Classical Vocals
705 products
Rachmaninoff: Vocalise / Rachmaninoff, Moffo, Kissin, Et Al
To know a piece of music, to truly understand the depth of its meaning, requires intense study. Once written, a great work takes on a life of its own, its full potential beyond even what its composer anticipates. This album, an exploration of Rachmaninov's 'Vocalise,' takes 13 interpretations and, by laying them side by side, shows how rich such a simple melody can be.
Each interpretation brings out something new in this beautiful, wordless song. Transcriptions for solo piano, solo flute, piano duet, soprano, full choir, and full orchestra show how flexibly the music accepts different ideas and instrumentation. The deep melancholy of Vladimir Spivakov's violin, accompanied by Sergei Bezrodny's piano, stands in stark contrast with the angelic transcendence found in countertenor Brian Asawa's performance.
Every listener will find his or her favorite performance here, but it is impossible to select a definitive interpretation. However, the Philadelphia Orchestra's version, conducted by Rachmaninov himself, has an air of authority. After all, who better to interpret the intentions of the composer than the composer himself?
Ramon Vargas - Mexico Lindo
Tallis: Spem in Alium / Summerly, Oxford Camerata
Includes work(s) by Thomas Tallis. Ensemble: Oxford Camerata. Conductor: Jeremy Summerly.
The Voice Of Bach / Taylor, Theatre Of Early Music
- BBC Music Magazine, [October 2008]
"...eloquently thought through and beautifully sung with the perfect sense of dramatic character:.. Sung with peerless vocal beauty and remarkably sensitive ornaments."
- Gramophone Magazine (About the Canadian counter tenor, Daniel Taylor.)
Fauré: Piano Works Vol 1 / Kathryn Stott
Best Of Thomas Quasthoff
2. Prometheus, Nachlaß, Lfg. 47 Quasthoff, Thomas 5:29
3. Winterreise, D. 911; Der Lindenbaum Quasthoff, Thomas; Spencer, Charles 5:01
4. Winterreise, D. 911; Der Leiermann Quasthoff, Thomas; Spencer, Charles 3:26
5. Der Musensohn, Op. 92/1, D. 764: Durch Feld und Wald zu schweifen Quasthoff, Thomas 1:56
6. Liederkreis, Op. 39; Waldesgespräch, Op. 39/3: Es ist schon spät, es wird schon kalt Quasthoff, Thomas 2:03
7. Liederkreis, Op. 39; Mondnacht, Op. 39/5: Es war, als hätt' der Himmel Quasthoff, Thomas 3:43
8. Dichterliebe, Op. 48; Im wunderschönen Monat Mai, Op. 48/1 Quasthoff, Thomas 1:24
9. Dichterliebe, Op. 48; Allnächtlich im Traume seh ich dich, Op. 48/14 Quasthoff, Thomas 1:22
10. Belsazar, Op. 57: Die Mitternacht zog näher schon Quasthoff, Thomas 4:02
11. Johannespassion, BWV 245; Eilt, ihr angefochtnen Seelen Guttenberg, Enoch zu 4:26
12. Johannespassion, BWV 245; Betrachte, meine Seele, mit ängstlichem Vergnügen Guttenberg, Enoch zu 2:06
13. Johannespassion, BWV 245; Mein teurer Heiland, laß dich fragen Guttenberg, Enoch zu 4:07
14. Mentre ti lascio, o figlia - Aria for Bass, K. 513 Quasthoff, Thomas 7:13
15. Don Giovanni, K. 527; Deh, vieni alla finestra Quasthoff, Thomas 2:03
16. Don Giovanni, K. 527; Madamina Quasthoff, Thomas 5:48
17. Die Zauberflöte, K. 620; Der Vogelfänger bin ich ja Quasthoff, Thomas 2:55
18. Die Zauberflöte, K. 620; Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen Quasthoff, Thomas 4:15
19. Die Zauberflöte, K. 620; In diesen heil'gen Hallen Quasthoff, Thomas 4:42
20. Die Zauberflöte; Duet Papageno & Papagena: Pa-pa-pa... Caballé, Montserrat; Quasthoff, Thomas 2:39
Arriverderci: Grigolo (17 track version)
Grigolo has been said by some to be the heir of Pavarotti — fine. But Grigolo’s voice has purityand innate beauty along with the passion; a ringing, golden top; a centered, solidly secure placement across his range; and none of the spread, forced, hard-edged upper- register tone of his predecessor. Grigolo is young and talented, with natural gifts and a devotion to his art that bodes well for his future. He seems to understand that this is a long-term proposi- tion; that there is a difference between selling your talent and building a career; that to be a great singer, to sustain a career, to make music that is memorable and meaningful across years of performances and all manner of audiences takes time and care and patience, that a deep respect for the craft of singing is at least as important as an appreciation for one’s natural ability. Grigolo is not immune from a little over-the-top indulgence (Enrico Cannio’s “O surdata ‘nnammurato”), but you won’t mind because at the same time you will be savoring the memory of his meltingly affecting “Un’ aura amorosa” (Cosi) and powerful “Recondita armonia” (Tosca) and “È la solita storia” (L’arlesiana). The sound, recorded in Parma’s Auditorium Niccoló Paganini and London’s Wathen Hall, is ideal; the orchestral playing and direction is spot on.
