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Tracklista: CD 1 1. La Jean 2. Love Is Blue/Sing A Rainbow 3. Crying Song 4. Listen To The Band 5. I've Gotta Get A Message To You 6. Feelin' Alright? 7. Cymbaline 8. How Long Will It Be? 9. Let It Be 10. Fire And Rain 11. Allegro From Concerto No. 3 In D 12. Theme From Love Story 13. Passacaglia In C Minor 14. Flute Sonata In F CD 2 1. Pavane 2. The Rite Of Spring 3. Syrinx 4. Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 (1st Movement) 5. Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 (2nd Movement)


  • Wykonawca Hubert Laws
  • Data premiery 2014-08-25
  • Nośnik CD / Album
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Tracklista: 1. Allegro Moderato 2. Andante 3. Menuetto 4. Allegro Con Spirito 5. Allegro Assai 6. Andantino 7. Andante (Alternative 2nd Movement) 8. Allegro 9. Allegro Spiritoso 10. Andante 11. Allegro Con Spirito 12. Andante 13. Menuetto 14. Finale. Presto 15. Adagio - Allegro Spiritoso 16. Adagio 17. Menuetto 18. Finale. Presto


  • Wykonawca Scottish Chamber Orchestra
  • Data premiery 2010-03-15
  • Nośnik SACD / Hybrid

Tracklista:1. Allegro Moderato2. Andante3. Allegro4. Adagio Sostenuto - Presto5. Adagio Mesto E Sostenuto6. Allegro7. Allegretto8. Molto Adagio9. Allegro Ma Non Tanto10. Second Movement - Embellished Version11. Second Movement - Embellished Version12. Allegro Moderato13. Andante14. Allegro


  • Wykonawca Spanyi Miklos
  • Data premiery 2013-09-02
  • Nośnik CD
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Jubileuszowa edycja klasycznego albumu „Exodus”  Bob Marley & The Wailers na 40-lecie wydania!  Wydany oryginalnie w 1977r. „Exodus” był 9 albumem w dyskografii grupy. Ukazał się 6 miesięcy po próbie nieudanego zamachu na życie Marleya. W 1999r. magazyn „Time” uznał „Exodus” za najlepszy album XX w.. Specjalnie na 40 –lecie syn Boba Marleya – Ziggy, przejrzał rodzinne archiwa, z których wydobył wcześniej nie słyszane wokale oraz instrumentacje, a także teksty. Nowe wersje klasycznych utworów, przygotowane z pełnym sacunkiem dla dorobku Marleya, trafiły ostatecznie na „Exodus 40 - The Movement Continues”. Super deluxe box set zawiera 4 LP, w tym dwa 7’’ single, oryginalną wersję płyty „Exodus”, „Exodus 40 – The Movement Continues” oraz  „Exodus Live” z występem z londyńskiego Rainbow Theatre. Tracklista: LP 1: Bob Marley & The Wailers, Exodus (Original Version) Side A 1. Natural Mystic 2. So Much Things to Say 3. Guiltiness 4. The Heathen 5. Exodus Side B 1. Jamming 2. Waiting in Vain 3. Turn Your Lights Down Low 4. Three Little Birds 5. One Love/People Get Ready LP 2: Ziggy Marley’s Exodus 40 - The Movement Continues Side C 1. Natural Mystic 2. So Much Things to Say 3. Guiltiness 4. The Heathen 5. Exodus Side D 1. Jamming 2. Waiting in Vain 3. Turn Your Lights Down Low 4. Three Little Birds 5. One Love/People Get Ready LP 3: Exodus Live recorded live at Rainbow Theatre, London, June 1-4, 1977 Side E 1. Natural Mystic 2. So Much Things to Say 3. Guiltiness 4. The Heathen Side F 1. Positive Vibration 2. Jamming 3. Exodus LP 4: Punky Reggae Party Side G 1. Punky Reggae Party 2. Punky Reggae Party Dub Side H 1. Keep On Moving (previously unreleased extended mix) LP 5: Single 1 1. Waiting in Vain b/w Roots LP 6: Single 1 1. Smile Jamaica (Part One) b/w Smile Jamaica (Part Two)  


