Bands Music
Related Subjects: Funk Brothers Peterson, Oscar Abercrombie, John Bolden, Buddy Cherry, Don Dolphy, Eric Hall, Jim Joplin, Scott Mingus, Charles Shepp, Archie Tristano, Lennie
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Used price: $1.87
Disc 1
- Star Spangled Banner
- Washington Post March
- Semper Fidelus
- God Bless America
- Armed Forces Medley
- Liberty Bell March
- America
- National Emblem March
- El Capitan March
- Light Cavalry Overture
- 1812 Overture; Conclusion
- Stars and Stripes Forever

Used price: $3.28
Disc 1
- Holst: Jupiter from "The Planets" (Polo)
- Saint-Saens: "Aquarium" from Carnival of the Animals (Disney Cruises)
- Satie: Gymnopedies No.l (Bank of America)
- Rimsky-Korsakov: Flight of the Bumblebee ("Green Hornet")
- Vivaldi: The Four Seasons: Summer, Presto ("The Four Seasons")
- Bach: Cello Suite No. 1 (Gatorade)
- Offenbach: Barcarolle from "Tales of Hoffman" (Bailey's)
- The Liberty Bell March ("Monty Python's Flying Circus")
- Holst: Mars from "The Planets" (Pontiac GTO)
- Beethoven: Symphony No. 9, 2nd Movement ("The Huntley-Brinkley Report")
- Dvorak: New World S ymphony, Largo (AT&T Wireless)
- Prokofiev: Romeo and Juliet, Capulets and Montagues (Egoiste)
- Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture (Conclusion) (Quaker Oats)
Used price: $12.48
Disc 1
- Ride of the Valkyries (Inspiration for You Spin Me Round Like a Record)
- O Fortuna (Inspiration for Hate Me Now)
- Polovtsian Dances (Excerpt) (Inspiration for Prince Igor)
- 1st movement (Excerpt) (Inspiration for Because)
- Scene (Inspiration for Saturday Night At The Duck Pond)
- Air on the G string (Inspiration for A Whiter Shade of Pale)
- Jupiter (Inspiration for Joybringer)
- 1st movement (Inspiration for Roll Over Beethoven)
- Adagio (Excerpt) (Inspiration for All By Myself)
- Excerpt (Inspiration for Night Of Fear)

Used price: $8.59
Disc 1
- Igor Stravinsky: The Firebird Suite: Introduction and The Firebird and Her Dance
- Gustav Holst: First Suite in E-flat major, Op. 28, No. 1: March
- Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture, Op. 49 (excerpt)
- Modest Moussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition: The Hut on Fowl's Legs and The Great Gate of Kiev
- Georges Bizet: Carmen Suite No. 2: Danse Boheme
- Camille Saint-Saens: Symphony No. 3 in C minor, Op. 78 "Organ," Mvt. 2 (excerpt)
- Johann Sebastian Bach: Toccata and Fugue in D minor, BWV 565 (excerpt)
- Ludwig van Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-flat major, Op. 73, Mvt. 2 (excerpt)
- Antonio Vivaldi: The Four Seasons: Presto from L'Estate (Summer), Op. 8, No. 2/RV 315
- Aaron Copland: Fanfare for the Common Man
- Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 2 "Resurrection," Mvt. 5 (excerpt)
- Sergei Prokofiev: Romeo and Juliet: Montagues and Capulets (excerpt)
- Beethoven: Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major "Eroica," Mvt. 4 (excerpt)
- Frank Proto: Introduction
- Hector Berlioz: Requiem, Op. 5 (Grand Messe des Morts): Dies irae (excerpt)
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Eine kleine Nachtmusik, K. 525, Mvt. 1, Allegro (excerpt)
- Beethoven: Moonlight Sonata in C-sharp minor, Op. 27/2, Mvt. 1, Adagio sostenuto
- Holst: The Planets, Op. 32: Mars, the Bringer of War (excerpt)
- Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker: Trepak (Russian Dance)
- Bach: Italian Concerto, BWV 971: Presto
- Richard Strauss: Also sprach Zarathustra, Op. 30 (excerpt)
- Sergei Rachmaninoff: Vespers (All-Night Vigil) - Mass for Unaccompanied Chorus: Bogoroditsye Devo, Raduisya (Rejoice, O Virgin)
- Richard Wagner: Das Rheingold: Ride of the Valkyries (excerpt)
- Giovanni Gabrieli: Canzon septimi toni No. 2
- Elmer Bernstein: The Magnificent Seven
- P.D.Q. Bach: Oedipus Tex (dramatic oratorio for soloists, chorus and orchestra), S.150. "Howdy there"
- Mozart: The Magic Flute: Aria No. 17: "Ach, ich Fuhl's" from Act Two
- George Frideric Handel: Messiah: No. 7. "And He shall purify" from Part One
- William S. Gilbert: The Pirates of Penzance: No. 13: Song: "I am the very model of a modern Major-General" from Act One
- Ottorino Respighi: Church Windows: St. Michael the Archangel
- Claude Debussy: La fille aux cheveux de lin
- Maurice Ravel: Daphnis et Chloe: Scene 3
- Rachmaninoff: Sonata No. 2 in B-flat minor, Op. 36 (revised 1931 edition): Mvt. 3, Allegro molto
- Beethoven: Quartet in A minor, Op. 132, Mvt. 5, Allegro appassionato
- Nicholai Rimsky-Korsakov: Scheherazade, Op. 35, Mvt. 1, The Sea and Sinbad's Ship (excerpt)
- Isaac Albeniz: Suite espanola, Op. 47, Asturias (excerpt)
- Carl Orff: Carmina Burana: In taberna quando sumus
- Mahler: Symphony No. 5, Mvt. 4, Adagietto: Sehr langsam (excerpt)
- Jean Sibelius: Symphony No. 2 in D major, Mvt. 4, Allegretto moderato (excerpt)
- Shaker Hymn Tune: Simple Gifts

