micah, here is one you will love,the cd is, piano trascriptions, arcadi volodos; sony sk62691.
volodos; is considered the best pianist in the world right now
listen to #4 liszt, hungarian rhapsody no. 2
dont forget bach & schubert
Buy Direct M-F 9am - 10:30pm EST 1-866-764-1801
Vist our Online Storemicah, here is one you will love,the cd is, piano trascriptions, arcadi volodos; sony sk62691.
volodos; is considered the best pianist in the world right now
listen to #4 liszt, hungarian rhapsody no. 2
dont forget bach & schubert
. rt-7 mains
rt-20p surounds
cs-400i front center
cs-350 ls rear center
2 energy take 5, efects
2- psw-650 , subs
1- 15" audiosource sub
lets all go to the next ces.
here is one, if you like opera she is the best i think , sheryl studer, a portrait , emi lable 7243 5 55350 2 3
listen to # 6 throgh #11, and you will agree with me that she haves the best voice in the world.
Last edited by joe logston; 08-03-2002 at 12:21 AM.
. rt-7 mains
rt-20p surounds
cs-400i front center
cs-350 ls rear center
2 energy take 5, efects
2- psw-650 , subs
1- 15" audiosource sub
lets all go to the next ces.
I'd recommend Gorecki's Symphony No 3. It's a bit melancholy,
borders on depressing at times, but it's also very moving.
My disclaimer for it's not for everyone.
Time is the best teacher. Unfortunately it kills all its students.
mines beethoven 5th sympathy....thats awesome how the treble and bass and everything is so unpredictable...its awesome...lol
Damn you all, damn you all to hell.......
I promised myself
No more speakers. None. Nada. And then you posted this!!!!
Damn you all! - ATC
TA-DA!
I was doing some searching on classical music and ran accross this thread....read Micah's treatise....probably one of the most informative posts in the Club Polk archives.
I'm going to throw out a few discs that you should own:
http://www.amazon.com/Vaughan-Willia.../dp/B000004CVM
I've got a few different versions of The Lark Ascending but Marriner has this one cold....I have it on LP and it's superior.
Maybe you like opera...maybe you think you don't. Listen to this though and you'll see what all the hubub about Pavarotti is/was. Nessun Dorma is one of my hifi highlights...
http://www.amazon.com/Puccini-Turand.../dp/B0000041Q3
Wagner....ok, I'm not a HUGE Wagner fan. I understand why people do...but, generally, I'm not one of them. However, I DO like the Ride of the Valkyries....and if you really want to hear it, you got to get the Sheffield LP. Leinsdorf and the LA Philharmonic....
http://store.acousticsounds.com/d/29...owned_Vinyl_LP
BDT
I ALWAYS use an ass-gasket. Never hover because of splash down and back splatter. I also float landing pad made from TP for a soft landing to avoid the above. One can never be too cautious when dealing with the general public. - RonP
I picked this up based on a member's recommendation, and love it. This is 'spacey' classical.
Shostakovich: The String Quartets
http://www.amazon.com/Shostakovich-S...3590836&sr=1-2
Marantz AV7005 Pre/Pro
Outlaw 7500 Amp
Parasond 2100 Pre - HT Bypass
Marantz SA8004 SACD/CD
Polk Audio LSi15 Fronts, Polk Audio LC65FX Surround, Polk Audio LSiC Center
Oppo BDP-83SE
Yngwie Malmsteen:
Concerto Suite for Electric Guitar and Orchestra in E flat minor, Opus 1
Polk Audio Surround Bar 360
Mirage PS-12
LG BDP-550
Motorola HD FIOS DVR
Panasonic 42" Plasma
XBOX 360[/SIZE]
Office stuff
Allied 395 receiver
Pioneer CDP PD-M430
RT8t's & Wharfedale Diamond II's[/SIZE]
Life is one grand, sweet song, so start the music. ~Ronald Reagan
Violin Concertos -
(Preferred violinists: Hilary Hahn, Julia Fischer, Anne-Akiko Meyers, but no one's perfect.. Hahn comes really close..)
Mendelssohn - Concerto in E minor (Hilary Hahn, Nicola Benedetti)
Tchaikovsky - Concerto in D Major (Either Perlman or Fischer)
Beethoven - Concerto in D Major (Again, Hahn)
Shostakovich - Violin Concerto No. 1 in A minor (Hahn...I love her sound, and this is a hauntingly beautiful piece)
And several Bachs...and the Sibelius and Bruch
Piano Concertos
Grieg in A minor
Rachmaninoff 2/3 (Argerich)
Symphonies
Mozart's 40th, 25th (Vienna Phil)
Beethoven's 5th, 9th (Berlin)
Dvorak's 9th (London)
String Quartets/Trios
Brahms Piano Quartet No. 1 in G minor
Beethoven Piano Trio in D major ("Ghost")
Shostakovich String Quartets (complete collection, Emerson String Quartet)
And a bunch of solo or individual pieces, such as Vivaldi's Four Seasons, Chopin Etudes (Winter Wind), Paganini Caprices, Verdi's Requiem, La Campanella, Devil's Trill, etc)
Last edited by DeusExa; 01-15-2010 at 05:55 PM.
