Originally posted by Barbirollians
View Post
Desert Island Discs
Collapse
X
-
I'd be taking Bach's Cello Suites (Tortelier) with me - eternal works. Apart from Cello Suite 1's prelude (thanks, advertisers!), they never seem to become overfamiliar.
I'd also probably include Bach's Brandenburg Concertos. The Dunedin Consort/Butt has been on heavy rotation since downloading it as a FLAC file in December, and is now my preferred version. I hear detail I've never heard before, probably due to the fact that, to quote one review, 'no instruments are doubled, and the entire ensemble comprises only ten performers'. I also marvel at how modern they sound. The last movement of No. 4 reminds me of the Jupiter symphony's finale, in its joyful inventiveness. And then the 6th, which sounds like nothing else in Bach's oeuvre that I've heard to date. The beer and tobacco must have been flowing freely when he wrote them.
A list of reviews here, for the undecided: http://www.linnrecords.com/review-du...-december.aspx
I'm curious to hear the new release by the Freiburg Barockorchester. Hopefully it's not too closely miked, as their Orchestral Suites were. I don't like hearing clacking keys.Last edited by Thropplenoggin; 08-02-14, 08:39.It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
Comment
-
-
Don Petter
Originally posted by vinteuil View PostVictoria : Requiem. Paul McCreesh / Gabrielis
Bach : St John Passion. Andrew Parrott / Taverners
Rameau : Hippolyte et Aricie. Marc Minkowski
Gluck : Alceste. John Eliot Gardiner
Haydn : Harmoniemesse. Bruno Weil
Mozart : Cosi fan Tutte. René Jacobs
Schubert : Winterreise. Christophe Prégardien / Andreas Staier
Wagner : Meistersinger. H van Karajan 1951
You are obviously a very vocal person. I haven't tried the exercise, which I think would be a very daunting one, but I suspect my list would not contain any human voice.
Comment
-
Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostI'd be taking Bach's Cello Suites (Tortelier) with me - eternal works. Apart from Cello Suite 1's prelude (thanks, advertisers!), they never seem to become overfamiliar.
Comment
-
Sir Malcolm Sargent on a 1955 DID on Radio 4extra this evening at 21:!5"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Comment
-
-
This be rather difficult.
Beethoven PC No.5(Uchida, Conceertgebouw, Sanderling)
Symphony No.5's by Sibelius(LSO/Gibson) Shostakovich(Bavarian RSO/Jansons)
Bax: Spring Fire; etc. Royal PO, Handley
Vaughan Williams: London Symphony. LSO, Hickox
Elgar : VC (Hugh Bean, LPO, Handley)
Tchaikovsky Symphony No.5(LPO Jurowski)
Mahler Symphony No.6(Berliner PO, Abbado)
Britten Spring Symphony(composer's own recording)
J S Bach Mass in B minor(JEG's DG recording)
I've gone over but there's no books or items so I think I can do this!! :)Last edited by BBMmk2; 29-01-17, 19:18.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
Comment
-
Comment