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Myslivecek: Complete Music for Harpsichord & Violin
$14.99CDBrilliant Classics
Apr 30, 2026BRI97686 -
J. S. Bach: Sonate en trio d'apres, BWV 1027, 1028 & 1029
$20.99CDEnphases
Apr 24, 2026ENP022 -
This Place
$16.99CDConvivium Records
Jun 05, 2026CVI127 -
Liszt: Complete Piano Music, Vol. 69
$19.99CDNaxos
Jun 12, 20268574714 -
Just Wonderful
$20.99CDGenuin
May 01, 2026GEN 26952 -
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Charles Silver: La Belle au bois dormant
Myslivecek: Complete Music for Harpsichord & Violin
J. S. Bach: Sonate en trio d'apres, BWV 1027, 1028 & 1029
This Place
Chevalier de Saint-George - Portrait
Say & Kerschek: Trumpet Double Concertos
String Quartets, Vol. 3
Liszt: Complete Piano Music, Vol. 69
Santtu conducts Shostakovich - Moscow Cheryomushki & Symphon
Lully: Proserpine
Encore! Dora Deliyska
Just Wonderful
Respighi: Belkis, Queen Of Sheba Suite, Metamorphoseon Modi XII / Simon, Philharmonia
Recorded in: All Saints' Church, Tooting, London 21,22 January 1985 Producer(s) Brian Couzens Sound Engineer(s) Ralph Couzens Bill Todd [Assistant]
GRIMETHORPE COLLIERY BAND: French Bonbons
Fibich: Symphonies Nos. 1-3 - complete, At Twilight , The Ro
Sondheim: Sweeney Todd / Henschel, Stone, Schirmer
SONDHEIM Sweeney Todd • Ulf Schirmer, cond; Mark Stone ( Sweeney Todd ); Jane Henschel ( Mrs. Lovett ); Gregg Baker ( Anthony Hope ); Rebecca Bottone ( Johanna ); Jonathan Best ( Judge Turpin ); Adrian Dwyer ( Beadle Bamford ); Diana DiMarzio ( Beggar Woman ); Ronald Samm ( Pirelli ); Pascal Charbonneau ( Tobias ); Bavarian R Ch; Munich R O • BR 900316 (2 CDs: 123:59) Live: Munich 5/6/2012
Composer-librettist Stephen Sondheim maintains that Sweeney Todd is not an opera, and so does the annotator for the present release. Nevertheless, Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (its full title), since it premiered on Broadway in 1979, has been revived by several opera companies, including the New York City Opera, the Houston Grand Opera, and the Chicago Lyric Opera. Why? Musically, it is highly sophisticated, and operatic voices are not wasted on it. Furthermore, with its larger-than-life dramatic themes, including mistaken identity, lust, vengeance, obsession, madness, and murder, how more operatic could a theatrical work be?
There have been several recordings of this work, including the unforgettable original cast recording on RCA with Len Cariou in the title role, and Angela Lansbury in the role of Mrs. Lovett, his cheerfully amoral partner in crime. That version will never be eclipsed, but each new recording adds a welcome new perspective. The one reviewed here, recorded in the Munich’s Prinzregententheater, is the most operatic yet, even more than the one with the New York Philharmonic which features singers such as Heidi Grant Murphy (Johanna), John Aler (Beadle Bamford), and Paul Plishka (Judge Turpin). This time around, we have legitimate operatic singers in all of the main roles; only DiMarzio appears not to be a “classical” musician per se. In other words, here we have an ensemble of acting singers, as opposed to singing actors such as Cariou, Lansbury, George Hearn, Patti LuPone, and Michael Cerveris, who all have made major contributions to this opera’s . . . I mean, musical’s performance history.
It turns out fairly well. I was immediately pulled in by Ulf Schirmer’s conducting, which is tense, taut, and stylish. In fact, you might not hear a better conducted Sweeney Todd anywhere. The Bavarian Radio Choir also adds much to the success of this performance. Although their diction is less clear than that of English-speaking ensembles who have recorded this music, their dramatic involvement is high, as is their musicianship.
This is an actual performance. Apparently the time, funds, or energy to correct the inevitable live lapses was unavailable, and thus we have oddities such as Henschel at one point rechristening Beadle Bamford as “Beadle Rumford.” A few memory lapses are covered professionally, but will leave those who know the show well asking, “What did (s)he just sing?” These issues are minor, though.
