (Act 3)
- Brunnhilde's Immolation (Act 3) - Kirsten Flagstad
Tracks:
- Overture
- Prelude to Act 1 - Berliner Philharmoniker
- Liebestod (Death Of Isolde) - Berliner Philharmoniker
- Prelude To Act 1
- Prelude To Act 3
- Dance Of The Apprentices (Act 3)
- Prelude To Act 1 - Berliner Philharmoniker
- Good Friday Music (Act 3) - Berliner Philharmoniker
Customer Reviews:
The best collection of Wagner excerpts from Furtwangler.......2005-12-16
In the post-war era Furtwangler left us two Ring cycles from Italy (both very scrapy in execution), a classic Tristan from London, and a somewhat disappointing (to me, at least) Die Walkure from Vienna. Those represent the bulk of his Wagner conducting, since he didn't record many excerpts. This classic EMI set gathers together two hours wroth from 1938 to 1954. Other reviewers have extolled the 2004 remastering, which I compared to the original 1993 "References" release. I didn't hear a revelatory transformation, but it's helpful to have any sonic improvement, particularly in the muzzy early recordings from Berlin.
The Gramophone declared that these excerpts validated Furtwangler's position as the greatest of all Wagner conductors. In their musical depth and emotional wisdom it's hard to disagree, although newcomers may find the tempos too braod, and the orchestral execution is never razor sharp--Furtwangler showed little interest in that.
I think the touchstones would be the opening Tannhauser Over. from 1952, which is in the best sound, and the Tristan Prelude from 1938, which is in the worst. Both draw us into Furtwangler's hypnotic way with Wagner, weaving a complete emotional experience that overarches mere details and passing events. I find it easy to listen past the dated sound; these are readings to sink into for a lifetime. (My only reservation is that Flagstad's Immolation scene from Gotterdammerung, recorded in 1952 when she and Furtwangler made their famous Tristan, seems grand without much regard for specific words or emotions.)
By now the Furtwangler canon has been scoured for more Wagner, and there is a live postwar collection in comparable sound from Testament that serves as the natural mate to these priceless studio recordings. Every scattered performance has been catalogued in the late John Ardoin's invaluable book, "The Furtwangler Record."
This deserves 5 stars, plus!.......2005-08-21
Wilhelm Furtwangler's recordings of Wagner Overtures and Preludes, refurbished by EMI and released in January, 2005, is so good it deserves more than five stars! "How?" you may ask, "can recordings made in the late 1930s, late 1940s/early '50s sound this good?" EMI's engineers have worked marvels, both in restoring the sound so that it is nearly modern, and in equalizing volume levels so the listener doesn't have to adjust volume up and down between tracks, sometimes a problem with compilation discs when different recording locales and orchestras were used.
The performances are all first rate: Furtwangler uses subtle liberties of tempo and nuance - his trademark as a conductor - to produce works of freshness and beauty. Three different orchestras are used: the Vienna Philharmonic, Berlin Philharmonic, and Philharmonia:all sound uniformly excellent. Kirsten Flagstad sings Brunnhilde's Immolation scene with great intensity, and in this track, the Philharmonia is in no way inferior to either Berlin or Vienna Philharmonic.
I had to keep reminding myself listening to Disc 1, Track 1,the TANNHAUSER Overture, that this was made in the era before stereo. From the first bars, this strikes me as very fresh and celebratory, and I'm not a huge Wagner fan: I prefer Overtures and Preludes over complete operas. My advice to anyone, even if you don't think you care for Wagner, is to invest in this: grab it before it goes out of circulation - for under $15.00 you can't go wrong.
Sublimity for the Ages.......2005-07-24
In a strange way, one almost needs to have known these recordings in their previous incarnations to appreciate the miraculous transparency that EMI engineers have achieved in this latest transfer. Having long treasured these performances on LP and their first CD transfer (1993), I was stunned by the immediacy, power, and splendor of the sound. What a jaw-dropping revelation! Who ever dreamt of tracing so many more threads in these complex orchestral tapestries via these classic interpretations?
As for the performances themselves, there are none better -- and there never will be. The only equally sublime Wagner excerpts are also in monophonic sound: check out the superb set of Stokowski's Wagner with the 1920s-40s Philadelphia Orchestra on Andante. Both conductors give us a kind of musicmaking that no one before or since has touched in this repertoire. And within the technical limitations of the times, the recordings admirably capture Wagner's sumptuous sound.
No, the decibel level will not knock you out of your seat. If you want that kind of displacement, you must naturally seek a more recent recording. But grandeur is not merely a function of decibels, and on this recording and Stokowski's you will hear a level of rapport with Wagner's deepest impulses, a grandeur of conception, and a quality of orchestral execution that come through loud and clear as they do nowhere else. Remember, many musicians playing in these recordings studied under Wagner's contemporaries (indeed, in the earliest recordings of both conductors, we are probably even hearing a few people who were children or teenagers during Wagner's final years). As a result, these players absorbed the spirit of the age with their every formative breath. Through these recordings, they effortlessly project intangible qualities to which no later generations can ever lay claim.
