Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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What download have you bought?
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Stockhausen - Helikopter Streichquartett
Arditti String Quartet
83p 16 bit CD quality download from Qobuz. The CD is going for £97.90 on Amazon!
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostThe cover image of the latter certainly is rather distracting.
Perhaps less obvious in the present release, but certainly a pleasant distraction from that all-too-undistracting Distratto....
Alpha do care for their visuals, as you'll recall from the portraits and Mythical Tableaux adorning Schoonderwoerd's Beethoven and Mozart Concerto Cycles....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 17-03-17, 03:24.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post.....each 2032 booklet develops a very individualised & quite extensive photo-essay or gallery running throughout it, sourced from the Magnum agency... at times thematically linking the images to the release titles - strikingly so in filosofo, solo e pensoso etc...
Perhaps less obvious in the present release, but certainly a pleasant distraction from that all-too-undistracting Distratto....
Alpha do care for their visuals, as you'll recall from the portraits and Mythical Tableaux adorning Schoonderwoerd's Beethoven and Mozart Concerto Cycles....
My "distracting" comment was, of course, a throw away. I very much enjoy the Alpha approach to illustrating their packaging, much as I do those for BIS's Brautigam Mozart keyboard concertos, in their different way.
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I've been mentioning Kagel a bit in the last week or two, and I'm going to do so again because my latest download purchases have been of his work.
Firstly the complete cello music by the Nomos ensemble, which begins with the classic Match for two cellos and percussion (where the two cellos take part in a contest to see who can come up with the most madly virtuosic "extended techniques" and the percussion acts as referee) and ends with the beautiful Motetten for eight cellos, one of a few late works in which Kagel seems finally to have achieved a hard-won reconciliation with music, its history and geography. This really isn't the case with the other new download, a new complete recording of Stücke der Windrose by Ensemble Aleph. In the course of eight pieces, each named after one of the points of the compass and varying in duration between five and twenty minutes, Kagel uses a "salon orchestra" (clarinet, solo strings, piano, harmonium and a massive armoury of percussive and other effects) to disassemble and reassemble the idea of "world music" in a sort of cubistic way. Both are very well performed. The second (a double CD) is certainly much preferable to the rather clinical recordings of the same piece spread over a number of separate discs by the Schönberg Ensemble and Reinbert de Leeuw. The first reminds me of the importance to Kagel of his collaboration with the late cellist Siegfried Palm (for whom most of the pieces were written) but the Motetten are worth the price of the download on their own.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI've been mentioning Kagel a bit in the last week or two, and I'm going to do so again because my latest download purchases have been of his work.
Firstly the complete cello music by the Nomos ensemble, which begins with the classic Match for two cellos and percussion (where the two cellos take part in a contest to see who can come up with the most madly virtuosic "extended techniques" and the percussion acts as referee) and ends with the beautiful Motetten for eight cellos, one of a few late works in which Kagel seems finally to have achieved a hard-won reconciliation with music, its history and geography. This really isn't the case with the other new download, a new complete recording of Stücke der Windrose by Ensemble Aleph. In the course of eight pieces, each named after one of the points of the compass and varying in duration between five and twenty minutes, Kagel uses a "salon orchestra" (clarinet, solo strings, piano, harmonium and a massive armoury of percussive and other effects) to disassemble and reassemble the idea of "world music" in a sort of cubistic way. Both are very well performed. The second (a double CD) is certainly much preferable to the rather clinical recordings of the same piece spread over a number of separate discs by the Schönberg Ensemble and Reinbert de Leeuw. The first reminds me of the importance to Kagel of his collaboration with the late cellist Siegfried Palm (for whom most of the pieces were written) but the Motetten are worth the price of the download on their own.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI've been mentioning Kagel a bit in the last week or two, and I'm going to do so again because my latest download purchases have been of his work.
This really isn't the case with the other new download, a new complete recording of Stücke der Windrose by Ensemble Aleph. In the course of eight pieces, each named after one of the points of the compass and varying in duration between five and twenty minutes, Kagel uses a "salon orchestra" (clarinet, solo strings, piano, harmonium and a massive armoury of percussive and other effects) to disassemble and reassemble the idea of "world music" in a sort of cubistic way. Both are very well performed. The second (a double CD) is certainly much preferable to the rather clinical recordings of the same piece spread over a number of separate discs by the Schönberg Ensemble and Reinbert de Leeuw.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostI've raved about this CD (oops - not a download) on "What have you been listening to now" but, for me at least, it really was a revelation.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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I’ve been listening to Turangalila a fair bit this week. I first bought Chung, Chailly then Wit. I borrowed the Ozawa from a work-colleague and still don’t have a copy myself. I used to have a preference for Chailly, but recently, the more I listen to the Chung, the more I prefer it.
Looking on Qobuz I found the BaL winner, Kent Nagano BPO Aimard/Kim, for a mere £4.15 (16 Bit CD quality) and couldn’t resist!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI’ve been listening to Turangalila a fair bit this week. I first bought Chung, Chailly then Wit. I borrowed the Ozawa from a work-colleague and still don’t have a copy myself. I used to have a preference for Chailly, but recently, the more I listen to the Chung, the more I prefer it.
Looking on Qobuz I found the BaL winner, Kent Nagano BPO Aimard/Kim, for a mere £4.15 (16 Bit CD quality) and couldn’t resist!
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI don't think you will be disappointed. It is from concert performance(s). However, a Gramophone reviewer has decribed it as "overly corporate", whatever that means. Have you tried the Mena? It's my current favourite.
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