Orchestral & Symphonic CDs
Orchestral & Symphonic CDs
13829 products
Castello: Sonata concertate in stil moderno, Book 1 / Egarr, Academy of Ancient Music
Academy of Ancient Music
Available as
CD
$20.99
Sep 30, 2016
Classical Music
Beethoven: Violin Concerto, Violin Sonata No 5 / J Szigeti
CBS Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Dec 28, 2007
BEETHOVEN: VIOLIN CONCERTO, VI
Mahler: Symphony No 1 / Levine, LSO
RCA
Available as
CD
$17.99
Jul 16, 2007
Time flies in the supposedly timeless world of classical music. It's easy to forget superb performances of even the greatest masterpieces when confronted with dozens, indeed hundreds, of recordings that differ from one another audibly, but often not all that significantly. So it is with this Mahler First, certainly one of the freshest and most vibrant performances, but one that also tends to get lost in the shuffle. The playing of the LSO is terrific: the scherzo bids fair to be the best on disc, but then Levine seems unusually energized and spontaneous throughout. Only the opening of the finale fails to erupt with the kind of violence that others (Bernstein especially) bring to it. Levine seems a mite hasty here, not giving the brass enough time to really bite as they should. But this also is the result of sonics that are dry in the bass and not all that wide-ranging compared with today's digital norm. Still, despite this minor caveat, this is an outstanding performance in all other respects, and moreover one that will sound well on iPods, in cars, and in all of those places where soft passages tend to vanish annoyingly in a welter of ambient noise. It certainly deserves to remain available, and thanks to Arkivmusic.com "on demand", it will be.
--David Hurwitz,ClassicsToday.com
--David Hurwitz,ClassicsToday.com
Placidus Von Camerloher: Kammermusik, Sinfonien, Arien
Thorofon
Available as
CD
$18.99
Feb 12, 2016
Founded in 1999 by cellist and gamba player Sabrina Lehrmann, Neue Freisinger Hofmusik (New Freising Court Music) view themselves as present-day successors of the prince-bishop court musicians of Freising. The ensemble performs on authentic and reconstructed historical musical instruments in differing combinations. Their focus is music originating from Freising and Southern Germany, and other places central to European culture in the 17th and 18th centuries. This album gives insight into the compositional master of Freising court musician, Placidus von Camerloher. Almost all of these compositions have never before been recorded.
The Royal Edition - Russian Orchestral Music / Bernstein
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
Bernstein's charisma is effectively demonstrated in a collection of Russian music... [P]redictably energetic...are Glinka's Ruslan and Ludmilla Overture and Glière's Russian Sailors' Dance from The Red Poppy... But the highlights are lyrical, with Bernstein suitably atmospheric in a fine account of Borodin's In the steppes of Central Asia and giving a coolly poised reading of the beautiful Prelude to Khovantschina of Mussorgsky (with glowing orchestration from Rimsky-Korsakov).
-- Gramophone [7/1985]
------------------------------------------------
...Prokofiev's Scythian Suite, which [Bernstein] does well; I have not heard all the other available recordings but I should imagine that none surpasses this one in brilliance of colour, excitement and virtuosity.
-- Gramophone [10/1969, reviewing the original LP release of the Scythian Suite]
------------------------------------------------
These very popular examples of colourful Russian music are very well played and recorded in a style to emphasise brightness, thus enabling us to hear clearly some of the inner parts that are sometimes obscured.
-- Gramophone [12/1967, reviewing the original LP release of the Glinka, Mussorgsky, and Ippolitov-Ivanov works]
-- Gramophone [7/1985]
------------------------------------------------
...Prokofiev's Scythian Suite, which [Bernstein] does well; I have not heard all the other available recordings but I should imagine that none surpasses this one in brilliance of colour, excitement and virtuosity.
-- Gramophone [10/1969, reviewing the original LP release of the Scythian Suite]
------------------------------------------------
These very popular examples of colourful Russian music are very well played and recorded in a style to emphasise brightness, thus enabling us to hear clearly some of the inner parts that are sometimes obscured.