Disappointing presentation of great musicReview Date: 2002-08-04

Used price: $5.25
Disc 1
- Dies Irae
- O Fortuna
- Mars
- Ride of the Valkyries
- Chorus Of The Hebrew Slaves
- excerpt
- Grand March
- Presto
- excerpts
- Toccata
- First movement
- Adagio (excerpts)
- Sabre Dance
- First movement
- Nessun dorma
- excerpts
- Dance of the knights
- Dies Irae
- excerpt
- [Unspecified] excerpt
- Allegro
- Hallelujah
- La Réjouissance
- Flight of the Bumblebee
- March to the Scaffold
- Overture
- excerpts
- Jupiter
- excerpt
- [Unspecified] Scene (excerpt)
- Nimrod
- Promenade
- Finale

perfect selection for commencement/ graduationReview Date: 2007-06-11
SamplesReview Date: 2003-11-23
Great Starting Point for Classical Music NovicesReview Date: 2004-08-12
The CD contains 36 songs composed by the legends of Classical Music Composers from the past. The bulk of the works come from Composers in the the 19th and 20th century, but there are works from the Romantic and Classical eras of the late 18th and early 19th century (such as Beethoven and Mozart). In general you will find most of the major names of Composers you would expect to find - names such as Tchiakovsky, Handel, Verdi, Strauss, Elgar, and Bach are all there. The only major composer who I would have expected to see on this CD that I don't see is Frederic Chopin. The composers of the late 20th century are not included on this collection - so you won't see Leonard Bernstein or John Williams on this set. While these Composers are excellent, I do think style of the tracks on this collection pre-date their style.
The recordings themselves are done by the great Orchestras around the world. For the most part, European Orchestras were used to deliver the tracks. There are a few exceptions: The Chicago Symphony Orchestra delivers "The Ride of the Valkyries"; The Toronto Symphony Orchestra delivers "Dance of the Knights"; and the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra delivers Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture". Some of the European Orchestras that are well known include: BBC Symphony Orchestra, London Philharmonic, Bolshoi Symphony Orchestra, Choeur Philhamonique de Strasbourg, and more. Also included are performances by well known names in the Classical space such as Marie-Claire Alain (Bach's "Toccate and Fogue in D Minor" and Saint-Saens' "Symphony for Organ No 3"), Piero Toso (Vivaldi's "Allegro From Spring - Four Seasons"), and Placido Domingo appears on Puccini's "Nessun Dorma".
The 2 Disc collection contains a total of over 2 hours and 6 minutes of music. The selections that are included in the set will sound very familiar to you when you play them. You probably have both heard and seen the names of tracks such as: Oref's "O Fortuna"; Copland's "Fanfare for the Common Man"; Beethoven's "First Movement from Symphony Number 5" and "Ode To Joy"; Elgar's "Pomp and Circumstance", and Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture". Many of the other tracks will also sound familiar, but maybe not so much by name - such as Wagner's "The Ride of the Valkyries", Strauss' Also Sprach Zarathoustra"; Grieg's "Piano Concerto", and "Dies Irae" (versions included by Mozart and Verdi - you can compare the two and judge for yourself). As for the Discs themselves, I think most of the casual fans will like the selections on Disc Two better, but Disc One is still very good. On a sidebar, the Israel Philharmonic's version of "1812 Overture" is by far the best you will hear - particularly at the end, the booming drums create almost a 3 dimensional vision of fireworks being launched into the air.
There one big negative on this collection is some of the recording quality. The clarity of the recording is there, but some of the recording levels leave a lot to be desired. On some of the softer parts, it is barely audible without significantly turning up your volume. This is very evident on "O Fortuna" where you will hear almost dead silence during from the 30 second to 1:30 mark of the track unless you crank your volume up. Same with the first few seconds of Strauss' "Also Sprach Zarathoustra" and Tchiakovsky's "1812 Overture". When the volume is cranked up you will hear them - but then the other sections will be way too loud. I'm surprised with modern technology that this couldn't be addressed better.
The liner notes are pretty thin. You do get the Composers, Performers/Orchestras, and recording dates. There isn't any more details than that and you won't learn anymore insight on the tracks than this information. Despite some of the shortcomings of the liner notes and recording volume, I still think this is an excellent place to start and do recommend this CD if you are a novice to Classical Music and are looking for a great place to start listening to what the Classics have to offer.
**An Exquisite Album**Review Date: 2004-02-21
Simply The Best Classical Anthems is a compilation album of `36 of the most powerful Anthems on Earth'. But, it is also said to be something else. It is said to be a gateway. A gateway to another world. A world where our imagination can run free without being shackled down by any borders or boundaries or rules or limits. A world that we have all seen or perhaps more accurately have all heard of but for many of us a world that we have never dared to enter. Never dared to enter because of fear. The fear of being ostracised and shunned by our community.