I’m more concerned about two other points. One is the lack of (black, very black) humor in this production. For example, I can’t understand why, in “A Little Priest,” the wonderfully uncomfortable pun about a meat pie made from a general (“With or without his privates?”) has been removed. This is a grim show, still there is much about it that can be very funny, and allowing it to be so makes the gore and horror even more effective. As the original Mrs. Lovett, Angela Lansbury was charming and endearing; she might bake you into a meat pie, but you couldn’t stay angry with her for long! Henschel can’t inspire that kind of affection, and she makes it clear that her murderous instincts were present even before opportunity allowed them to come out. The other thing that concerns me is the way in which some of the big dramatic moments are almost thrown away. Todd’s aborted murder of Judge Turpin (interrupted by Anthony’s untimely arrival) should be a big moment, but it isn’t. Similarly, soon after, in Todd’s “Epiphany,” we should feel his mind crack and his murderous rage insanely swell to encompass all of mankind, not just the Judge, but Mark Stone is not that fine an actor, the direction is too hurried, and one of the show’s most Brechtian moments doesn’t come off. The last segment of the show, with its string of murders and its Grand Guignol effects, moves forward jerkily, sometimes grinding to a halt, and sometimes not pausing long enough to make its points. On Broadway, Harold Prince would have fixed these miscalculations, but, at least as I am hearing them on CD, they were not addressed in Munich’s Prinzregententheater.
All of the singing itself is very fine. One curiosity is a baritone Anthony; Gregg Baker’s voice is darker than Mark Stone’s. Anthony is supposed to be an inexperienced sailor, newly arrived in London, and the early scenes between him and Todd feel strange, because the voice relationships have been inverted from the original production. I really missed hearing a tenor’s voice soar into “Johanna,” one of Sondheim’s most rapturous love songs. Also, the multinational cast presents a variety of accents. In 1979, Cariou had almost no accent at all, while Lansbury made the most of hers. Here, we have the reverse: a cockney Todd in Baker, and a Mrs. Lovett of no particular nationality or region in Henschel. Someday, there will be a production of this work in which everyone gets on the same page with dialects.
So, if you want an operatic Sweeney Todd , or a fresh look at it, this new recording will satisfy. It has many enjoyable moments, but a few unfortunate ones as well. If you do not know this show at all, however, the Broadway cast recording—still in print, thank goodness!—is the only place to begin. This show is one of the masterpieces of American musical theater, and absolutely needs to be heard.
FANFARE: Raymond Tuttle
Janacek: The Diary of One Who Disappeared - Dvorak: Biblical Songs - Smetana: Evening Songs / Pribyl
SCHUBERT, F.: Schöne Müllerin (Die) (Wunderlich, Stolze) (19
Paderewski: Piano Concerto, Polish Fantasy / Kenner, Niesiolowski, Podlasie Opera Orchestra
PADEREWSKI Piano Concerto. Polish Fantasy • Kevin Kenner (pn); Marcin Na??cz-Niesio?owski, cond; Podlasie Op O • DUX 733 (55:40)
Well, I’ve certainly been immersed in Paderewski lately … at least, Paderewski at one or two removes, which is not the same thing as the real deal. First, there was the Homage to Paderewski set on Hyperion 67903, which I reviewed in Fanfare 35:4, and now this new recording of his concerto and Polish Fantasy. As I expected, the concerto is very much in the big, late-Romantic mold of Brahms, Rubinstein, and other composers, but it’s a solid piece built around native Polish rhythms and with an interesting and exciting development section in the first movement. (In fact, at one point a solo piano passage sounds a little bit like a Russian folk song.) Although it is said that the second theme is an evocation of Chopin, it is an original melody and not one borrowed from that composer. The slow movement is even more delicate than Chopin’s andantes , almost Debussyan in its sparse use of the piano in the beginning and actually built around a three-part tune. Eventually, this delicate melody becomes more energetic, but never so much that the initial impression is forgotten. The lively rondo finale, based on a krakowiak, is likewise contrasted with a stately chorale that eventually caps the piece.
I find the Polish Fantasy an even more interesting work, having a more melancholy cast and somewhat related to Liszt’s Hungarian fantasies. It can be divided into four sections, each with its own character, though they are bound together by a mazurka-like motif. It is very nearly a concerto in itself, running over 21 minutes. I suspect that the composer refrained from calling it one simply because the four sections are played without a break, and such works in his day were almost always relegated to the “fantasy” category.