—?David?Vernier, Listen: Life With Classical Music
Desprez: Missa "la Sol Fa Re Mi", Motets / Ruhland
Inspired Voices - Music To Enhance Your Spirit
This selection contains both ADD and DDD recordings.
Vocal Masterworks - Regina Resnik - Song Recital
She also sings her heart out in five Mahler songs, four of which are from 'Des Knaben Wunderhorn.' The fifth, "Hans und Grete," has a text by Mahler himself which contains a humorous allusion to the famous fairytale duo. Resnik's handling of this material is both touching and colorful, further emphasizing her vast artistic ability. The inclusion of an excerpt from Menotti's 'The Medium' with Resnik singing one of Madame Flora's arias about the old, scheming, now-repentant woman is a nice programmatic end to the disc. Resnik is able to conjure both scorn and compassion from the listener--not an easy feat.
Bulgarian Soul / Vesselina Kasarova
That this performance was captured for posterity is a blessing for music lovers everywhere. Extraordinary performances, highlighted by that of previously unknown Mirella Freni (as Mimì) are a joy to behold. A reading vastly different than any that had come before, this 'La Bohème' pursued the inner-life of the characters with a success that may be the driving factor in subsequent reinterpretations of classic pieces.
The recording quality of this album evokes the sound of Vienna's classic opera house. Digital remastering has cleaned up any irregularities caused by the era's recording techniques, making this classic performance a collector's piece.
Gilbert & Sullivan: Here's A Howdy Do! / The King's Singers
Prayers and Praise
CANONS
Nørgård: Songs from Evening Land
Buxtehude: Vocal Music, Vol 2 / Reuter, Munk, Et Al
The four cantatas give us the chance to hear Buxtehude employing a variety of strategies.
Das neugeborne Kindelein sets the four verses of a Christmas hymn first published in 1588 by Cyriacus Schneegass (1546-1597), German hymn-writer, composer and music theorist. The words have a simple radiance, each of the four stanzas made up of four lines rhymed aabb. Buxtehude treats them interestingly; he adopts different approaches for each of the four stanzas. In the first he sets the opening three lines, the initial announcement of the recurrent ‘new’ birth of Christ and its significance, relatively plainly, allowing the words to dominate and hold the attention. Then, as if to celebrate the significance of the words of proclamation, the final line of Schneegass’s first stanza is richly elaborated through repetition and contrapuntal echo. Between each stanza we get an instrumental ritornello and after its first return, the second stanza offers yet more vocal elaboration and responds beautifully to the text’s assertion that the angels are singing in the sky, a response heightened by a greater use of instrumental accompaniment interwoven with the vocal phrases than was allowed to happen in the first stanza. The third stanza speaks of the battle against “Teufel, Welt und Höllenpfort” and the sense of conflict is heightened by much greater use of instrumental interjections which break up the vocal phrases and the lines of the verse. In the fourth stanza, as the text grows to a full realisation that the birth of “das Jesuslein” guarantees the possibility of human salvation, the musical metre changes and the instruments and voices work more obviously together, so that verse, voice and instruments embody, in their new relationship, the transformation into coherent meaning of which the hymn speaks. Buxtehude, in short, has integrated text, singers and instrumental ensemble with a completeness of achieved purpose that makes Das neugeborne Kindelein a minor masterpiece.