-- Gramophone [12/1967, reviewing the original LP release of the Glinka, Mussorgsky, and Ippolitov-Ivanov works]
Haydn, Schubert: Piano Sonatas / Evgeny Kissin
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.99
Aug 22, 1995
Haydn: Piano Sonatas Nos. 45 & 62 - Schubert: Piano Sonata N
Bernstein Century - Mahler: Symphony No 3, Etc / New York Po
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD

This was the finest performance of Mahler's Third when it was first issued back in 1962, and in some ways it has never been surpassed. Bernstein catches the riotous vulgarity of the first movement march music like no other conductor--not even his own digital remake reaches the level of sheer abandon he whips up here, and he also has the best of all fifth movements (bright and cheery, with dazzlingly prominent percussion). Other, more recent performances may match or even supercede this one in this or that detail, but on the whole the status of this performance as the reference by which all others are judged remains unchallenged. This performance also was the symphony's stereo debut, and Sony's latest remastering is a complete success. Jennie Tourel's performances of the songs are not without controversy. Her voice never was conventionally "beautiful," but her musical perceptions always were dead on the mark, and so it proves here. At mid-price, this is great listening.
-- David Hurwitz, ClassicsToday.com
Verdi: Quattro Pezzi Sacri; Vivaldi: Credo / Sweet, Giulini
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Oct 26, 2009
VERDI: QUATTRO PEZZI SACRI V
MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY SYMPHONIC BAND: To the Fore! - Per
Delos
Available as
CD
$18.99
Jan 01, 1990
Classical Music
Mozart: Haffner Serenade / Stern, Rampal, Franz Liszt Co
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
Mozart: Serenade No. 7 in D Major, K. 250 "Haffner"
Vivaldi: Eleven Concertos / Bylsma, Lamon, Tafelmusik
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
Vivaldi: 11 Concertos
The Feast Of San Rocco - Venice 1608 / Musica Fiata, Et Al
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
Includes toccata(s) by Giovanni Gabrieli. Ensemble: Cologne Musica Fiata. Conductor: Roland Wilson. Soloists: Graham Nicholson, Sebastian Scharr, François Petit-Laurent, Martin Lubenow, Matthias Sprinz, Yuji Fujimoto, Detlef Reimers, Sebastian Krause, Ole Andersen, Cas Gevers, Henning Plumeyer, Peter Sommer.
Casals Edition - Brahms, Mendelssohn: Piano Trios / Hess
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.99
Feb 21, 1995
Brahms & Mendelssohn: Piano Trios (Live)
Glass: Itaipu, The Canyon / Shaw, Atlanta So & Chorus
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.99
Jun 29, 1993
Glass: Itaipú & The Canyon
Stravinsky: Firebird; Debussy: Nocturnes
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
IDIGITAL:FIREBIRD/NOCTURNES
Danielpour: Concerto For Orchestra, Etc / Zinman, Pittsburgh
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.99
Apr 15, 1997
Danielpour's "Concerto for Orchestra" was nominated for the 1998 Grammy Award for "Best Classical Contemporary Composition."
Richard Danielpour is one of several American composers to emerge in the 1990s with an eclectic tonal style that makes no bones about its aim to please. He is also not shy about the derivative nature of his music, calling himself "an assimilator" who "will take an idea that may resemble another composer's and mull over it until it becomes something else." He cites Copland, Shostakovich, Britten, Bartók and Stravinsky as favorites but his own work, with its big romantic gestures and easily digested rhythms is less confrontational than theirs. It is meant to entertain, impress, soothe, not to provoke, and it succeeds on all of these fronts.
The 'Concerto for Orchestra' demonstrates Danielpour's chops as a colorist as well as his flair for steady pounding beats, rather as if the 'Miraculous Mandarin' wandered into 'West Side Story.' 'Anima Mundi' is a ballet score depicting the four seasons. It opens with a seven note motif which, amusingly, is the same as that for Borodin's 'In the Steppes of Central Asia,' then moves into upbeat John Adams territory for a while before settling into a mood of somber reflection. The very good, natural sounding recordings were made under the composer's supervision.