Kevin Kenner, despite his American origins, proves himself to be fully up to the task of interpreting this Eastern European music. Like all modern pianists, he eschews the slightly out-of-synch coordination of hands favored by Paderewski and many other pianists of his generation, preferring to play in a clean, rhythmically consistent manner, but he certainly gets the feel of Polish music very well. Of course, having a Polish orchestra and conductor helps, and I am more than a little amused to see that the orchestra hails from Bia?ystok (known as the “Jerusalem of Poland” because of its heavy Jewish population and the birthplace of Dr. Albert Sabin, immortalized by Mel Brooks with the name of his principal character—Max Bialystock—in his zany comedy The Producers ). All concerned play beautifully on this CD, giving us about as convincing a reading of these works as can be imagined. One can find more visceral and exciting readings from Janina Fialkowska, supported by the great Antoni Wit, on Naxos 8554020, and by the late, great Earl Wild (the concerto on Elán 2266 with Arthur Fiedler and the London Symphony, the Fantasy on Ivory 72010 with conductor Massimo Freccia), but this recording meets the demands of the music with a more convincing nationalistic flavor than Wild and less clattery sound than we get from Fialkowska’s piano. Recommended without hesitation for both the unusual repertoire and its presentation.
FANFARE: Lynn René Bayley
Beethoven: Revisited Symphonies 1-9 / Stangel, Pocket Philharmonic
This is an extraordinary journey through the most preeminent of classical symphonies. With an ensemble of only 12-16 top-quality musicians, the Pocket Philharmonic Orchestra explores Beethoven's musical origins. All the great conductors and orchestras have shown where Beethoven led: how his ideas paved the way for later masters like Schumann, Bruckner and Mahler. What hasn't been shown yet is where Beethoven was: where his musical language came from, how he shifted standards and developed techniques in a completely new and revolutionary way. The Pocket Philharmonic has a new approach to this idea: instead of a full chamber or symphony orchestra, the ensemble performs as a chamber ensemble in a symphonic manner – symphonic chamber music, or chamber music symphonies, so to speak. "This is the most vivid performance of the Eroica you have ever heard" said the critics. “It makes the revolution in his music audible. "An outstanding listening experience."
Ceremonial Music / United States Air Force Heritage Of America Band
DISC 1
1 Adjutant's Call - C.M.T.C. March 2:16
2 Sound Off, into Trombones Triumphant 0:38
3 Officer's Center - Officer of the Day March 2:27
4 Inspection Waltz 3:56
5 Bugles and Drums 2:22
6 First Call 0:12
7 Reveille 0:24
8 Assembly 0:12
9 Mess Call 0:14
10 Attention 0:09
11 Officers Call 0:10
12 Drill 0:11
13 Fatigue 0:14
14 Carry On 0:08
15 Recall 0:12
16 Church 0:38
17 Adjutant's Call 0:13
18 Retreat (Solo) 0:25
19 Retreat 0:29
20 To the Colors 0:39
21 Tattoo 0:56
22 Taps (Solo) 1:01
23 Taps 0:57
24 Echo Taps 1:06
25 Taps with Brass Accompaniment 1:22
26 First Sergeant's Call 0:09
27 Charge 0:10
28 Roast Beef of Old England 0:58
29 Yankee Doodle 1:23
30 York Marsch 2:20
31 President of the United States 0:50
32 Vice-President of the United States 0:39
33 Congressional Honors 0:45
34 4 Ruffles and Flourishes and General's March (arr. F. Kepner) 0:26
35 3 Ruffles and Flourishes and General's March (arr. F. Kepner) 0:25
36 2 Ruffles and Flourishes and General's March (arr. F. Kepner) 0:23
37 1 Ruffle and Flourish and General's March (arr. F. Kepner) 0:22
38 4 Ruffles and Flourishes and Flag Officer's March (arr. W.H. Santelmann) 0:24
39 3 Ruffles and Flourishes and Flag Officer's March (arr. W.H. Santelmann) 0:23
40 2 Ruffles and Flourishes and Flag Officer's March (arr. W.H. Santelmann) 0:20
41 1 Ruffle and Flourish and Flag Officer's March (arr. W.H. Santelmann) 0:19
