Bestsellers > Music > Forms and Genres
|
|
Buy Now |
25 Thunderous Classics(more) »rank: 5594from: Vox (Classical)
|
Buy Now |
Erik Satie: Gnossiennes; Gymnopédies; Ogives; Etc.(more) »rank: 10683from: Philips
|
Buy Now |
Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas / Daniel Barenboim(more) »rank: 15897from: EMI Classics
|
Buy Now |
Glassworks(more) »rank: 7406from: Sony
|
Buy Now |
Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor; Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini(more) »rank: 4727from: Universal Classics
|
Buy Now |
Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker (excerpts)(more) »rank: 4508from: Sony
|
Buy Now |
Bach: Cello Suites Nos. 1-6(more) »rank: 4999from: EMI Classics
: :Mstislav Rostropovich is one of the few musicians who can create a larger-than-life experience through the combined forces of exceptional music, a beautiful instrument, and uncommonly facile communicative skills. In his performances of Bach's transcendent masterpieces for solo cello, Rostropovich finds a perfect balance between a romantic, rhapsodic interpretation and one that emphasizes the purely formal 'aridity' of Bach's structures. Although it's nearly impossible to isolate one or two highlights, the Sarabande and Prelude from Suite No. 5 are among the most profoundly moving cello performances you will ever hear--the closest we probably will ever come to experiencing through music the soul of ... |
Buy Now |
Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition(more) »rank: 6935from: RCA
: :Mstislav Rostropovich is one of the few musicians who can create a larger-than-life experience through the combined forces of exceptional music, a beautiful instrument, and uncommonly facile communicative skills. In his performances of Bach's transcendent masterpieces for solo cello, Rostropovich finds a perfect balance between a romantic, rhapsodic interpretation and one that emphasizes the purely formal 'aridity' of Bach's structures. Although it's nearly impossible to isolate one or two highlights, the Sarabande and Prelude from Suite No. 5 are among the most profoundly moving cello performances you will ever hear--the closest we probably will ever come to experiencing through music the soul of ... |
Buy Now |
Bernstein: Symphony No. 3 ('Kaddish'); Chichester Psalms(more) »rank: 28163from: Sony
: :Leonard Bernstein's Kaddish, Symphony No. 3, from 1963 is probably his most famous. It's dedicated to the memory of John F. Kennedy, and comprises spoken and sung texts from Jewish prayers for the dead. It's quite dramatic, very listenable, and not at all pretentious, as some critics have avowed. It ranks with Shostakovich's harrowing Symphony No. 14 and deserves more attention than it usually gets. Which is damned little. The same goes for Bernstein's Chichester Psalms (1964). It's a very engaging choral work that celebrates the practice of psalmody or choral festivals, a kind of celebratory music we don't hear much. --Paul Cook |
Buy Now |
Rachmaninoff plays Rachmaninoff(more) »rank: 33506from: RCA
: :Unlike most composer/pianists, Rachmaninoff's instrumental prowess was fully commensurate with his creative gifts. He embraces his youthful First Concertos as if he had encountered an old lover, consumating his passion with stupefying fingerwork in the first movement cadenza. Conversely, the composer seems bored in the Third. He laconically dispatches its torrents of notes, opts for the easier ossias in difficult passages, and makes cuts in the first and third movements. And pianists like Arturo Michelangeli and Earl Wild have recorded more incisive, demonic Rach Fourths. No question about the Paganini Rhapsody and Second Concerto, where Rachmaninoff's fierce authority and luscious, molten tone permeate ... |