My own personal favorites here are the *Lohengrin* Prelude (boasting some of the most ethereal high-string sonorities ever recorded, courtesy of the Vienna Philharmonic -- a pure and perfect evocation of spiritual light descending from on high), the *Tristan* selections, Flagstad's grandly voiced Immolation Scene, and the incomparable *Parsifal* Prelude. *Parsifal* has never been my favorite Wagner opera, but its Prelude easily ranks among the chief glories of music. Never has it sounded more ravishing than it does here, with Furtwängler's patient and probing baton guiding Berlin's flawless execution (oh, those shimmering string tremolos!).
These are just a few personal high points. In reality, nothing falls below superb here -- and the new transfers put us closer to the music than ever before (to mix in a bit of Richard Strauss, Salome has dropped another sonic veil; will the engineers find a way to make her drop still another in the next decade?!). If you want a direct route to the heart of Wagner, this EMI anthology and Andante's five-disc Stokowski set are the royal road to Wagner's kingdom of bliss. I urge you to make the journey.
Wondrous Wagner.......2005-06-09
In this era of limited edition, out-of-print and rapidly disappearing classical CDs, sometimes it is better to wait and see instead of immediately buying a given title. Case in point, these famous Furtwangler recordings of Wagner extracts from the Operas, which have been available for years as a costly import in the EMI "References" series. I struggled off and on for some time about whether or not to buy it, knowing that these are among the very best Wagner performances ever committed to disc (despite their mono sound), but not wanting to pay an arm and a leg for them either. Well now with this inexpensively priced reissue in EMI's "Historical" Series, I can get the best of both worlds. Furtwangler's renditions, made with both the Vienna and Berlin Philharmonics between 1949 and 1954, are absolutely fantastic. This is the conductor at his very best, and there are few rivals in this material, even in stereo. In particular, the Tannhauser Overture, Lohengrin Prelude, and Tristan and Parsifal selections are magical. For price and performance, this CD is without peer.
Average customer rating:
- Astonishing!
- As Good As It Gets
- Great Wagner Performances at an Unbeatable Price
- for the serious Wagner enthusiast, it's indispensable
|
Wagner: The Complete Karl Muck Parsifal Recordings, Orchestral Suite, etc / Muck
Karl Muck , Alfred Hertz , Gotthelf Pistor , Cornelius Bronsgeest , Ludwig Hofmann , Ingeborg Holmgren , Anny Helm , Minnie Ruske-Leopold , Hilde Sinnek , Charlotte Moller , Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra , and Bayreuth Festival Chorus and Orchestra
Manufacturer: Naxos
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Wagner
| Wagner, Richard
| ( W )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General Modern
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra
| ( B )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Symphonies
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
German
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Operettas
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- Furtwängler at Covent Garden: 1937 "Ring" Excerpts
- Wagner: The Ring
- Massenet: Werther
- Wagner: Parsifal
- Wagner: Die Walküre
ASIN: B000026C8I
Release Date: 1999-10-26 |
Tracks:
- Parsifal: Orchestral Suite: Prelude To Act 1
- Parsifal: Act I Transformation Music
- Parsifal: Act III Transformation Music
- Parsifal: Good Friday Spell
- Parsifal: Act I: Prelude To Act I
- Parsifal: Transformation Music
- Parsifal: Grail Scene: 'Zum letzten Liebesmahle'
- Parsifal: 'Durch Mitleid wissend, der reine Tor'
- Parsifal: 'Wein und Brot des letzten Mahles'
Tracks:
- Parsifal: Act II: Flower Maidens Scene
- Parsifal: Act III: Prelude
- Parsifal: 'Heil mir, dass ich dich wieder finde!'
- Parsifal: 'O Gnade! Hochstes Heil!'
- Parsifal: 'So ward es uns verhiessen' - Good Friday Spell
- Parsifal: 'Mittag: die Stund' ist da' - Transformation Music
- Parsifal: 'Geleiten wir im bergenden Schrein'
- Parsifal: 'Ja, Wehe! Wehe!'
- Parsifal: 'Nur eine Waffe taugt'
- Parsifal: 'So ward es uns verhiessen' - Good Friday Spell
Amazon.com
Karl Muck (1859-1940), one of the greatest Wagnerian conductors of the generation immediately following those who knew and worked directly with the master, was responsible for leading the performances of Parsifal at Bayreuth from 1901 until 1930. Wagner's last opera was, in a word, Muck's property, and this magnificent two-CD set documents his unique and intense relationship with that work in exemplary fashion. It contains Muck's accounts of the Prelude to Act I and a sizable amount of Act III, recorded with the chorus and orchestra of the Berlin State Opera, and of excerpts from Acts I and II, recorded with the chorus and orchestra of the Bayreuth Festival. The recordings, made in 1927 and 1928, reflect the glow of a golden age in Wagner interpretation, and thanks to Naxos's extraordinary job of remastering, that reflection is no longer a dim one.