42 1 Ruffle and Flourish - Last 32 of Stars and Stripes Forever 0:39
43 The Stars and Stripes Forever 0:37
44 Trio to the National Emblem 1:20
45 2/4 Drum Cadence 0:42
46 6/8 Drum Cadence 0:44
47 The Star Spangled Banner 1:22
48 The Air Force Song (arr. R.R. Bennett) 0:37
49 The Air Force Song (arr. J. Wasson) 3:10
50 The U.S. Air Force Blue March (arr. L. Ludlow) 0:59
51 Lord Guard and Guide, "The Air Force Hymn" 1:06
52 Lord Guard and Guide, "The Air Force Hymn" (arr. F. Werle) 1:06
53 The Air Force Dirge (arr. G. Cray) 5:18
54 U.S. Army Song (arr. Lake) 0:37
55 God of Our Fathers 1:31
56 The U.S. Navy Song (arr. P. Yoder) 0:36
57 Eternal Father, strong to save, "Melita" (arr. C. Smith) 1:07
58 The Marines' Hymn (arr. D. Hunsberger) 0:38
59 The Marines' Hymn (arr. Farmer) 1:28
60 U.S. Coast Guard Song (arr. W.C. Schoenfeld) 0:36
61 Armed Services Medley 3:34
62 The Stars and Stripes Forever 3:26
63 Gary Owen March (arr. J. McFulton) 2:30
64 Semper Fidelis 2:46
65 Heave Ho! My Lads, Heave Ho! 2:11
66 The Song of the Seabees 3:15
67 American Legion March 2:17
68 American Red Cross 2:26
DISC 2
1 Liberty Fanfare 0:25
2 Emperata Overture 0:22
3 Ceremonial Fanfare 0:44
4 3 Jubilant Fanfares: No. 1. Fanfare Jubilante 0:29
5 Aloft! 0:28
6 America The Beautiful (arr. C. Dragon) 3:15
7 Battle Hymn of the Republic (arr. S. Nestico) 4:33
8 God Bless America (arr. E. Leidzen) 2:17
9 My country 'tis of thee, "America" 1:09
10 This Is My Country (arr. F. Werle) 1:59
11 God Bless the USA (arr. for wind ensemble) 3:08
12 Wind Beneath My Wings 3:32
13 Hero for Today 3:32
14 The Last Full Measure of Devotion (arr. M. Davis) 5:03
15 Americans We 2:48
16 National Emblem 2:58
17 The Washington Post March 2:38
18 Chimes of Liberty 3:11
19 Hail to the Spirit of Liberty 3:31
20 Hands Across the Sea 2:47
21 Auld Lang Syne 1:41
22 Military March No. 1 in D major, Op. 39, "Pomp and Circumstance" (Land of Hope and Glory) (arr. C. Grundman) 5:36
23 Amazing Grace (arr. W. Walker) 1:38
24 Amazing Grace (arr. F. Ticheli) 4:43
25 Eternal Father, strong to save, "Melita" (arr. C. Smith) 1:56
26 God of Our Fathers 1:31
27 Nearer my God to Thee (arr. P. Rawlins) 2:42
Beethoven: Piano Concertos 2 & 5 for Sextet / Shybayeva, Animato Quartet
During the Biedermeier period, the piano gained huge popularity as a domestic instrument, and piano concertos were increasingly arranged for chamber music ensembles. Ignaz Lachner’s superb arrangements of Mozart’s piano concertos are well known, but his brother Vinzenz Lachner’s arrangements of Beethoven’s concertos are a rarity, though equally as valuable. This volume completes the cycle of Beethoven’s Piano Concertos in Vinzenz Lachner’s transcriptions for piano and string quintet.
Bruckner: Symphony No 3 / Tintner, Royal Scottish No

Every so often a recording comes out that is so powerful, so comprehensive in its interpretive vision, that it not only makes the music sound completely new, it forces a complete reappraisal of the music's overall significance. Georg Tintner's Bruckner Third is one such recording. In fact, it offers such a fundamental reappraisal of this music that it's safe to say that until you hear this recording, you have not heard Bruckner's Third Symphony. In order to understand why this is so, it's necessary to understand something of the history of the work. First composed in 1873 and dedicated to Wagner, the symphony went through at least two major revisions in the wake of its disastrous Vienna premiere. For the most part, these revisions involved cuts, but also some recasting of the basic thematic material of the first and last movement in a heavier, more "late Bruckner" style. The final, truncated version published by Nowak is the one most frequently played today, but the slightly less cut Oeser edition (the "middle" version) has been gaining favor recently, and has been recorded by conductors such as Haitink and Sinopoli.