If my classical music collection were to burn up in a fire, which 5 would I replace first?
Ravel, The Complete Piano Music, Robert Casadesus
Chopin, Poetry of the Piano, Ivan Moravec (complete Nocturnes, Ballades, & Preludes)
Vivaldi, Concertos for Diverse Instruments, I Solisti di Zagreb
Prokofiev, Romeo and Juliet Ballet MusicPhilharmonia Orchestra
Dvorak, Symphony #9 "New World" New York Philharmonic, Bernstein conducting
Then I would check Micah Cohen's list and work from there.
(Nah, I would just start hitting the thrift stores again and buying whatever looked interesting.)
Jim
Jimbo...I like that...if my collection were to burn up...I would replace:
1. Same as you - Dvorak 9th conducted by Bernstein. Love the upbeat tempo of the third movement.
2. Brahms Requiem - Conducted by James Levine - Chicago Symphony (Grammy award winner) 2nd movement is a true dirge, and Kathleen Battle does the second greatest Brahams Requiem Soprano solo I have ever heard.
3. Beethoven Missa Solemnis - Both Beethoven and I agree this is his greatest ever composition. The recording is tough - Sometimes the period instruments with Gardiner, sometimes - for sentimental reasons, the Bernstein recording.
4. Beethoven 9th - Conducted by Maazel and the NYP. My favorite recording of this wonderful piece!
5. Verdi's Requiem - Robert Shaw and Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Chorus - Grammy award winner, with America's greatest choral conductor.
2 Channel/HT:
Sony SS-M9 P's (ES version)
Sony SS-M1CN Center Channel
Polk RT800 Surround Speakers
Odyssey Stratos Dual Mono Amplifiers
TAD 150 Signature Tube Preamp
Harman Kardon HK354
Sony SACD Player
Some of those are favorites since I was old enough to be allowed to handle the record player.
Jim
This is a great thread.
What ever happened to Dr. Spec?
I liked his posts along with his data.
Ravel: La Valse
TNRabbit
NO Polk Audio Equipment
Sunfire TG-IV
Ashly 1001 Active Crossover
Rane PEQ-15 Parametric Equalizers x 2
Sunfire Cinema Grand Signature Seven
Carver AL-III Speakers
Klipsch RT-12d Subwoofer
Mods, can we sticky this?
Source: C.E.C. CD-3300 CD Transport
DAC: Benchmark DAC/PRE
Linestage: Placette Audio Passive
Power Amp: Parasound HCA-1500A
Speakers: Harbeth Compact 7ES-3 Monitor
Stop dissecting and start listening. - Steve in Arizona
Here's a small ( hope they grow) apparently Canadian site that features lossless downloads. Dunno about their claim that flac is "better than cd", but we don't haveta go there, do we?"
Analekta
emergence- athens guitar trio Great sound...
From Hayden, Dvorak, Bach, to a new kid on the block "Philip Glass", born a year before me 1937, something to check out...
Some final words,
"If you keep banging your head against the wall,
you're going to have headaches."
Warren
What a great way to put the question! I would first look for:
Stravinsky- Firebird, Rite of Spring, Petrushka (Stravinsky Conducts Stravinsky- Columbia Masterworks)
Beethoven- Complete Symphonies (George Szell - Cleveland Orchestra)
Bartok- Concerto for Orchestra, Music for Strings, Percussion and Celeste (Leonard Bernstein - NY Philharmonic)
2001: A Space Odyssey Soundtrack for the Gyorgy Lygeti pieces and the Blue Danube
As much as I love fine recording quality with lush textures, high drama, and ultra-wide dynamics and staging, I have to say that for me the musical performance is more important. I'll gladly give up some sound quality if it's in exchange for a performance that touches, triggers or churns my emotions. I have an HDCD reference recording of Firebird/Rite of Spring that sounds incredible, putting me right there in the room, but the music just doesn't move me the way the performance does with the recording of Stravinsky conducting the pieces.
Great Thread! I'm glad it has the sticky:)
Dual 1229/Grado Gold/Rotel RCD1070/RC995/RB980BX/Pioneer 7100/Denon DRM710/Monster HTS3600MKII/PolkAudio SDA2A's
The BluRay player will up-convert standard def DVD's but it can usually do a slightly better job than the TV does because it has access to the digital data on the disk. But I warn you: once you get used to HD TV channels and BluRay disks - it is a painful transition to watch standard def DVD's any more. Even with a up-converting BluRay player. It's not the players or cables fault - standard def is 1940's video technology.