  • Wykonawca Bob Marley
  • Data premiery 2017-08-04
  • Nośnik Płyta Analogowa
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Tracklista:1. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 2 in A minor: 1st movement, Adagio2. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 2 in A minor: 2nd movement, Allegro3. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 2 in A minor: 3rd movement, Alla Siciliana4. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 2 in A minor: 4th movement, Allegro assai5. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 4 in C major: 1st movement, Adagio6. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 4 in C major: 2nd movement, Alla breve7. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 4 in C major: 3rd movement, Largo8. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 4 in C major: 4th movement, Gigue e presto9. Polonaises (24) for Keyboard: Polonaise in F major10. Polonaises (24) for Keyboard: Polonaise in D minor11. Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso continuo in C minor: 1st movement, Largo12. Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso continuo in C minor: 2nd movement, Allegro13. Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso continuo in C minor: 3rd movement, Grave14. Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso continuo in C minor: 4th movement, Gigue15. Polonaises (24) for Keyboard: Polonaise in E flat major16. Polonaises (24) for Keyboard: Polonaise in C minor17. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 1 in B flat major: 1st movement, Adagio18. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 1 in B flat major: 2nd movement, Allegro19. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 1 in B flat major: 3rd movement, Grave20. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 1 in B flat major: 4th movement, Ciacona21. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 3 in G minor: 1st movement, Adagio22. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 3 in G minor: 2nd movement, Allegro23. Trio Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso Continuo no 3 in G minor: 3rd movement, Tempo di Menuetto24. Polonaises (24) for Keyboard: Polonaise in G major25. Polonaises (24) for Keyboard: Polonaise in C major26. Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso continuo in F minor: 1st movement, Adagio27. Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso continuo in F minor: 2nd movement, Allegro28. Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso continuo in F minor: 3rd movement, Largo29. Sonata for 2 Violins and Basso continuo in F minor: 4th movement, Allegro ma non tanto


  • Wykonawca Musica Alta Ripa
  • Data premiery 2014-12-04
  • Nośnik CD
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Mendelssohn was without doubt the most precociously gifted composer the world has ever known: not even Mozart produced ‘mature’ masterpieces while still in his teens. He was also a double prodigy on the violin and piano, an exceptional athlete, a talented poet (Goethe was a childhood friend and confidant), multi-linguist, watercolourist and philosopher. He excelled at virtually anything which could hold his attention for long enough, although it was music above all which activated his creative imagination.The two String Quintets were composed at opposite ends of his short career. No 1 was written in 1826, soon after the completion of the Octet and E major Piano Sonata and before the Overture to ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’, when Mendelssohn was still only seventeen. He later substituted a slow movement in memory of his friend the violinist Eduard Rietz, and it was this revised version of the Quintet that was published in Bonn the same year and is recorded here.Quintet No 2 dates from 1845 (when Mendelssohn was still only thirty-six), a year before his triumphant success with Elijah in Birmingham and just two years prior to his premature death.


