Respighi: The Birds/Church Windows/Scarlatti/Tommasini: The Good Humored Ladies

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Sometime in the ‘70s, Sony (then CBS) released a two LP set called The Respighi Album which contained, among other pieces, the Church Windows and The Birds. Now The Birds had been recorded before and was pretty well known, but Church Windows was a stereo novelty, and it made a tremendous impression. Now this legendary performance has been remastered onto a budget-priced CD at a fraction of the cost of the original! It sounds better than ever--those magnificently deep organ pedals in the second movement (depicting the Archangel Michael with his flaming sword) will send your neighbors running for cover. What fun! --David Hurwitz

BBC Magazine
Gloriously wilful and un-PC as are Respighi's arrangements of Rameau and Pasquini in The Birds, they are done with considerable artistry.

Respighi: The Birds/Church Windows/Scarlatti/Tommasini: The Good Humored Ladies

Respighi: The Birds/Church Windows/Scarlatti/Tommasini: The Good Humored Ladies, Music, Ottorino Respighi, Domenico Scarlatti, Eugene Ormandy, Louis Lane, 20th/21st Century Tone Poem/Symphonic Poem, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Miscellaneous, Miscellaneous Music, Orchestral, Orchestral & Symphonic
Respighi: The Birds; Church Windows; Scarlatti; Tommasini: The Good Humored Ladies
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Brilliant Playing
  • Respighi, Tommasini advocators of the Neo Baroque...
  • Excellent recording of Respighi's lesser known works.
  • Out of print?!
  • Soaring, Majestic Compositions
Respighi: The Birds; Church Windows; Scarlatti; Tommasini: The Good Humored Ladies

Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

BalletsBallets | Ballets & Dances | Classical | Styles | Music
All Works by RespighiAll Works by Respighi | Respighi, Ottorino | ( R ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
Tone PoemsTone Poems | Theatrical, Incidental & Program Music | Forms & Genres | Classical | Styles | Music
Ballets & DancesBallets & Dances | Modern, 20th, & 21st Century | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Symphonies | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
CDs Under $7CDs Under $7 | Classical General | Classical | Today's Deals in Music | Formats | Music
CDs $7 - $10CDs $7 - $10 | Classical General | Classical | Today's Deals in Music | Formats | Music
All Bargain TitlesAll Bargain Titles | Classical General | Classical | Today's Deals in Music | Formats | Music
Classical MusicClassical Music | The Sony BMG Masterworks Store | Amazon.com Label Stores | Stores | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Respighi: Pines of Rome/Fountains of Rome/Roman Festivals
  2. Berlioz: Harold In Italy
  3. Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5; Prokofiev: Love for Three Oranges Suite
  4. Ormandy Conducts Sibelius & Grieg
  5. Strauss: Orchestral Music from Stage Works

ASIN: B0000062DS
Release Date: 1998-03-17

Tracks:

  1. The Birds: I Prelude
  2. The Birds: II La colomba (The Dove)
  3. The Birds: III La gallina (The Hen)
  4. The Birds: IV L'usignuolo (The Nightingale)
  5. The Birds: V Il cucu (The Cuckoo)
  6. Church Windows: I La fuga In Egitto ( The Flight Into Egypt)
  7. Church Windows: II S. Michele Arcangelo (St. Michael Archangel)
  8. Church Windows: III Il mattutino di Santa Chiara (The Matins Of St. Clare)
  9. Church Windows: IV S. Gregorio Magno (St. Gregory The Great)
  10. The Good-Humored Ladies: I Overture. Allegro
  11. The Good-Humored Ladies: II Presto
  12. The Good-Humored Ladies: III Allegro
  13. The Good-Humored Ladies: IV Andante
  14. The Good-Humored Ladies: V Non presto, in tempo di ballo
  15. The Good-Humored Ladies: VI 'Cat's Fugue' And Finale. Presto

Amazon.com

Sometime in the `70s, Sony (then CBS) released a two LP set called The Respighi Album which contained, among other pieces, the Church Windows and The Birds. Now The Birds had been recorded before and was pretty well known, but Church Windows was a stereo novelty, and it made a tremendous impression. Now this legendary performance has been remastered onto a budget-priced CD at a fraction of the cost of the original! It sounds better than ever--those magnificently deep organ pedals in the second movement (depicting the Archangel Michael with his flaming sword) will send your neighbors running for cover. What fun! --David Hurwitz

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Brilliant Playing.......2006-05-09

Most of the time when I listen to classical music, it is for the sheer beauty. Therefore, I am not overly concerned about the brilliance of the playing. However, sometimes I do enjoy great orchestral playing and that is when I pull out Cleveland Orchestra CDs from the George Szell era. Louis Lane was Szell's faithful assistant and thankfully was able to record many pieces that Szell had no interest in. A perfect example is the Scarlatti-Tommasini piece here. This is the type of music you listen just for the fun of it. The playing is almost beyond belief, that is how brilliant it is. One Lane recording that has never been issued on CD is the Mozart Divertomento No. 17, a truly magnificent performance. Hopefully, Sony will reissue it one of these days.

As for the two Eugene Ormandy recordings, they are both magnificent making this CD an absolute must for just about all classical musical lovers. Unfortunately, it has been deleted and the marketplace price is almost four times what it cost originally. But Sony reissues all the time and just maybe this truly great CD will come back.

