I'm now listening to Brahms' Symphony No. 3, as performed by István Kertész & the Vienna PO:
Earlier, it was Brahms' Symphony No. 2 and his Serenade No. 2, again performed by Kertész & the VPO:
Next up:
Villa-Lobos: Instrumental & Orchestral Works
Disc 2
- Fantasia for Soprano Saxophone & Chamber Orchestra / John Harle (ss), Marriner, ASMF
- Concerto for Guitar & Small Orchestra / Angel Romero (g), López-Cobos, London PO
- A Próle do Bébé No. 1 and other works for solo piano / Cristina Ortiz (p)
On my turntable now:
Dexter Gordon - At Montreux with Junior Mance (Prestige, rec. 1970)
with Martin Rivera (b) and Oliver Jackson (d)
A voluble Dex strutting his stuff.
Now giving this new-to-me LP a first listen:
Vincent d'Indy: Symphony No. 2 / Michel Plasson & the Orchestre du Capitole de Toulouse (EMI, 1982)
These French La Voix de Son Maître LPs are such beautiful objects -- and the music is consistently terrific too.
Next up:
Albert Dailey - Renaissance: November 2, 1977 (Catalyst/Trading Places, 1978)
with Albert Dailey (p), Carter Jefferson (ts, ss), Cecil McBee (b), Charlie Persip (d, 5 trks), Adam Nussbaum (d, 2 trks), and Cheryl Alexander (vo)
A hidden gem!
Definitely NOT mutually exclusive, I would think! Just two different angles on the same thing: musicophilia.
Different jobs, different "responsibilities."
Yes, I agree! Oistrakh/Ormandy is a magnificent performance, my "go to" for Sibelius' VC.
But I will also confess that -- on purely subjective grounds -- Heifetz's vibrato does not appeal to me. I MUCH prefer Oistrakh's sound (or others) in most repertoire, relative to Heifetz.
Nielsen's music strikes me as being full of "life force." It has a sort of transcendent, supra-human vitality.
I'd recommend his Fourth Symphony, subtitled "Inextinguishable." That was Nielsen's first work that captured my ear.
I think this image does a great job of representing Nielsen's music: The living EARTH & SEA.
@Referentzhunter, just to confirm: mister goatman refers to W.A. Mozart, correct?
It's shocking to me that he's gone, even though I suppose it shouldn't be.
I realize that he was 78 -- but, in my mind's eye, he's still a young guy.
R.I.P.
Continuing my recent Clara Haskil kick with Mozart:
That Gothic photo of Haskil on the cover makes her look über-menacing & sinister. Seems like an odd choice for these elegant, lovely works. Not to mention the contrast with the cherubs on the fortepiano lid!