The great Wagnerian soprano Frida Leider, whose voice is not heard on these recordings, encountered Muck in his later years at Bayreuth and was struck by the slowness of his tempos in Parsifal. Indeed, they are slow: the Act I prelude takes 15:55 by the clock and seems even longer, yet the effect is sublime. Muck sustains the prelude as if on a single breath, just at the point where the pulse almost disappears; the music seems to arise out of silence and darkness to become light and spirit. This is just what Wagner intended. The Act III excerpts, which feature tenor Gotthelf Pistor as Parsifal and bass Ludwig Hofmann as Gurnemanz, are also superb. Pistor's is quite a fine voice--he was a real heldentenor--and the drama is palpable. But the greatest treasure here is the playing of the State Opera orchestra. Muck had been its chief conductor for 20 years, from 1892, and the chemistry between him and his erstwhile colleagues is particularly remarkable. They are majestic in the "Good Friday Spell," and they bring enormous grandeur and radiance to the closing pages of the opera. What a superb band this was!
The segments recorded in Bayreuth are only a little less enchanting, largely because the chorus preparation leaves a lot to be desired (the chromaticism in Wagner's writing was difficult then, and still is). But we hear the original Bayreuth bells in the Act I transformation music (they were carried up to Berlin for the Act III processional music as well); cast to Wagner's own specifications, and melted down for the German war effort in 1940, they are truly a "voice" from the past.
The two discs are superbly laid out, and include, in addition to the Muck material, a four-part orchestral suite from Parsifal conducted by Alfred Hertz and recorded in 1913 with the Berlin Philharmonic, as well as the "Good Friday Spell" played by the Bayreuth Festival Orchestra under the direction of Siegfried Wagner, the composer's son, recorded in 1927. The transfers by Mark Obert-Thorn are the best yet of these historic recordings. --Ted Libbey
Customer Reviews:
Astonishing!.......2006-06-19
How amazing that a recording from 1927 can have such an effect on a listener of today! Having gotten used to Levine's wonderful recording from the Met with its polished sound quality and mindblowing soloists, I was quite shocked and surprised to have tears running down my cheeks listening to Karl Muck's recordings here. In spite of some background noise, very little however, the music comes through and has that "parsifal effect" on me, chills and all, more than ever! I'm going to leave it to the experts to explain why and how Muck achieves this, all I can say is that listening to this recording leaves me startled and in total respect of these old masters!
Having this gem available in such an improved sound quality is a blessing to all Wagner fans, a blessing you want to make the most of, so get it now!
As Good As It Gets.......2002-07-02
After reading the other reviews of this disc I couldn't wait to hear it. I'm not disappointed. The only caveat about this set is some widely scattered distortion that the filtering couldn't remove. That being said, the Karl Muck "Parsifal" selections, which are the reason to buy this disc, could hardly be better. In comparison with much more expensive vintage discs from EMI, DG and Music and Arts from the 30's and 40's I have, these 1927 and 1928 recordings sound better! Compared to Barenboim's recent highlights on Teldec, this set offers far less sonic annoyance and almost infinitely more musical satisfaction. It is bliss, and Muck leaves it to you, the listener, to groan with pleasure. What Muck recorded here is about 40 minutes of Act 1, including Prelude, Transformation music, and a choral Grail Scene (no solists). Ditto the 5 minute Flower Maiden Scene from Act2. Then comes over an hour of Act 3, complete with soloists. Filling out the discs are a 1913 recording of the orchestral suite from the opera, and Siegfried Wagner's 1927 recording of the Good Friday Spell, so if you listen to both discs straight through, you'll hear that music 3 times, twice with soloists! I usually just listen to the Muck excerpts.
Great Wagner Performances at an Unbeatable Price.......2002-01-23
Karl Muck was one of the great Wagner conductors, with an uncanny feel for Wagner's music (and a resemblance to the composer that was so uncanny that people thought that he was Wagner's illegitimate son!). Now his recordings of Wagner's final opera are on this 2-CD set from Naxos.
Along with the Muck recordings from 1927 and 1928, there are also recordings of music from Parsifal by Siegfried Wagner (the composer's son) and Alfred Hertz (the latter excerpts were recorded in 1913, in the acoustic era, and some sonic allowances should be made for them).
