by Kent » Mon 18 Jul 2005, 19:50:14
A VERY short list of my all-time personal favorites:
SYMPHONIC:
Symphony Fantastique by Hector Berlioz
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he Symphonie Fantastique has no equivalent in the repertoire: this work must be regarded as the most amazing bombshell in 19th century French music, whose boldness is quite as remarkable as that of another 'scandalous' piece of the following century, [Stravinsky's] The Rite of Spring. The fact that [Symphony Fantastique] is firmly rooted in Viennese classicism does not prevent this iconoclastic work of genius from being at the same time a veritable manifesto of French Romanticism. With this symphony built on the famous 'idée fixe' motif (among others), the young Hector Berlioz ensured his place in history.
--Castle Classics Recordings
Symphony Fantastique tells a semi-literal story of the composer's obsession with a young woman (represented by a repeated musical theme or 'idée fixe') and the "exorcism" of his pain from her unrequited love. My favorite movement is called "March to the Scaffold" which recalls the terror of the French Revolution. It is bold and exciting, but also lush and romantic...and even humorus in spots. If you listen closely you can actually hear a musical representation of the guillotine falling and a head dropping off into the basket.
If you're going to purchase this piece I would personally recommend you go with one of the Chicago Symphony recordings with Sir George Solti conducting. Awesome.
CHORAL:
Handel's
Messiah
If the
Hallelujah Chorus is the only thing you've ever heard from this Baroque choral masterpiece, you definitely owe it to yourself to check out this work in its entirety. No matter how many times I hear this piece it never fails to lift my spirits. Beautiful. Inspirational. Awe inspiring.
If I never see another lame Christmas-season production of
The Nutcracker or
A Christmas Carol it will be just fine. But I never, never get tired of listening to Handel's
Messiah.
Note: I've heard many recordings and live performances over the years, but in my opinion the absolute FINEST performance of this piece is the 1966 recording by the London Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, Sir Colin Davis conducting. The London Symphony recording is note and tempo perfect and the soloists are exquisit, executing the most the thrilling period vocal improvisations or "ornaments" I've ever heard.
I just went to Amazon.com and found out they digitally remastered the CD in 2001. I ordered it immediately.
Handel - Messiah / Harper, Watts, Wakefield, Shirley-Quirk, LSO, C. Davis
~ George Frideric Handel
Amazon Link
There shall in that time be rumors of things going astray, and nobody will know where lieth those little things with the sort of raffia-work base, that has an attachment, seen only just the night before, about eight O'clock --Boring Prophet, Life of Brian