In Der Herr ist mit mir the text is taken from the Psalms (Psalm 118 verses 6-7). In the Authorized Version it reads thus: “The Lord is on my side; I will not fear: what can man do unto me. The Lord taketh my part with them that help me: therefore shall I see my desire upon them that hate me”. To the German translation of these verses is added a concluding ‘Hallelujah’. Buxtehude sets the Psalm text in predominantly homophonic fashion, the text remaining clearly and emphatically audible, its meaning emphasised by some patterned rhythmic and harmonic touches. With the ‘Hallelujah’ Buxtehude launches into a virtuoso ciacona made up of nineteen variations over two-bar ostinato bass. The contrast with what has gone before is startling and exciting.
The most dramatically expressive work here is Fürwahr, er trug unsere Krankheit, setting verses from Isaiah prophetic of the crucifixion. There is some powerful instrumental writing and Buxtehude’s music articulates a powerful response to the idea of the Passion; the writing, both for the bass soloist and for the chorus, as well as for the sections of the chorus, is consistently intense and moving. The response to the imagery of Christ’s wounds and “stripes” is especially poignant. Fürwahr, er trug unsere Krankheit is a fine piece, full of sustained melodies and aching harmonies, and it comes off particularly well in this recording.
Alles, was ihr tut is perhaps the most familiar of these four cantatas. It is an exhortation to ensure that (in the words of the Epistle to the Colossians) “whatsoever ye do in word or deed, [ye] do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God and the father by him”, as well as a petition that God might assist both individual and community. Buxtehude fruitfully juxtaposes elements of the sacred concerto and the aria, as well as the setting of a chorale text to an already existing melody; homophonic passages and contrapuntal writing are employed by turns; the interplay of instruments and voices is always effective and interesting. In passing phrases – both textual and musical – between soloist and chorus, Buxtehude seems to offer an artistic statement as to the proper relationship between the individual and the community in a Christian society. The whole work breathes an untroubled faith and the continuo work from the Dufay Ensemble is particularly striking here.
The external evidence makes it unlikely that the Magnificat is Buxtehude’s; although one copy of the work was found in the collection of Buxtehude’s friend Gustav Düben, who certainly owned copies of works by Buxtehude, it has to be said that he also owned works by other composers too; other surviving copies of this setting come from areas of Europe where Buxtehude is not known to have had any connections. Nor, indeed, does it really sound like Buxtehude; it lacks the subtlety and inventiveness of Buxtehude at anything like his best. It is pleasant but undistinguished and is perhaps best attributed to that old favourite ‘Anon’.
These are not perfect performances. The closing ‘Hallelujah’ of Der Herr ist mit mir hasn’t quite the brilliance and lightness of touch that the music deserves; Johan Reuter’s bass, though tonally very apt and attractive, isn’t quite as expressive as one might wish; just now and then, by the highest standards, the voices of one or two of the choir’s soloists sound overtaxed. On the other hand, the Choir as a whole sings beautifully, their work tonally lovely, their diction exemplary. The performances are certainly plenty good enough to give the hearer a pretty good idea of just how fine this music is.
-- Glyn Pursglove, MusicWeb International
TEACHING
Guitar Recital: Michalis Kontaxakis
Walcha: Chorale Preludes, Vol. 1 / Rubsam
A native of Leipzig and steeped in the musical tradition of J. S. Bach, Helmut Walcha was one of the most influential organists of the 20th century. Building on Baroque examples, Walcha started composing the Chorale Preludes during the war years and they became popular teaching pieces as well as ideal vehicles for expressing the clarity and colour of organs both historic and new. As one of Walcha’s most renowned students, Wolfgang Rübsam’s interpretations are uniquely authoritative. This is the first of four volumes of Walcha’s complete Chorale Preludes.
Lamenti Barocchi Vol 3 / Vartolo, Capella Musicale Di San Petronio
the sheer joy of hearing Italian singers in this repertoire where so much rests on the text, especially since these are singers whose accuracy of pitch and sureness of focus means that they can sing together with instrumental clarity -- Early Music Review
SCHUMANN: Romances and Ballads
HUGO WOLF: LIEDER NACH TEXTEN
The King's Singers - Live At The BBC Proms
VARIOUS The King's Singers. LIVE AT THE BBC PROMSTracks: Chansons Francaises; Scenes in America Deserta; Dessus le marched'Aeeas; Il est bel et bon; Toutes les nuitz; La Guerre; Hears not my Phyllis; Phillis is my only joy; The Little Green Lane; The Goslings; Greensleeves; Blow Away the Morning Dew; The Turtle Dove; Widdicombe Fair; The Long Day Closes.
LES LECONS DES TENEBRES