But you'll be buying this set (as I hope you will) for the Karl Muck tracks. They are truly amazing. When you consider that he was forced to record this music on 78 R.P.M. records in snippets of three minutes or so, the quality of his performances is astounding. Audio Restoration Engineer Mark Obert-Thorn has done a marvellous job restoring these discs so that they sound as good as they possibly can, and Naxos has put them out at an unbeatable price. If you have any interest in Wagner at all, I would grab this set.
One more thing. On the 6th track of the first disc, Muck conducts the Transformation Music for the Grail Scene in Act I. In that scene you hear the bells that Wagner had constructed for the first performances of Parsifal at his own theater at Bayreuth (where these recordings were made). Those bells were later melted down by the Nazis for ammunition during World War II. Listen for them -- they carry you right back to the sound that Wagner must have heard at the premiere.
for the serious Wagner enthusiast, it's indispensable.......2002-01-03
It was a pleasure indeed to hear this set on CD, I purchased Karl Muck's Parsifal Act III excerpts on a Lebendige Vergangenheit (Living History) LP close to 20 years ago. The first transfers from the original 78s were effective and these new transfers have further reduced background hiss and noise. The sound quality in the Alfred Hertz excerpts, made in September, 1913, is significantly worse than all the others, which were done in 1927 and 1928. According to the excellent program notes electrical recording came into use around 1925. It is also noted, and very audible, that the 1882 Bayreuth bells in the Transformation Music are at a significantly lower pitch than the orchestras of the 1920s. The effect remains startling nonetheless.
This set is not for everybody, as it contains 3 performances of the Good Friday Music, one of which is purely orchestral, and two accounts of the Act I Prelude. Both CDs play for almost 80 minutes. In general the woodwind and string playing can be heard most clearly, and Gotthelf Pistor's assumption of the title role is strong and clear in spite of the great age of the recording.
Artistically, I consider Karl Muck's reading of Parsifal to be peerless. The Act III excerpts are very moving in spite of the constricted sound, and one cannot help but admire the efforts of all the performers, since they were using very short takes for recording onto 78s. I don't think anyone today could take the Good Friday Music and split it into 3 sections, and make it sound on record as if there were no interruptions at all. The contributions by Alfred Hertz and Siegfried Wagner are not quite in the same class, but are also well worth hearing.
Overall, at the lowest price range, this cannot be too strongly recommended, even at the risk of duplicating prior releases. A desert island set.
Average customer rating:
|
Kirsten Flagstad: Wagner Arias and Duets with Melchior
Manufacturer: RCA
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Wagner
| Wagner, Richard
| ( W )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Arias
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Wagner, Richard
| U to Z
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
German
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Flagstad, Kirsten
| Divas
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Classical Music
| The Sony BMG Masterworks Store
| Amazon.com Label Stores
| Stores
| Music
Opera & Vocal
| The Sony BMG Masterworks Store
| Amazon.com Label Stores
| Stores
| Music
ASIN: B000003ES8
Release Date: 1990-04-19 |
Tracks:
- Tristan Und Isolde: Mild Und Leise
- Lohengrin: Euch Luften, Die Mein Klagen
- Parsifal: Ich Sah' Das Kind (Kundry-Parsifal Duet) - Kirsten Flagstag/Lauritz Melchior
- Die Walkure: Du Bist Der Lenz
- Die Walkure: Ho-Jo-To-Ho!
- Gotterdammerung: Vorspiel/Prologue/Prld/Preludio: Zu Neuen Thaten - Kirsten Flagstag/Lauritz Melchior
- Gotterdammerung: Starke Scheite Schichtet Mir Dort (Brunnhilde's Immolation)
Average customer rating:
- One of the triumphs of recorded sound
- A decent Wagner collection, for the price
- Part 2: DIE MEISTERSINGER Analysis
- Difficult
- Part 1 of Comments
|
Solti: The Wagner Opera Collection (Limited Edition) [21-CD Box Set with Bonus Unreleased CD]
Manfred Jungwirth , Peter Klein , Waldemar Kmentt , Tom Krause , and Resnik, Regina
Manufacturer: Decca
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Wagner
| Wagner, Richard
| ( W )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General Modern
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Braun, Hans
| ( B )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
| ( V )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
German
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
The Decca Records Store
| Specialty Stores
| Music
Similar Items:
- Wagner - Der Ring des Nibelungen (Ring Cycle) / Sir Georg Solti
- An Introduction to Der Ring des Nibelungen
- Wagner: Der Ring Des Nibelungen (Milan 1950)
- Wagner: Tristan und Isolde
- Wagner - Der Ring des Nibelungen / Levine, Metropolitan Opera (Complete Ring Cycle)
ASIN: B00006469R
Release Date: 2002-10-08 |
Album Description
Track Listings:
Discs 1-3 Der Fliegender Holldnder
Discs 4-6 Tannhduser
Discs 7-9 Lohengrin
Discs 10-13 Tristan und Isolde
Discs 14-17 Die Meistersinger von N|rnberg
Discs 18-21 Parsifal
Bonus CD: The Birth of an Opera (Solti in rehearsal of Tristan und Isolde)
Customer Reviews:
One of the triumphs of recorded sound.......2007-01-09
This collection not only represents all of the glorious music of Wagner the continues to influence composers to this day; it is also one of the greatest achievements both for Maestro Solti and for recording technology that was in practice during this time period. Yes, this music is lengthy, and because of the german dialogue often difficult to follow and comprehend, but I assure you that the rewards of listening to this collection will change your life. I would also recommend seeing any of these operas live, in that they are a truly magical experience.