THE MYTH
`Classical Music!',
I can hear some of you cry. `That isn't another world. That's just music for the upperclass, the high-brow, and the pompous.'
Surprisingly, I too felt this way for a long time until I accepted the invitation made to me by Simply The Best Classical
Anthems. I always felt that Classical Music was nice to listen to as background music for a Levis ad or a Car ad but I would
consider people strange if they chose to hear it on its own. However, after having listened to this album I realised how wrong
I was in my assumptions.
THE TRUTH
Music as with all forms of amusement helps to take you away from where you are now.
It helps to relax you when you are stressed with anger; it helps to give you strength when you are vulnerable; it helps to
keep your spirits up when you have faced tragedy or loss. It helps. And, for me the type of music that best conjures up the
most passionate emotions (love, hate, courage and anger) at our most testing times is Classical Music.
How? I don't know.
Why? I don't know.
I can only promise you that in my experience it does.
THE CHEST
The album, in visual terms,
is very difficult to overlook amongst the plethora of records that may surround it. This is because the album has a very distinct
purple sleeve cover. Not any kind of purple mind you but the Cadbury's kind of purple. The kind of purple that carries with
it an invitation. An invitation that if accepted promises you a treasure inside.
And since, I have always enjoyed the
treasure within the purple Cadbury's Dairy Milk wrapper, I asked myself why would an album carrying the same invitation promise
to be anything different? Thus, I parted with my tuppence worth and went back home to open this purple chest of promised treasures.
THE
PROMISED TREASURE
As you may have guessed, the contents of the album are somewhat different to the contents of a Cadbury's
bar. When I opened the album, I was presented with two compact discs. At first glance, there did not seem to be anything special
about them. They were just your average, everyday, run of the mill compact discs. To tell you the truth, I was a bit disappointed
because I suppose I had hoped for something more.
However, looks can be deceptive. (Afterall, a Cadbury's Dairy Milk does
not seem very appetising until you taste it!) And, also come November each year, I am always bemused and surprised at how
the shabby contents of a cardboard box can both light up the sky and light up the faces of the neighbourhood. Thus, I pushed
aside my assumptions and I ignited the discs (not literally of course, I just pressed the play button on the CD player). And,
I let the fireworks begin.
THE KEY
From the very beginning, you will feel like you have unlocked the doorway to something
special. And, after a full two hours of listening to both discs, you will feel like you have been taken out of this world
and transported to another. Welcome to the world of Classical Music.
GUIDANCE
In the beginning, continue to listen to
both discs in one go (i.e. one after the other). After a while, you will know which tracks you enjoy listening to the most.
For those tracks you enjoyed the most make a promise to yourself that you will listen to the whole of the piece from which
that track came from.
Good Luck on your quest if you choose to accept it.
Ride amongst the Valkyries, listen to the
Flight of the Bumblebees, and use The Planets to keep you on the path.
I am not a good reviewer because as with all of my reviews I refuse to comment too much about what is inside the product but rather more about what effect the product has had on me. (Me, me, me. Vain & Egotistic, I know, so my friends and family keep telling me). But, I just want to cause a raucous about the product, enough not to spoil but enough of a raucous to let you experience it for yourself.
So my final words
are:
Simply The Best Classical Anthems is an invitation. An invitation to the world of classical music. A world where you
can begin a never-ending quest of curiosity. A curiosity that will always be rewarded with fulfilment.
Do you accept such an invitation?
Hope you found this review helpful.
Great Sampler!Review Date: 2002-03-19
There are also some new pieces that I have fallen in love with, such as "The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra," "'Promenade' from Pictures at an Exhibition." The compilers did an interesting double take by including both Verdi's and Mozart's "Dies Ire." I'm not sure which is better.
This music is good for the brain and good for the soul. There is a power and passion that the blaring and glaring music that makes up most of the FM band. I'm reminded of the religious man who said that there is no music in hell. Probably because they wouldn't appreciate it there.
These CDs has a good transfer from the analogue tapes; there is no hiss or fuzziness. The packaging hearkens back to 2001: A Space Odyssey, with the black monolith. And appropriately, "Also Sprach Zarathustra" is the opening track on Disk 2.