  • Wykonawca Raphael Ensemble
  • Data premiery 2012-04-01
  • Nośnik CD
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VICTORY OF THE HUMAN RACE It is the best-known work in the history of music, that goes without saying. Its folksong-like melody is common property throughout the world. It resounded during innumerable concerts celebrating the millennium all over the globe. Everyone can hum or sing along to it. The subject at hand is, of course, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 and its Freudenmelodie (= melody to “Ode to Joy”). In the year 2001, it received the great honour of becoming the first musical opus ever to be included in the UNESCO World Inheritance List. In short: it is omnipresent. And that is also its problem. Following its première on May 7, 1824, which received an enthusiastic reception from the audience at the Vienna Kärntnertor Theatre, Beethoven’s last symphonic work embarked upon an incomparable – and non-stop – triumphal march. Right up to the present day, it has been constantly and vehemently “claimed” by all imaginable ideological and political groupings. Fascist, anti-fascist, communist, anti-dictatorial, etcetera, etcetera... Even to this day, it still causes amazement that this masterpiece, “about which so much rubbish has already been spread [...], has not long been buried under the pile of scribbling to which it has given rise” (to quote Debussy). Despite the fascinating and, at the same time, also frightening history of the reception given to the Ninth (which cannot simply be ignored in a study of the work), the main thing here is to focus on the idea which Beethoven expressed both instrumentally and vocally. After the composition of his Eighth, well over a decade passed before the composer (who in the meantime had become profoundly deaf) again attempted a symphony and started working on the project. Previously, he had written his eight other contributions to the genre within a similar period of time. The stimulus apparently came from a commission he received from the London Philharmonic Society for two symphonies in 1817. Beethoven subjected his own work to the greatest of criticism and wrote as follows: “For some time now, I have not found it easy to get down to writing. I sit down and think and think. I already know what I want; but I just can’t get it down on paper. I dread finally embarking upon such a major work.” Only a number of years after writing this, did Beethoven manage to conquer his dread and begin sketching the first movement. He spent a number of years working on the composition, the gigantic dimensions of which far exceed all its predecessors. Only at a relatively late stage, did Beethoven take the decision to include the human voice in the Finale: he had also worked on a purely instrumental solution for the Finale (which he later used in his Quartet in A minor, Op. 132). Finally, in March 1824, the composition was finished.  The central theme of the Ninth is Beethoven’s solution to the Finale problem, which he had designed individually for each of his previous symphonic works. The task of allowing the human voice to invade the domain of absolute music – the symphony – correspondingly demanded yet another special solution. In the first movement, the music consists of the most elementary and characteristic tonal components, of an unembellished, lingering 5th interval (a – e), which finally increases from falling 5ths and 4ths to octave jumps, before the elemental force of the main theme breaks in.  The previous lack of structure then begins to take on form, from the chaos order is restored. In a number of swelling waves, indicative of the later monumental symphonic works of Anton Bruckner, the recapitulation presents the theme in its full glory, before this is once more surpassed in the Coda. The Scherzo appears for the first time in Beethoven’s symphonic cycle in his second symphony, thus assigning to the Adagio the task of providing the place of rest. The movement supplies thematic material from the main theme of the first movement and tirelessly and restlessly drives it onwards in highly dynamic contrasts, before a melodic derivative from the “Ode of Joy” from the Finale appears for the first time in the cantabile Trio in D. However, here it does not yet have a joyful development. The supremacy of the D-minor key, which has so far continually dominated, is not broken until the Adagio, with the appearance of B-flat major: in a closely woven motif consisting of a 2nd interval, it develops the preliminary stages of the “Joy” theme, until two fanfares in the Coda announce the final movement. One more time, the D-minor key overwhelms the listener in this movement with shattering force. Then Beethoven quotes – adding each time a commentary from the instrumental recitative of the low strings – the main themes from the first three movements (as Bruckner was also to do in his Symphony No. 5), until finally the “Joy” melody asserts itself. It develops from the depths into a kind of undertow, which finally takes over the entire orchestra in all its tutti glory. Only now, after the theme has been, as it were, presented by the instruments and thus set free, does the human voice appear on the scene to depict the utopia of a harmonic, peaceful and loving human society. Beethoven had summarized the text of Schiller’s Ode an die Freude (= Ode to Joy) in a greatly reduced and concentrated form. The melody of Alle Menschen werden Brüder (= All people will become brothers) can be grasped immediately by the listener, due to its simplicity. It encourages the listener to sing along and allows him to join in the rest of the movement. Once again, Beethoven summons up major and magnificent compositional devices – ranging, for instance, from counterpoint to double fugues based on the main theme – before the movement comes to a hymnal conclusion in lively jubilation. With this Finale, Beethoven left behind not only his symphonic legacy, but, without realizing it, also a gigantic problem: after this work, which allowed vocal music to intrude into the absolute world of instrumental music, how would any future composer be able to write symphonic works? Was the absolute climax of the genre also to signify its demise?


  • Wykonawca Various Artists
  • Data premiery 2005-01-01
  • Nośnik CD

Tracklista:1. Sinfonia per la Chiesa in D Major, VB 146 00:07:37 2. I. Largo maestoso - Allegro vivace 00:10:31 3. II. Larghetto amoroso e semplice 00:04:34 4. III. Presto 00:06:26 5. I. Allegro 00:08:03 6. II. Andante un poco largo 00:05:54 7. III. Allegro 00:04:09 8. Larghetto (alternative second movement) 00:04:59 9. Riksdagsmarsch, VB 154 00:06:29


  • Wykonawca Sundkvist Petter
  • Data premiery 2002-01-01
  • Nośnik CD