A decent Wagner collection, for the price.......2004-06-08
None of these is my favorite recording of each particular opera, but for the new fan of Wagner who wants an instant, and decent, collection of recordings, one could do much, much worse than this. These recordings feature the most accomplished singers and orchestras of their day, as well as the most advanced sound engineering available. That said, these recordings (The Ring in particular) suffer from an over-consciousness of their own greatness. The producers strove too hard to create perfect, definitive recordings. The result frequently is a gorgeous, but lifeless reading of the drama. Solti's languid tempi don't help, either. Bohm or Kegel (when you can find him) are far better Wagner conductors. On the positive side, the presence of French tenor Rene Kollo in several of these recordings is a particular delight. He was a singer of extraordinary taste and refinement.
A note about Tristan und Isolde: The main reason to own this recording is for the supporting cast: Tom Krause as Kurwenal, and particularly Regina Resnik as Brangaene (the best recorded Brangaene ever, by far). Fritz Uhl as Tristan is a nonentity (where's Kollo when you need him!). Nilsson of course is brilliant, but her 1966 live recording under Karl Bohm has more fire.
Part 2: DIE MEISTERSINGER Analysis.......2004-01-29
Solti's Die Meistersingers is without doubt one of the best in the catalogue. His conducting is lively and very animated, and all the singers sing very beautifully - they all have beautiful voices. As with ANY wagner opera recording, there are drawbacks. Firstly, the orchestra and singers are really recorded too closely to each other - there is a lack of space in between orchestra, singer and chorus. Secondly, the microphones were placed too close, again, to singers, chorus and orchestra. This has to do with the recording venue - Orchestra Hall in Chicago - which does not allow the singers, chorus and orchestra to be spaced out nicely. So the sound is slightly unpleasant - but you can mitigate that by turning the volume down a little. It does help. Having said that, the digital sound is very full and vivid, all the details are beautifully captured by Decca's engineers. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra is absolutely gorgeous - they play beautifully and articulate clearly. Having said that, you notice that the Chicago forces lack something that the Vienna Philharmonic possesses. Call it the X-factor. The Vienna Philharmonic is an opera orchestra - they play under the name Vienna State opera orchestra at the Vienna State Opera. But in concert and in recordings, they assume the name Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. Anyway, being an opera orchestra, the Vienna Philharmonic certainly knows how to play opera music better than the Chicago Symphony. The Chicago forces, though technically wonderful, lack that extra X-factor in their playing. I think it has to do with injecting emotion into the playing. The end result is that although the Chicago Symphony plays beautifully, the playing is sometimes a bit bland, and you miss the kind of frisson an opera orchestra provides. Mattila sings very beautifully as Eva - she is one of the highlights of the performance. the other highlight is Ben Heppner who is wonderful in his singing and phrasing. Van Dam is excellent as Hans Sachs. All the other principals are never less than adequate although they are a bit detached.
Having said all that, this is still one of the best Die Meistersingers in the catalogue. But you have to listen to it over a long period of time before you can appreciate it properly. I only began to really enjoy the performance after spending over a year listening to it (in between other things). But that's only because I listen to tons of other music. I guess if you just concentrate on Die Meistersinger, it might take a shorter time.
There's always this talk about the K's in Die Meistersinger - Karajan, Kubelik, Kempe. Well, Kempe is in MONO, Karajan's 1951 performance is in MONO, Kubelik's recorded sound is not very nice - on the hard side. I guess Jochum and Karajan's stereo would be good alternative, but this version can hold its own against those two. Unless you are a Wagner freak (in which case, you should just buy them all), this is perfectly fine as a sole representation of Die Meistersinger in your collection.
Difficult.......2004-01-27
Wagner's non-Ring operas can be quite difficult to listen to. If you buy this set, be prepared to spend time on it. I listened to it for a very long time. For some time I was quite dissatisfied. But with time, you learn to appreciate the operas. Now I enjoy them thoroughly. Like good wine, these operas become better over time. So don't throw your set away after 1 hearing. Listen to each opera for 100 times, then you'll discover the magic.