Used price: $12.91
Disc 1
- -7. Sound Effects
- Respighi: Ottobrata from Roman Festivals
- York: Bantu
- Palestrina: Alma Remptoris
- Handel: Alla Hornpipe from Water Music, Suite II
- Bach: Toccata in D Minor
- Wagner: Prelude to Act III
- -18. Stereo Setup & Imaging
- Copland: Fanfare for the Common Man
- Durufle: Sanctus from Requiem
- Satie
- Debussy: Arabesque No. 1
- Dvorak: Minuet from Serenade for Winds, Op. 44
- Vivaldi: Autumn from the Four Seasons, Movement III
- Gershwin: Medley from Porgy and Bess
- Falla: The Three-Cornered
- Dvorak: Stabat Mater, Movement V
- Back: Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring
- -29. Subwoofer Evaluation & Setup
- Hanson: Dies Natalis
- Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture
- -39. Surround Sound Setup & Imaging
- -49. Reference Tones

cdReview Date: 2008-01-21
I am happy with the product and was also happy with the delivery time.

Used price: $3.99
Disc 1
- [Excerpt]
- Daybreak [Excerpt]
- Bransles
- Pieds-en-l'air
- 1. Introduction (Prelude). 2. Dance
- 1st Movement, Allegro [Excerpt]
- 3rd Movement, Allegro [Excerpt]
- 4th Movement, Allegro assai
- [Excerpt]
- [Excerpt]
- Chinese Dance
- Part 1 [Excerpt]
- 3rd Movement, Allegretto [Excerpt]
- The Mermaid's Lagoon [Excerpt]
- Before I Gaze at You Again
- Te Deum / Judex crederis [Excerpts]