Richard Danielpour is one of several American composers to emerge in the 1990s with an eclectic tonal style that makes no bones about its aim to please. He is also not shy about the derivative nature of his music, calling himself "an assimilator" who "will take an idea that may resemble another composer's and mull over it until it becomes something else." He cites Copland, Shostakovich, Britten, Bartók and Stravinsky as favorites but his own work, with its big romantic gestures and easily digested rhythms is less confrontational than theirs. It is meant to entertain, impress, soothe, not to provoke, and it succeeds on all of these fronts.
The 'Concerto for Orchestra' demonstrates Danielpour's chops as a colorist as well as his flair for steady pounding beats, rather as if the 'Miraculous Mandarin' wandered into 'West Side Story.' 'Anima Mundi' is a ballet score depicting the four seasons. It opens with a seven note motif which, amusingly, is the same as that for Borodin's 'In the Steppes of Central Asia,' then moves into upbeat John Adams territory for a while before settling into a mood of somber reflection. The very good, natural sounding recordings were made under the composer's supervision.
Isaac Stern - A Life In Music - Mendelssohn: Piano Trios
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.98
Dec 05, 1995
Mendelssohn: Piano Trios, Opp. 49 & 66
Mahler: Symphony No 3 / Tennstedt, London Philharmonic
ICA Classics
Available as
CD
$26.99
Oct 25, 2011
The 1986 performance of Mahler's Symphony No.3 from London's Royal Festival Hall differs from the studio recording made in the late 70's. As Michael McManus states in his booklet notes, 'Fine though the studio recording from 1979 was and is, this live performance has an intensity and integrity that few, if any, recordings of this work can match' and 'Tennstedt in concert was a very different creature from Tennstedt in the studio. Mahler in particular was a life-and-death experience in the concert hall'. The sound captured by the BBC engineers is state of the art and easily captures Mahler's huge dynamic range. As a bonus, there is a short interview from 1987 in which Tennstedt discusses Mahler interpretation.
Tchaikovsky: Sleeping Beauty, Etc / Ormandy, Philadelphia
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Oct 26, 2009
Ormandy returns with the Philadelphia Orchestra to provide a sumptuous offering of nearly an hour of music from Tchaikovsky's The Sleeping Beauty ballet that features many favourites (including mine, the "Panorama", taken fairly briskly yet retaining its elegant magic). The playing is exciting and the resonant acoustic brings warmth and sonic spectacle, but rather less in the way of subtlety: it is typical of the Philadelphia/ CBS recordings of the 1960s, but it's certainly very involving. The coupling is a similarly vivacious suite from the Rossini/Respighi La boutique fantasque, a scintillating score to which Ormandy does justice. Thanks to him one immediately notices the sparkling percussion condiment in the "Tarantella". Once more, good sound; resonant and spectacular, but not quite so opulent as in the Tchaikovsky selection. This is worth any collector's money.
-- Gramophone [3/1991]
-- Gramophone [3/1991]
Brahms: Piano Concerto No 1 / Bernstein, Gould
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.99
Sep 22, 1998
This is the first authorized release of this performance. The disc also includes Bernstein's pre-performance remarks and an interview with Glenn Gould from a 1964 New York Philharmonic broadcast.
This disc should serve as an extremely important historical novelty to those listeners familiar with the players and the repertoire. The performance is taken from a 1962 radio broadcast, and Bernstein begins the program with a disclaimer. He tells the intrigued audience that while he looks upon Gould as a supreme artist, he does not agree with the soloist's interpretation of the work, that they share major interpretive discrepancies. Despite this, Bernstein opts to go along with Gould's interpretation.
And so begins this disc, followed by what Bernstein himself called one of the most "unorthodox" renditions of the Brahms he has ever heard. With its varying tempi, sometimes as slow as molasses, Gould still manages to express perfectly what this piece calls for: a sense of majesty, intensity, and delicacy all at once. Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic create an ambience that is as reflective as Gould could have asked for. This disc is indeed a fascinating tribute to the two great artists who could not agree.