Part 1 of Comments.......2003-07-25
LOHENGRIN ANALYSIS:
Lohengrin. My goodness, the singing here is simply gorgeous. Jessye Norman is in superb voice and her voice rings out gloriously throughout the opera. Domingo has been criticized for his German diction. But don't forget that Lohengrin is supposed to be a foreigner. Besides, his beautiful golden tone more than makes up for the unidiomatic diction. With such wonderful singing from Domingo, you just forget any shortcomings with respect to diction and related stuff. Besides, a lot of listeners do not know German (I don't) so they won't really care. Contrary to popular beliefs, Wagner loved beautiful singing. Many will be astounded to know that Bellini was one of his favorite composers. Did you know that Brunhilde's battle cry "Hoyotoho!" HAVE TRILLS WRITTEN IN THEM!!!!! YES!! Birgit Nilsson doesn't sing the trills. Almost no Brunnhilde ever attempts the trills. Only exception is Gwyneth Jones. Yes, contrary to popular belief, Wagner has some elements of Bel Canto written in them. Wagner's music has been subject to much abuse - singers singing it in a rough way. the Solti set shines out for the wonderful legato lines by Domingo, Norman, Randova et. al. It is simply a ravishing performance. No doubt one of Solti's most beautiful Wagner recording. I am not suprised that the Penguin Guide once gave this opera a rosette. Finally, instead of a tenor and a soprano with pressed shrill sound and a forced out tone, we have sensuous, beautiful, gorgeous legato lines - ravishing tone poured out minute after minute, underscored beautifully by the incomparable VPO and Solti's lively conducting - the tempi never sags but Solti never drives the music hard either.
More comments on other sets to come in time....
Average customer rating:
- Tantalizing hints of greatness
- Exceptional performances
- Toscanini and Wagner
- Clarity of sound...impeccable conducting...masterful...
- Stunning, Nontraditional Wagner
|
Arturo Toscanini & NBC Symphony Orchestra Vol. 7
Manufacturer: RCA
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Wagner
| Wagner, Richard
| ( W )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Romantic
| Symphonies
| Forms & Genres
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Symphonies
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Toscanini, Arturo
| ( T )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
German
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Classical Music
| The Sony BMG Masterworks Store
| Amazon.com Label Stores
| Stores
| Music
Opera & Vocal
| The Sony BMG Masterworks Store
| Amazon.com Label Stores
| Stores
| Music
Similar Items:
- Schubert: Symphonies Nos. 5, 8, 9; Mendelssohn: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 5
- Brahms: The Four Symphonies
- Arturo Toscanini: Great Symphonies, Vol. 6
- Arturo Toscanini: The Complete Philadelphia Orchestra Recordings 1941-42
- Ludwig van Beethoven: The 9 Symphonies - Arturo Toscanini / NBC Symphony Orchestra
ASIN: B00002DEWB
Release Date: 1999-11-09 |
Tracks:
- Die Walkure - The Valkyrie: Ride Of The Valkyries
- Siegfried: Forest Murmurs
- The Twighlight Of The Gods: Dawn And Siegfried's Rhine Journey
- The Twighlight Of The Gods: Siegfried's Death And Funeral Music
- Siegfried-Idyll
- Tristan und Isolde: Vorspiel Und Liebestod
Tracks:
- Die Meistersinger von Nurnbert - The Matersingers of Nuremberg: Act III Prelude
- Parsifal: Act I Prelude
- Parsifal: Good Friday Spell
- Lohengrin: Act I Prelude
- Lohengrin: Act III Prelude
- Tannhauser: Ouverture Und Bacchanale
Customer Reviews:
Tantalizing hints of greatness.......2005-12-04
If you didn't know that this 2-CD Wagner miscellany was condcuted by Toscanini, you wouldn't find it extraordinary. Unlike Bruno Walter and Otto Klemperer, who lived to great old age and made some of their most sympathetic recordings after turning 75, the aged Toscanini has required special pleading. On the surface, the many recordings he made with the NBC Sym.--these Wagner pieces span 1949 to 1952--are often brusque, rigid, screechy in climaxes, dry to the point of unlistenability, and without expressive relaxation. This was great conducting?
Yes, devotees insisted, but you had to listen through the claustrophic sound and imagine the younger Toscanini thruogh the inflexible stick discipline. As the years went on, that became too hard to do, and despite his legendary status, Toscanini became a dead letter. The younger conductors he inspired--Szell, Leinsdorf, Solti--are dead, too, though in their prime they all made similar recordings in much beter sound than The Maestro.