Used price: $0.92
Disc 1
- The Star Spangled Banner - Key, Francis Scott
- America the Beautiful - Bates, Katherine Le
- America - Smith, Samuel Franc
- Battle Hymn of the Republic - Howe, Julia Ward
- Anchors Aweigh - Miles, Alfred Hart
- The Marines' Hymn
- The U.S. Field Artillery March - Gruber, Edmund L.
- Stars and Stripes Forever - Sousa, John Philip
- El Capitan - Sousa, John Philip
- The Liberty Bell - Sousa, John Philip
- Semper Fidelis - Sousa, John Philip
- Washington Post March - Sousa, John Philip
- National Emblem - Bagley, E.E.
- Excerpt
- Excerpt
- Overture (Excerpt)
- Excerpt

Stars and Stripes ForeverReview Date: 2008-04-23
Thanks Again,
Peter
What are they thinking?Review Date: 2006-09-30
Must Have for Every Patriotic AmericanReview Date: 2002-04-12
I strongly disagree with some of the other reviews here and I found the quality to be great, along with the selection of songs. BUY THIS CD. YOU WON'T BE SORRY!!
Don't Buy this Album!!!Review Date: 2001-11-03
songs is completely ruined because of brutal
editing and may I even say deception. I almost
never return a CD, but I returned this one. And
sadly because I found the sound quality very good.
Both on the outside track listings and on the inside
pullout, there is no mention that the tracks are
excerpts. Most leave out entire strains or repeats.
But the worst offense has to be the "1812 Overture".
I was excited to be purchasing an album with this
on it. But what I got was not even excerpts from
this piece. "excerpts from" usually implies that
a specific movement is presented. But this piece
is totally mutilated. Three measures are played,
five measures are omitted, two more measures are
played, etc. If Tchaikovsky were around he'd have
good cause for a lawsuit. Pleeeaasse, don't support
a product that does injustice to the composers and
does not truthfully describe the product's contents!!!
Marching music to yawn by?Review Date: 2002-04-04
Used price: $0.95

Used price: $1.75
Disc 1
- Finale
- Presto
- O mio babbino caro
- 2nd movement
- Overture
- Rondeau - Mouret, Jean-Joseph
- 1st Movement
- The Liberty Bell March - Sousa, John Philip
- Nessun dorma
- Dance of the Comedians
- Funeral March of a Marionette - Gounod, Charles
- Hungarian Rhapsodies, S244 - Liszt, Franz
- Dies Irae
- Albason Fanfare - Reiche, Eugen
- Flight of the Bumblebee
- Finale (excerpt)
Related Subjects: Funk Brothers Peterson, Oscar Abercrombie, John Bolden, Buddy Cherry, Don Dolphy, Eric Hall, Jim Joplin, Scott Mingus, Charles Shepp, Archie Tristano, Lennie
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Maazel's Pictures at an Exhibition is excellnt, precise with excellent blends and fantastic orchestral playing, but you can hardly feel the power of the Great Gate of Kiev without the promenades and pictures that preceed it--you loose the whole sense of climax and fulfillment following the half hour of difficult music that preceeds the Great Gate. Beethoven's Emperor concerto is top-notch music but I think you might rather hear the second movement between the first and third movements which are full of powerful orchestral playing and keyboard virtuosity. Robert Spano's recording of Scheherazade that was released just a few months ago is brilliant. It's his first recording with the Atlanta Symphony and it's great--and you should own the complete thing which comes on a CD with the beuatiful Russian Easter Overture.
Spend some time looking for these complete recordings and you will be rewarded. What makes the compilation even worse is that in many cases the CD does not even present a full movement but just a part of a movement.
As I said, I own many of these individual recordings and they are all great: Telarc captures the best musicians at their best. Having two or three CDs from which these excerpts were taken is much better than owning this compilation. I highly recommend Fennell's Holst (Telarc - #80038), Maazel's Pictures (Telarc - #80042), and Spano's Scheherazade (Telarc - #80568), instead of this disc. Rachmaninoff's Second Sonata and Sibelius' Second Symphony are great but these are not my preferred recordings (find Van Cliburn's Rachmaninoff and Maazel's Sibelius), and you can do better by swapping some other performers as well.