This disc should serve as an extremely important historical novelty to those listeners familiar with the players and the repertoire. The performance is taken from a 1962 radio broadcast, and Bernstein begins the program with a disclaimer. He tells the intrigued audience that while he looks upon Gould as a supreme artist, he does not agree with the soloist's interpretation of the work, that they share major interpretive discrepancies. Despite this, Bernstein opts to go along with Gould's interpretation.
And so begins this disc, followed by what Bernstein himself called one of the most "unorthodox" renditions of the Brahms he has ever heard. With its varying tempi, sometimes as slow as molasses, Gould still manages to express perfectly what this piece calls for: a sense of majesty, intensity, and delicacy all at once. Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic create an ambience that is as reflective as Gould could have asked for. This disc is indeed a fascinating tribute to the two great artists who could not agree.
Famous Rhapsodies - Liszt, Enescu, Chabrier, Alfvén /Ormandy
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$17.99
Aug 06, 2007
Famous Rhapsodies
Complete Crumb Edition, Vol. 16
Bridge Records
Available as
CD
$18.99
Sep 09, 2014
Classical Music
Bernstein Century - Mahler: Symphony No 9
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.99
Sep 29, 1998
REVIEWS:
New York Times (Publisher) (7/30/00, p.30) - "...An aching and apocalyptic version of this signature vehicle for Bernstein; the recording remains a touchstone..."
New York Times (Publisher) (7/30/00, p.30) - "...An aching and apocalyptic version of this signature vehicle for Bernstein; the recording remains a touchstone..."
Sibelius: Violin Concerto; Bruch / Midori, Mehta, Israel Po
Sony Masterworks
Available as
CD
$11.99
Sep 20, 1994
Sibelius: Violin Concerto in D minor, Op. 47 - Bruch: Scotti
Wagner: Gotterdammerung / Elder, Gustafson, Bickley, Dalayman, Cleveman, Jun, Shore
Halle
Available as
CD
$37.99
May 01, 2010

Recorded live in Manchester's Bridgewater Hall over two evenings in May, 2009, this concert recording of Wagner's Götterdämmerung easily stands among the work's three or four finest on disc. For starters, it is sumptuously yet naturally engineered, with voices and instruments in ideal perspective, and there's realistic depth and definition to the orchestral image no matter how texturally complex or threadbare. As with Reginald Goodall, Mark Elder's tempos are slow, but they never, ever drag because the conductor's strong inner rhythm fuels the carefully coaxed and painstakingly balanced linear strands.
This is mainly apparent in orchestral interludes. In Siegfried's Rhine Journey, for example, notice the churning string accompaniment's pronounced dynamic gradations, and the rarely heard leitmotivs that bubble to the surface. The myriad tempo changes and drawn out rests in the hunting scene leading up to and including Siegfried's dying words are taken on faith as they often are not, and the conductor plays up the gnawing half-step steerhorn dissonances in Act 2 while letting the low strings slightly drag, creating a kind of primeval sound world that couldn't be more appropriate for the moment. It also allows for the choral antiphony to build momentum and maintain full comprehensibility.
And what a cast! Lars Cleveman's multi-leveled vocal acting and musical security add up to an impressively tender, proud, and vulnerable Siegfried. Katarina Dalayman's Brünnhilde holds equal allure, and equal tonal command in all registers. In Alberich's brief scene at the start of Act 2, Bayreuth veteran Andrew Shore is a little too guttural at times, but Attila Jun's dark yet agile Hagen nearly steals the show--and that's not to take anything away from Peter Coleman-Wright's sensitive singing as Gunther. Some listeners may find Susan Bickley a more understated, less emotive Waltraute than "tradition" deems, yet her impeccable diction and legato control speak for themselves. I also should mention the Norns and the Rhinemaidens--what splendid and superbly blended vocal trios!
Although the opera could have fit onto four CDs, a five-disc deployment allows Act 2 to stand alone on one disc, and for Act 3 to be logically divided across two discs as Act 1 usually is. The fifth disc contains a full libretto and English translation as a PDF document. Even if you already own Solti (Decca), Keilberth (Testament), or Barenboim (Teldec), Elder's Götterdämmerung adds up to a most fulfilling and modestly priced dramatic and musical experience that no serious Wagnerian should miss.
--Jed Distler, ClassicsToday.com