Has anyone ever heard The Planets by Holst. Mars, Bringer of War is almost like heavy metal.
I really rediscovered an interest in classical music when I upgraded my Polk speakers and when I started getting into SACD's.
So far my top classical SACD's are
Massanet - Melodies
Beethoven - Symphonies 1 and 5 (Paavo Jarvi - Conductor)
Multi channel on this makes a difference
Bizet/Grieg - Carmen Suites, Pier Gynt Suite
Arrangements fit well together, great sound
Mozart - Flute Concertos, Symphony # 4 (Jupiter)
Sibelius - The Sound of Sibelius (Swan of Tuonela, Finlandia)
Vivaldi - Four Seasons
Various - Baroque Music for the Brass and Organ
Not strictly classical but a somewhat Jazzy version of Bach:
Best of Play Bach.
I was hoping for CD's but better and I found it.
Front - Polk LSi 15, Center - Polk LSi C, Rear - Polk LSi 7
Subwoofer - Epik Legend
Receiver (as Preamp) - Sony STR-DA3400 ES
Amplifier - Outlaw 7125
Television - 58" Samsung Plasma PN58B860
Blu Ray - OPPO BDP 83
I may be a purist, but I've found the classical SACD listings a bit on the low quality side. Perhaps great recording, and and technology, but I want to hear the BIG orchestras and the BIG conductors. I want Bernstein, von Karajan, etc. I saw a few Solti recordings - Cleveland orchestra I believe. I am not sure buying a classical sacd with the South Dakota Philharmonic conducted my George's dad will do it for me. That said, does anyone have recommendations of SACD's that may fill my need. I prefer symphonic works, and large choral works, and song cycles by high quality singers.
Any comments on the Solti recordings?
Thanks, and great thread!
James
EDIT: Also, prefer romantic era music, but will go back as far as Baroque - classical (Mozart, Haydn is hit or miss for me).
James
Last edited by Pycroft; 04-19-2010 at 09:23 AM. Reason: I'm an idiot and forgot something
2 Channel/HT:
Sony SS-M9 P's (ES version)
Sony SS-M1CN Center Channel
Polk RT800 Surround Speakers
Odyssey Stratos Dual Mono Amplifiers
TAD 150 Signature Tube Preamp
Harman Kardon HK354
Sony SACD Player
James, as you say, SACD certainly isn't a guarantee of performance quality, and it also doesn't necessarily result in superior sound quality. Many SACDs do in fact sound better, but as the tests described in the AES Journal paper by Meyer a couple of years ago indicate, this is due to better recording, mixing and mastering, not any automatic format superiority(the excellent SACDs sounded equally excellent when processed through 16 bit, 44.1KHz ADC/DACs, "downgrading" them to the CD standard).
Now, if you can ease off a bit on the BIG orchestra, BIG conductor requirement and simply enjoy great music in great performances and sound, here's a list of favorite SACDs that should meet your needs: first a pricey, but worth the $22 up cost, Mobile Fidelity Ravel collection ; Carmina Burana ; Debussy orchestrations ; Ilya Murometz ; Vaughan Williams collection . This is all gorgeous and/or exciting music in excellent sound and available from some of the Amazon sellers at a reasonable price.
[QUOTE=TNRabbit;1322631]Duh; only one of the top 5 recommended classical pieces~OOPs, It is on some of the original posts from 8 years ago. I guess I didn't look back far enough, d'oh!
I got this in the mail today....never heard of the Guy till this week.
Penguin Guide gave it a top award of Rosette and for good reason....it's GREAT!
Very worth while to add to my collection. Cd number 161 for me.
Maybe a good one for YOUR must have?
Listen to samples here
http://www.amazon.com/Rubbra-Symphon...2135264&sr=8-2
.
Yamaha RX-A710 90Watt 7.1
Mains: RTi A1's Center: CS150 Sats: RT15i's Sub: Velodyne DPS-10
Music CD: Sony CDP-CE375 5 Disk
HD TV: Vizio 42" LCD 1080p E420VO
Blu-Ray: Sony BDP-S350
DVD: Sony DVP-NC665P 5 Disk
AV Rack: Sanus Euro EFAB-II Audio Base x2 EFAS-II Audio Expansion Shelf x4
Cables Used: Monster Cable HPD Sony HDMI DLCHE18W
Phones: Sennheiser HD280 Pro
I will start with Wagner's Ring Cycle by the Valencia Orchestra and chorus, Zubin Meta conducting. The sound is authored in 7.1 DTS Master HD audio and is the best I have ever heard for any Ring Cycle. The video is also incredible, especially since the production incorporates lots of projections and unusual costumes and special effects. The creators claim that every Prop that Wagner describes is in the production, but in no way will any one see this as a traditional Ring Cycle Production.
I would be interesed to hear from anyone else who has seen this production.
fafner
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)