Loading
Join Us. 170 Million Americans for Public Broadcasting

Our Blog Usage Policy


Want to comment on a blog?

Login and post your comment


Log In
 
 

Register for a free account

Forgot your Password?

Inside Appalachia

Classically Speaking

Classical music in West Virginia and Beyond

Favorite Things (2009)

(CD Reviews, Commentary) Permanent link   All Posts
Share/Save/Bookmark
By Mona Seghatoleslami
 · December 14, 2009

There are plenty of lists coming out at the end of the year, so you have plenty of other guides through classical music recordings that have been released in the past year.

I still had fun wandering through our library’s shelves and my memories of the past year to put together a list of some of my favorite things that we’ve featured on WV Public Radio. Last year I managed to limit myself to eight recordings; this year my list is all over the place, and I’m sure that I’m still leaving out so many good things.

 

One can be the Loveliest Number (featured soloists)

Walton Cello

Peter Wispelwey: Walton Cello Concerto (Bloch * Ligeti * Britten)

I’m surprised how few cellists I’ve spoken to know about Walton's Cello Concerto. Everyone, not just cello players, should know about it!  I keep listening to this recording for the Walton as well as the solo cello selections.

Meyers Smile


Smile / Anne Akiko Meyers

This CD is really pretty; it features some lyrical playing and just a touch of adventure in the musical choices. I interviewed Anne Akiko Meyers right before she played in Wheeling this year (check it out here). 


Come into my parlor... (Chamber Music)

Pavel Haas

Pavel Haas: Chamber Music/Ensemble Villa Musica

I first heard of Pavel Haas when studying about composers who perished in Nazi concentration camps.   While his name and story first caught my attention, it’s the recording of Haas’s Wind Quintet that makes this one of my favorite discoveries this year.

 

Orion Early Beethoven

Beethoven String Quartets: Early / Orion String Quartet

I saw the Orion String Quartet play an all-Beethoven concert when I was in high school, and it made a huge impression on me. (I still have the program signed by the viola player.) A decade later, I’m thrilled that the Orion String Quartet has recorded the complete Beethoven string quartets so that I can listen to them whenever I feel like it.

 

QSF Plays Brubeck album

QSF Plays Brubeck

Another group who has recently visited West Virginia (more about that visit and an interview here). Not quite classical, but certainly connected. A great tribute to a great composer.


 

 

 

At (hopefully not "on") the Piano
A listener has written in to point out to me that very few classical musicians find themselves in the indecorous state of being “on the piano” (as Marlene Dietrich was in one of her films). It’s safer all around to say that they are at the piano.

Hough in Recital

Stephen Hough:  In Recital

Is it possible to wear out CDs? I’ve played every track on this recording on the radio at least once, and that doesn’t count how many times I’ve listened to Mendelssohn’s Variations Serieuses while working in the library.

 

Avant Satie

Erik Satie: Avant-Dernières Pensées

Satie was such an awesomely weird dude, and his music is strange in subtle ways. This collection of solo and chamber music by Satie captures the gracefulness, oddity, and beauty of his music.

 


The Wisdom of Crowds (Orchestral Music)


D & C

Daphnis and Chloe/Maurice Ravel: Boston Symphony Orchestra, Tanglewood Festival Chorus, James Levine

The whole piece, not just the suites! An excellent live recording from a concert in 2007.

 

Foote's Francesca

Arthur Foote: Francesca da Rimini / Seattle Symphony, Gerard Schwarz

Beautiful, lush programmatic orchestral music. My favorite discovery on this recording is Four Character Pieces after the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam.

 

The Singer or the Song? (Vocal Music)

 

Lieberson Recital

Lorraine Hunt Lieberson: Recital at Ravinia

Lorraine Hunt Lieberson combined a rich voice with some serious musical smarts. The tone of her voice is just one of the most beautiful things ever. Her Bach Cantatas and Neruda songs recordings are some of my all-time favorite recordings, and I’m now also attached to her performances of Debussy, Brahms, and others from this recital recorded in 2004.

 

Song of the Stars

Song of the Stars

The title piece on this CD sat around unperformed or recorded since its premiere for over 100 years – I’m glad someone finally got the music and the rights to record it.  It starts out as a solo piece, then about half way through, an organ shows up, and it ends with a beautiful dreamy chorus.

 

Sacrificium

Sacrificium / Cecilia Bartoli

The music sounds good, the booklet (all 100 pages!) is fascinating, informative, and pretty creepy. Listen, read, and learn (possibly not a good gift for male relatives). This is an adventurous project that yielded great results.

 

Fashionably Early (Going for Baroque)

 

Arion Rebel

Rebel: Les Plaisirs Champêtres / Arion, Daniel Cuiller

I have yet to find any French baroque opera that can hold my interest, but they certainly knew how to dance (and write dance music).  The ensemble Arion’s playing is bright, engaging, and immediate for this ballet music by Jean-Féry Rebel.

 

German Bouquet

A German Bouquet / Trio Settecento

There's more to the German Baroque than J.S. Bach!  Even though this music all from one country and the same time period, there's a lot of variety -- it's neat to hear the directions that German composers took based on different influences, including Italian and English music.  Find out more about this music in my recent interview with violinist Rachel Barton Pine.

 

Make New Friends (Some Newer Compositions)

 

24 Bits: Hip Hop Studies and Etudes for Piano by DBR

Chopin had Mazurkas, Schubert had waltzes, and Daniel Bernard Roumain (DBR) incorporates music of his (and our) time into his piano miniatures. Nothing too grand or deep, but rather really cool and engaging little pieces.  Jade Simmons (interview) has recorded three of them; I’d love to hear the whole set.

again (after ecclesiastes) by David Lang

The featured piece on this recording is The Little Match Girl Passion, which is rightly getting a lot of attention, but the music and the text of this miniature at the end of the CD is one of my new favorites.

Look and Listen (DVDs)

 

Keeping Score DVD

Keeping Score with Michael Tilson Thomas

If you're one of those people who think, “I like classical music, but I wish I knew more about it.” Then this PBS series is for you.  It's a pretty thorough and engaging introduction. Tilson Thomas talks about the music, shows examples, and connects the music to literature, art, and history. Plus, I showed the Symphonie Fantastique episode to a five-year-old, and he stayed put for 15 whole minutes while watching it.

 

Hope you enjoy!  Share your favorites in the comments.

Links:
* Favorite Things (2008)
* Ten Great Christmas Gifts (Eclectopia Blog)
* The New York Times Classical Gift Guide
* NPR Music: Best Music of 2009
* 2009: Ten Exceptional Recordings (Alex Ross, The New Yorker)


Leave a comment
Name *
Email *
Homepage
Comment

RSS Feed
<< May 2013 >>
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  

Blogroll

Archive

Subjects

Recent Posts

West Virginia Public Broadcasting is a member station of: