This is one of gems of my vinyl collection. It's not only a fabulous recording, it captures the magic a great conductor and orchestra can produce when musically aligned.
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This is one of gems of my vinyl collection. It's not only a fabulous recording, it captures the magic a great conductor and orchestra can produce when musically aligned.
This is the debut release of Italian conductor Daniele Gatti's tenure as the seventh chief conductor of the great Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam.
I've followed Gatti's career for a long time, since he conducted the Royal Philharmonic many years ago. Always an interesting musician, he managed a difficult orchestra and guided them to some wonderful recordings. His RPO Mahler 5 is a famous recording.
This 1960 recording sounds different than most of Art Pepper's west coast school recordings. Standards here, show tunes there from his famous records. But Smack Up feels different. A long drug sentence at San Quentin loomed over the sessions. That probably didn't help the general air of things.
This televised annual concert which began in 1939 to showcase the musical traditions of the great orchestra and Austria is considered the most important classical concert in the world, seen by over 50 million people in over 70 countries.
The repertoire is taken from the family of Johann Strauss and its contemporaries.
I was introduced to Nine Inch Nails by my twenty something son, who is a massive fan. Like a lot of kids in their early twenties, the concept of the music is easily as important as the melody, harmony and rhythm. Here’s where groups like Nine Inch Nails rule. Fronted by musical dynamo Trent Reznor, the ID, soundscape, sheer style of Nine Inch Nails (NIN) has jumped the cult shark. And, with Hesitation Marks, NIN’s first mainstream studio (Columbia) album since 2007, the public’s going to jump all over this.
Our writers are lucky to intersect with the gear we do. Even luckier to have the kit in our homes and review it for you. There are numerous requests for reviews that we just do not have the manpower to cover. Imagine the thousands of pieces we miss?
With that in mind, please take into account our 'winners' and rate accordingly. The equipment chosen is for a small list we love unreservedly. We hope you get a chance to listen to the kit in your system. We loved it in ours.
Chet Baker's sad story is one of legend. From talented teenager (even Italian movie producers looked at him as a leading man) making records with the very best west coast jazzers to an ignominious death falling from an Amsterdam hotel after a life of heroin addiction.
This exceptionally refined artist can take his place among all the luminaries who have won the Chopin Competition, including Martha Argerich, Maurizio Pollini and Krystian Zimerman.
I watched the competition daily on YouTube and followed Seong-Jin Cho with great interest. I had my favourites, Charles Richard-Hamelin chief among them (and runner up), but Cho's wonderful musicianship won the jurors' hearts
I like the way violinist Isabelle Faust mix and matches her accompaniments on her wonderful recordings. Her modern violin playing with original instrumental groups such as the accompanying band here, Il Giardino Armonico. 21st Century fiddling, baroque bowing at times and HIP practice.
So, how does it work for Mozart's Salzburg Violin Concertos?
This is becoming one of my favourite new releases. Who new way back in the 70s that DG vinyl releases would receive such raves? At the time, most DG LPs were best of the rest, far behind Bluebacks and RCAs.
Also cause for happiness, these early releases of two of DGs greatest roster members. I remember Abaddo's beginnings with the BSO and these early recordings. What a musician. And Argerich was a star from the beginning. A pair from musical heaven. And now the re release of their early gems.
My first discovery of these fascinating speakers was at the Montreal Audio Show from a few years ago. A local dealer had them set up beautifully with well matched gear SET gear and nothing but some red Barcelona Chairs for company. It was a very musical and stylish presentation.
Every young virtuoso has these two concertos in their back pocket. Georgian fiddler Lisa Batiashvili is among them. Her family left Georgia in 1991 and settled to study in Hamburg, After successes on the BBC, Batiashvili began her concert career. She quickly made a name for herself for refined, expressive playing. All of which may be heard on this wonderful new DG release.
As uber professionals, both the LSO and Valery Gergiev kept up the excitement to the end, but the truth was a little in the tiredness. Both needed a change. Gergiev got Munich's house band. Not in the LSO's league, but a money maker and musically safe.
I have a long history with JM Labs/Focal. One of our most fervent supporters has been a long time dealer.
The original JM Labs looked magnificent with their great covers of wood. For some reason, these beautifully engineered speakers were not my cup of tea.
An absolute gem from the young group from Stavanger, Norway.
The cellist Clemens Hagan chose his accompanists well. His performance of Haydn's wonderful C Major Concerto is full of life and vitality. Of course, it's played with utmost virtuosity, but with such musicality and refined tone. A musical winner in every way and very highly recommended to Audiophilia readers.
A good solid read of my detailed review of the powered version of this speaker may well be instructive.
The new passive version from Audioengine maintains many of the qualities from that fabulous little gem of a speaker, with the new one allowing for your own favourite type of amplification.
The HDP6 is a retro version, stripped of all the powered guts and gizmos.
More Curate's Egg from Canadian crooner Michael Bublé. A real mix, but inevitably something for all his fans.
The man can sing. Gifted and musical, he also puts on a stage show that is pretty well unmatched today. I guess that's why he went from the 7 million club to the 70 million! Astounding.
Fad or fo real?
The air to searching musicians like Furtwangler, our great Daniel Barenboim has not let himself settle for being one of the finest stage musicians, simply conducting the best or playing the greatest concert stages.
Considered by many to be the ultimate in high fidelity, this justly famous recording of Strauss’ enigmatic score glows on the Classic Records reissue. Based on the Nietzsche’s philosophical novel of the same name, Richard Strauss pulls out all of his tricks of orchestration to provide the listener with a musical journey of superhuman proportions.
I'm not sure why the Brits call a fully featured 'integrated amplifier' an 'Amplifier'. I'm sure it's just another example of the many idiosyncrasies of the English language and its enigmatic [eccentric] users. We've all got our favourites. Mine, a car 'hood'. In England it's called a 'bonnet'. Cute. What's the phrase? 'Two nations divided by a common language.'