Because Bruckner's later thoughts on the symphony reflect his more mature orchestral practice, the Third has acquired a reputation as a hybrid, a "magnificent failure" that falls between the Schubertian world of the early symphonies and his monumental later achievement. This view was reinforced by Robert Simpson's unsympathetic account of the work in his important English language study of the Bruckner symphonies. Eliahu Inbal's first recording of the original 1873 version for Teldec did nothing to dispel this impression, being a rapid and not especially well played performance that merely set out the notes that Bruckner wrote. Tintner's spacious, epic conception of the symphony couldn't be more different. In the first place, it plays for more than 77 minutes, making it Bruckner's longest symphony after the Eighth (and in fact longer than many performances of that work). But the tempos never sound slow. Rather, Tintner gives each thematic group time to breathe, to present its themes in Bruckner's characteristic blocks of sound, and along the way we make some fascinating discoveries. The first of these reveals the exposition of the first movement to be the richest and most thematically diverse that Bruckner ever wrote, with no less than four complete subject complexes. The spaciousness of the exposition makes the development section sound unusually concentrated for Bruckner, the movement's overall form confidently poised and balanced.
After the 30-minute first movement, with its huge contrasts of dynamics and texture, the lyrical adagio comes as the ideal contrast, and Tintner's gracious phrasing, combined with his ability to find just the right tempo, keeps the music moving with a real sense of inevitability. The Scherzo has never been controversial, and Tintner captures its lightness and rustic dance qualities as have few others, but it's the finale that offers the final revelation. Here, Tintner's confidence in Bruckner's vision pays huge dividends in a movement long regarded as almost a complete bust, formally speaking. With all the "cyclical" elements that were later removed still in place (the recollections of earlier themes), and a tempo that gives the music time to reveal its clear derivation from the melodies and accompaniments of the first movement, what we really have is one of Bruckner's most ambitious and far reaching formal successes, an energetic and satisfying counterbalance to the epic expanses of the symphony's opening. Tintner's belief in this symphony reveals it to be not some sort of unfortunate hybrid, but the product of a fully mature (he was 49 when he wrote it!), even radical composer. This in turn makes its initial failure in performance all the more understandable: there was certainly nothing even remotely like it in 1873. The conventional wisdom that the "real" Bruckner begins with the revised Fourth Symphony simply will not stand. It's this work that is his symphonic manifesto, and no one hearing this performance will doubt it for a second.
The Royal Scottish National Orchestra deserves a huge amount of credit for sharing Tintner's patience and conviction. The light tone of the strings, in particular, sounds especially "right" in this symphony, and in this case preferable to the darker, heavier sound of many Continental orchestras in this music. Tintner's Bruckner series has been almost uniformly excellent, but I think that this recording is the finest of them all. Its importance to our understanding of Bruckner's symphonic achievement is such that it amounts to nothing less than a premiere performance of a newly discovered masterpiece. Recordings this significant happen all too rarely. Don't miss it.
--David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com
UNITED STATES ARMY CONCERT BAND: Carnival
Beethoven: Piano Concertos Nos. 5 "Emperor" & 0 / Giltburg, V. Petrenko, RLPO
These works share the common key of E flat major but represent two very different stages in the composer’s life. The Piano Concerto "No. 0," WoO 4, was written when Beethoven was 13 years old and is one of his earliest works. With the orchestral score lost, this extant version for piano solo written in Beethoven’s hand includes the tutti sections reduced for piano. The radiant ‘Emperor’ Concerto shows the 38-year-old Beethoven at the peak of his creative powers, and remains a glorious example of his spirit triumphing over life’s adversities.
REVIEW:
Boris Giltburg’s recording of Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto is offered with a scintillating twist, the ‘other’ E-flat concerto composed when the composer was 13. This brings Giltburg’s Beethoven concerto cycle to a close, his ebullience and physicality the reverse of plain-speaking, brilliantly partnered by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic under Vasily Petrenko.
Given such forces this is never simply ‘another’ Emperor, but one boldly and exuberantly conceived. Giltburg makes you listen with new ears to one of the most familiar and greatly loved works in the repertoire. The Piano Concerto No 0 (played in Beethoven’s original piano reduction) may be a protracted jeu d’esprit, but Giltburg’s relish of its tonic, virtuoso aplomb sets the pulse racing. Naxos soundworld is of an exceptional clarity and focus.
-- International Piano
Excellent performances of the Emperor and the rarely heard Concerto No. 0. The sound reproduction on this Naxos CD is vivid and well balanced. Those looking for an excellent performance of the Emperor and who are attracted to its lesser coupling, will certainly find this a most rewarding disc.
-- MusicWeb International