This newly remastered "Immortal" series goes a long way to repairing the defective sound. It's now fuller and has audible air around the orchestra. You no longer feel you are suffocating in a closed box with a hundred trapped musicians. As for the interpretations, Wagner is a good place to start rehabilitating Toscanini for modern ears. Even in his late seventies and eighties, Toscanini remained an expansive Wagnerite. Several excerpts here, such as the Tristan Prelude and Love Death, the Parsifal Act I Prelude and Good Friday Music, and the Lohengrin Act I Prelude, are broad and contemplative. They radiate a serene inner beauty quite at odds with Toscanini's reputation for knife-edge tenseness.
But except for the Tristan Prelude--and then only the first half--I wouldn't call these readings great. Toscanini was famous for making orchestras play precisely, and he punished slackness with cruel invective and tantrums. Now, however, every major orchestra plays with more finesse and technique than the NBC Symphony. The crude trumpets bray painfully in the middle part of the Parsifal Prelude, the solo horn in Siegfried's Rhine Journey sounds as timid as a conservatory student, and we are reminded that Toscanini didn't have a totally first-rate ensemble at his command. On the other hand, the strings are radiant in the same Parsifal music, for the first time sounding sweet and inspirational.
To my ears there is only one great performance here, a rivetig Dawn and Rhine Journey from Gotterdammerung that blazes with intensity and conviction. Nothing else quite rises to that standard, and we are left to perform the difficult trick of imagining how much better this all would have been in Toscanini's heyday between the wars. I am not that imaginative, so I'd say this is an excellent portrait of Toscanini the elder, totally free of blemishes but not at a sublime level of musicianship.
Exceptional performances.......2004-06-16
Toscanini was a mercurial conductor, a force of nature and the performances of Wagner are filled with deep commitment , when you play Wagner you must notice the existence of several gravity centers you must keep in mind. Otherwise you can play a lineal Wagner and that would be a mess. The score and the dramatic sequence are so important and even more perhaps that the music itself . They work out as if they were twins , So if you want to win in Wagner you have to maintain in your mind the dyoinisiac and apolinean features in the performance .
Beethoven seventh is filled with histamine and powerful and overwhelming rhytm presence .
It's not my favorite Seventh I must confess but it has character , violence and rapture , and with these elements it's very difficult for you to fail the challenge.
One of the major achievements of the master Toscanini.
Toscanini and Wagner.......2003-10-22
Although Toscanini was usually associated closely with Italian opera, particularly the works of Verdi, he made it clear that he considered Richard Wagner the master when it came to musical drama. He had a long-standing appreciation of Wagner, which led him to conduct many of the composer's works during his long career. Furthermore, Toscanini was the first non-German conductor to be invited to conduct at the Bayreuth Festival, in 1930. The invitation came from no less than Siegfried Wagner, the composer's son.
Unfortunately, the only complete opera by Wagner that Toscanini ever recorded was "Meistersinger," during the Salzburg Festival in 1937. In Toscanini's many recordings with the NBC Symphony for RCA Victor, he recorded only excerpts from Wagner's operas. Nevertheless, the excerpts of Wagner's music are quite impressive.
One of the more memorable recordings was of the finale to Act I of "Walkure," recorded during a broacast concert in Carnegie Hall in February 1941 with soprano Helen Traubel and tenor Lauritz Melchior. Typically, the Maestro drove the orchestra relentlessly, maintaining intensity and excitement throughout. The same wonderful results can be heard in the 1952 recording of "The Ride of the Valkyries," a concert arrangement derived from "Walkure." This performance builds and builds as the valkyries ride.
Toscanini's recordings in the early 1950's tend to be rather "bright," since RCA was emphasizing the highs in "high fidelity," sometimes overshadowing the bass tones. Still, despite some tampering with the sound, such performances are absolutely amazing, given the fact that the Maestro was in his eighties at the time.
In all of the Wagner music he conducted, one is absolutely amazed at his fidelity to the composer's intentions. He may have come closer to what Wagner wanted than any other conductor.
An unfortunate incident came in Toscanini's final NBC broadcast concert, in Carnegie Hall on April 4, 1954, when his emotions over his impending retirement got the best of him. It has become legendary how he faltered during the "Venusburg" music of the Tannhauser overture (Paris version) and NBC temporarily replaced the broadcast with a recording of the Brahms first symphony. Adding to the misfortune of that concert is that it was one of the few times the NBC Symphony under Toscanini was recorded in stereo; despite excellent sound, the orchestra simply did not play its best that day. None of that happened in the 1952 studio recording of the same overture, also recorded in Carnegie Hall.
This compilation features the best of Toscanini's performances of Wagner and is definitely worth having. It is an opportunity to really appreciate the greatness of Wagner's music, even if his personal life was marred by his egotism and racism.
