Originally posted by PJPJ
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BaL 27.09.14 - Holst: The Planets
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostI have no idea...it would be a shame if they had disbanded. I liked their set of Wagner recordings and they could have gone on to do other things too, such as Elgar.
The New Queen's Hall Orchestra shows how a dependence on state subsidy rather than popular support is stifling classical music, says Simon Heffer.
and maybe still!
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostI've just ordered the CD for £1.50 (used inc pp)for the Jochum Enigma http://www.amazon.co.uk/Holst-Planet...olst+steinberg
At thirty-bob, it hardly matters that the last thing I need, is a another CD of The Planets!
P.S. I thought I had the Steinberg, but it seems I haven't, or it's disappeared in the mists of time.
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I think I must be the odd man out here.
I enjoy "The Perfect Fool", the short opera "Savitri", the recently aired "Beni Mora" and some of the lighter music pieces but, for some reason, "The Planets" leaves me cold. Maybe it's due to over exposure in my student days - confusion with Arthur Bliss' "Things to Come" and some of the works of Arnold Bax.
Sorry folks.
HS
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Stokowski's NBCSO broadcast of 1943 is the earliest non-British performance on disc and is still available (Cala Records) so should be on the list. Andrew Achenbach's 'Gramophone' review (May 2000) was very enthusiastic: "A 'Planets' crammed full of interpretative incident, superbly played by a legendary orchestra ... Stokowski's performance evinces a giant theatricality and abundant zeal that prove hypnotically compelling" ... though he does add "Purists should perhaps steer well clear"! However, he does sum up by saying that it's "a performance connoisseurs should investigate all the same" though of course the restricted sonics of a wartime radio broadcast won't put it in the running for any BAL.
Incidentally, does this on-line "Planets" Discography show a complete list of all the recordings of the work ever made? ...
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostBut Ernest Macmillan (Canadian) and the Toronto SO had recorded four movements the year before, so perhaps there's just enough room to swing an anorak.
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Originally posted by seabright View PostIncidentally, does this on-line "Planets" Discography show a complete list of all the recordings of the work ever made? ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Planets_discography
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt's pretty comprehensive. Sometimes the "complete" Wiki lists can be anything but complete. At the risk of being boring, the Strauss Eine Alpensinfonie Wikipedia "comprehensive" list has approximately one third of all recordings missing. However, this Planets list seems pretty good to me.
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