4 out of 5 stars Respighi, Tommasini advocators of the Neo Baroque..........2005-12-24

These recordings show, both composers took delight in working with older styles and adapting them to the modern symphony orchestra. This is the form Stokowski marveled at in many of his transcriptions. The "Church Windows" is most heavy in orchestration. It is derived by Respighi's use of the Gregorian Chant. This set alone is worth the price of this disc; taking on a cinematic ambiance almost matching that of his great tone poems. This is evident most in the final segment " St. Gregory
the Great" with it's interlude of ominious organ cords, leading to an heavenly inspired finale. The Rameau influenced "The Birds"
are much more delicately orchestrated resembling sketches in music. The filler selection, "The Good Natured Ladies" is scored with more of a Baroque feel by Tommasini. This was assembled as a ballet based on Scarlatti harpsicord sonatas. He still utilizes the harpsicord, neatly dressed around light, airy
orchestation. This Sony/Columbia budget issue dating from 1964-
1970 is remastered and is probably priced for less than when they
were originally offered.

5 out of 5 stars Excellent recording of Respighi's lesser known works........2004-12-09

After hearing three different recordings of the Church Windows (this being one of them) I have come to the conclusion that this is the finest recording out there of Respighi's lesser known works.

The lush string section of Philadelphia is the definite selling item of this album. They show (as they always have, considering they were one of the finest string sections on Earth during the time of the actual recording) a warmth that makes the performance even more-so welcome and enjoyable. They play very cleanly and display a discipline to follow the conductor's every whim.

The organ in Church Windows also is well balanced with the ensemble and, when played loudly, can raise the hairs on the back of this listener's neck. Pedals that can shake rafters and cause weak hearts to flutter.

I have yet to understand why this work is not a standard orchestral warhorse. With few available recordings, each being well done, but this one, currently unavailable, surpassing them, I can say this is a real find. I hope that Sony reissues this, as another poster has said. It is worth the investment. The Birds and The Good-Humored Ladies are also performed excellently on this album. If you can find this recording, grab it. It's worth every penny you spend on it.

5 out of 5 stars Out of print?!.......2004-12-08

I imagine Sony will be repackaging and re-releasing this sometime soon--I hope--for the sake of those who haven't heard this wonderful disc. The pieces are fascinating and the performances are effortless yet filled with passion (if one can imagine such a mix!). These days just about any conductor of the past is underrated and even toward the end of his career Ormandy was pretty much taken for granted. Under his guidance, though, the Philadephia produced an endless series of first-rate recordings with a consistency that even a von Karajan no doubt could admire. Maybe that was the problem--no single recording among them all ever jumped out a you! Man, were we spoiled!

I feel a bit bad for the younger generation. There was a time back when I was a young'un when the US had phenomenal orchestras: the Philadelphia with Ormandy, the New York with Bernstein, the Boston with Munch, and Szell and Reiner with their orchestras out in the heartland (along with an assortment elsewhere on the continent that were merely damned good. I doubt we'll ever have such luck again).

Oh, nearly forgot. The Tommasini is great fun and is very well played. I miss the other side of the LP release though, Walton's "Wise Virgins" suite which has some of the hottest Bach arrangements this side of Stokowski. I've heard other performances of the Walton but Lane's gets it just right.

5 out of 5 stars Soaring, Majestic Compositions.......2002-11-14

I am falling in love with the music of Respighi. Introduced to him at a Mannheim Steamroller concert where they played some selections from his Pines of Rome, I have slowly purchased more of his works.

This latest addition is such a great find! The Birds are so mellow and pleasant to listen to. The winds are magnificent here from the Philadelphia Orchestra in this legendary recording. Especially delightful is the playfulness of The Cuckoo.

Respighi's Church Windows shifts moods to won of emulating in various phrases of the music Gregorian chant. The pipe organ kicking in on The Matins was especially moving.

The excellent liner notes accompanying were very helpful in explaining how Respighi and Tommasini were throwbacks in their day to the previous musical styles, here resurrecting several of them with adaptation.

Scarlatti's harpsichord sonatas are here adapted to a delightful orchestral piece "The Good-Humored Ladies." Played eloquently by the Cleveland Orchestra under Louis Lane.

Music Review:

  1. Richard Rodney Bennett: Complete Works for Solo Piano
  2. Riley: The Book Of Abbeyozzud / Tanenbaum, Silverman, et al
  3. Roberto Alagna ~ Serenades
  4. Sainton:The Island/Hadley:The Trees So High
  5. Scarlatti Cantatas, Volume III / McGegan, Brian Asawa
  6. Symphony No. 9 "L'Eve Future"
  7. Tchaikovsky - Eugene Onegin / Te Kanawa ˇ Hampson ˇ Rosenshein ˇ Gedda ˇ Sir Charles Mackerras [in English]
  8. Tchaikovsky: The Snow Maiden, Op. 12
  9. The Age of Cathedrals
  10. The Collection

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Pink of Condition

An Introduction To Alexandre Rabinovitch

A Musicall Dreame

The Gigolo

Amusing Anecdotes for the Depraved [Import]

Bamboo Shadows

Adi Anant: Creation Mondiale (A Beginning Without An End)

Booth and the Bad Angel

16 Lovers Lane [Import]

Béla Bartók: Concerto for Viola & Orchestra / Peter Eötvös: Replica / György Kurtág: Movement for Viola & Orchestra - Kim Kashkashian

Adventures in Whistle Village [Import]

15 Anos [Import]

20 Kilates Nortenos

Hail Queen of Heaven

Christmas Songs