Clarity of sound...impeccable conducting...masterful..........2003-04-20
This review relates to the Toscanini recordings
of Wagner selections with the NBC Symphony
Orchestra, Vol. VII, in the BMG series, "Arturo
Toscanini: The Immortal"
In the enclosed brochure, the producers of the
recording tell about the new remastering which
has prompted the releasing of this particular
set of Toscanini recordings. "The recordings in
this new series were made using 20-bit recording
technology, UV22 (TM) Super CD Encoding, Cello
and Struder tape systems and were processed from
the original analog source tape masters at the
BMG/RCA Studios in New York."
All it takes is listening to the "Forest Murmurs"
selection from -Siegfried- to hear what the
"masterful" and "clarity" mean. The sound of
the French horns and glockenspiel are brilliant
and fascinating...the final orchestral chord
on each of these pieces is august. There is
no murkiness in these interpretations --
all is pristine, but the pace is not slow.
I was privileged to be able to preview
listen to the recordingbefore I bought the recording...just
hearing the first section of the "Ride of
the Valkyries" let me know that I wanted
the recording (2 CDs for the price of one).
My ears are perfectionist, so it takes a
lot of different elements combined to satisfy
my acutely sensitive ears and aesthetic
longings. The quality of the earphones or
playback system will, no doubt, affect
the quality of sound delivery. The earphones
at the sound was richer than the earphone
quality of a Sony Discman which I am playing
it on as I type this review. On the Discman
earphones, the sound is a bit too treble (though
those brasses still come through with full-
bodied energy and verve) and "boxy." One
of the recordings is from a live performance,
so be forewarned that you will hear a cough or
two. But, for the price, the mastery of
conducting and recording reprocessing, this
duo can't be bettered.
"Holder Sang/ singt zu mir her." ["Lovely
sounds/ ravish my ears."] -Das Rheingold-.
Stunning, Nontraditional Wagner.......2001-07-28
It is difficult in our time to think of the music of Wagner as a contemporary. But for Arturo Toscanini, who made his conducting debut in 1886, only three years after Wagner's death, that is exactly how it was. Toscanini was an early champion of Wagner's music, leading the first performance of Gotterdammerung by an Italian Opera Company in 1895, and performing orchestral excerpts long before it was fashionable outside of Germany. He continued to perform the composer's music in the United States, including during World War II, when it was out of favor due to the Nazi's use of the music--and Wagner's anti-Semitism--for propaganda purposes. Astonishingly, Toscanini lived long enough to conduct two all-Wagner concerts on television.
Toscanini's Wagner has long been criticized in some circles as superficial, fast, lacking in guts, and "Italianate"--an example of ethnic stereotyping which would not be tolerated in any other profession. The performances on these CDs strongly refute that assertion. They are nontraditional, to be sure--and all the more convincing for that.
Take, for example, Siegfried's Death and Funeral Music from Gotterdammerung: during the violin triplets leading to the March's climax, Toscanini does not accelerate through the figurations, as is usually done, but rather SLOWS the tempo, creating a greater sense of anticipation. The effect is stunning, greatly increasing the emotional impact of the music.
Toscanini was unafraid to move beyond the "popular" sections of Wagner's output. He conducted Parsifal at Bayreuth in 1931--the slowest performance of that opera ever given at Wagner's shrine up to that time. His 1949 recording of the Prelude and Good Friday Spell from that opera reveal a nobility which has nothing to do with bombast.
The recordings on this 2-CD set date from 1949-1952. The remastering is nothing short of remarkable, far eclipsing early 1990s CD reissue. Utilizing the best technology now available, RCA has done the right thing by hiring a musician--conductor Edward Houser--rather than whiz-bang technicians to supervise the remastering. The NBC Symphony Orchestra now sounds better than ever before, with greater clarity, smoother strings, fuller winds, and less distortion during fortissimos. There is a very slight high-pitched electronic noise during Siegfried's Funeral March, but it is only noticeable at high volume.
Music Review:
- Rosvaenge in Trovatore & Un Ballo Mascara
- Saint-Saens: Complete Symphonies [Import] [Original recording remastered]
- Schillings: Das Hexenlied und andere Kompositionen
- Schubert: Licht Und Liebe/Abendröte/Gesänge Des Harfners/Lieder Der Mignon
- Schubert: Piano Trio
- Schumann: KREISLERIANA / Arabeske / Fantasie
- Schutz: Six Part Motets
- Secret Des Muses
- Sephardische Romanzen
- Seymour Group: Nigel Butterfly
Music Review
music review
Music Review
Lessons I Learned From Rocky I to Rocky III [CD-single] [Import]
Suite Pointillistique
Shchedrin: Piano Concertos Nos. 1-3
Those Dizzy Days [Import]
Top Tunes Karaoke CDG Hall of Fame Vol.3 TT-051
Por Si Volvieras
Singin' in My Soul
Tender Trap
Segundo Compasso: Samba & Choro [Import]
So Great a Joy
The Morgan Powell Jazz Album
Serie Max 3 X 1 [Box set]
The Grand Opening
The New York School
Close Up