What are you listening to and WHY might anyone be interested? (Vol. XI)
Posted by: Richard Dane on 31 December 2014
On the cusp of 2015, we start a new thread...
Anyway, links:
Volume X: https://forums.naimaudio.com/to...-be-interested-vol-x
Volume IX: https://forums.naimaudio.com/to...16#22826037054683416
Volume VIII: https://forums.naimaudio.com/di...nt/12970396056050819
Volume VII: https://forums.naimaudio.com/di...6878604287751/page/1
Volume VI: https://forums.naimaudio.com/di...ent/1566878604097229
Volume V: https://forums.naimaudio.com/di...ent/1566878605140495
Volume IV: https://forums.naimaudio.com/di...ent/1566878605795042
Volume III: https://forums.naimaudio.com/di...ent/1566878607309474
Volume II: https://forums.naimaudio.com/di...ent/1566878606245043
Volume I: https://forums.naimaudio.com/di...ent/1566878607464290
Music Matters strikes again!
Their latest reissue Hancock's Empyrean Isles does not disappoint.
On Cantaloupe Island, Hancock's subtle key strokes which I didn't notice before as well as the precision of Freddie Hubbard create that spooky walked in sound.
Going back to the 80s reissue, everything collapses and sounds flat. Dynamic shadings are just not there.
As Maiden Voyage, cymbal shimmers and strikes are vivid and has a tactile presence. Young Ron Carter's solo bass line is clearly defined. Avant garde tune like The Egg now makes much more sense and sounds extremely rich simply more shadings of each instruments overlapping with others.
Dexter Gordon isn't my favourite horn player but I purchased his 'Our Man in Paris' mainly wanted to listen to Bud Powell and Pierre Michelot in a best possible sound.
Also, this session was not done by Van Gelder since the recording venue was in Paris. ( CBS Paris studio )
Now for the first time, I can hear a piano! ( albeit Powell mumbling along with the tunes )
Great album Tony and one I haven't played in a very long time. Will need to dig it out.
Got this one a couple of days ago, Ewe. Must have played it half a dozen times already, especially Nature's Way. What a track.
Always thought it was best listened to on phones because of the phasing.
Streaming | FLAC 16/44.1 Download
EFSS ~ Ouddorp Tapes [22 March 2011]
Fast becoming my favourite Berlin School band.
Franz Schubert: David Fray (Klavier), Jacques Rouvier (Klavier)
Piano Sonata in G major D 894 "Fantasie"
Hungarian Melody in B minor D 817
Fantasia in F minor for Piano Four Hands D 940
Allegro in A minor for Piano Four Hands D 947 "Lebensstürme"
Unfathomable melancholy.
This is my favourite quote from the you tube video below. And how he describes a glassy, perfectly still water (as if nothing is really happening on the surface) yet below the surface there is something profound going on. He is very apt in his assessment of the music and his interpretations too I find to be very convincing.
I have spent the last 3 days listening to this disc and in equal portions playing this same music at the piano. This is music I could not live without. The trouble with music and maybe especially with the music of Schubert is that words just do not suffice in describing it. If you can listen to the opening of the G major sonata or the opening of the F minor fantasia and not be affected somehow then I would question whether you have even come in to the presence of the real Schubert. It is not music you can exercise to or read the paper or a book with it in the background (at least in my experience and this is my opinion only). It is all or nothing. This is music where the composer is telling you his deepest darkest secrets ranging from the saddest and most painful thing imaginable to those joyful, rich moments. This is music for times when you have the opportunity to be in the still, quiet alone. And there is simply no better example of unfathomable melancholy than the opening section of the F minor fantasy.
When you see in the score any pianissimos or triple pianos then this is almost certainly a time when Schubert is whispering to you some secret but in a much more profound language than any words could manage. Fortissimo or triple forte is the opposite. These moments are usually where the pain is so great that one screams in anguish.
This G major sonata is really an example of stillness with the extreme contrasts written in. I love what David Fray has done here really and the recording quality is really beyond expectations. He accomplishes a beautiful melancholy, cantabile bell like tone which is very nice. Maybe it is not entirely possible to do on a recording what you might do in real life but I would have liked more contrast. I didn't find enough difference between all the levels between triple piano and triple forte. This is not a criticism but I am simply musing about here. I certainly don't think it suits Schubert to be loud and clangy. I just wonder if it would be reasonable for him to show a little more anguish at the loudest spots.
So you may wonder why a guy who mostly hangs out in D minor is enthusing about a sonata written in G major. While I love the first two movements of this sonata with their endless beauty and sublime moments one of my favourite spots in this sonata is in the last movement where Schubert takes us out of the sunshine of G major and exposes us to darkness in the key of C minor. It is here where I find Fray has glossed over the opportunity to show the severe contrast and gravity of the situation. Part of the problem may be that his chosen tempo is clipping along quite quickly.
While not the only way I have always liked everything I have heard of David Fray - his Schubert, Bach, Mozart, Liszt and so on. This album is no exception. Part of it might be that he plays music that I find so vital and important in my own life. The pianism and the recording quality though are both exceptional and I think this year so far this is one of my favourite albums.
Great write up - I also like this disc a lot.
During workout - live concerts of Led Z are always a great things to listen to ...
Enjoyable version of the Noctures..
During workout - live concerts of Led Z are always a great things to listen to ...
Bert, how is the sound quality of that download?
Steve
On vinyl. The best female singer EVER....
Original mono vinyl.
Their new album, on vinyl. It's a real grower:
Streaming | CD FLAC rip
Frank Sinatra ~ Frank Sinatra Sings For Only the Lonely (1958)
One of the 15 album (9 CD) plus an additional 46 bonus tracks that arrived this morning in the Masterworks box set. The sound quality on this one is excellent.
Ripping has however proved a bit of a pain with many CDs containing two albums. The final CD (9) has disappeared into the dBpoweramp ether at the moment. I suspect that the tagging is all over the place.
On CD:-
From the mono vinyl box set, my third fave Fabs LP:
Streaming | CD FLAC rip
Frank Sinatra ~ Frank Sinatra Sings For Only the Lonely (1958)
One of the 15 album (9 CD) plus an additional 46 bonus tracks that arrived this morning in the Masterworks box set. The sound quality on this one is excellent.
Ripping has however proved a bit of a pain with many CDs containing two albums. The final CD (9) has disappeared into the dBpoweramp ether at the moment. I suspect that the tagging is all over the place.
That aside Stevee, what do you think? SQ is very good and the presentation is nice, especially for that kind of money...
On original vinyl...
Streaming | CD FLAC rip
Frank Sinatra ~ Frank Sinatra Sings For Only the Lonely (1958)
One of the 15 album (9 CD) plus an additional 46 bonus tracks that arrived this morning in the Masterworks box set. The sound quality on this one is excellent.
Ripping has however proved a bit of a pain with many CDs containing two albums. The final CD (9) has disappeared into the dBpoweramp ether at the moment. I suspect that the tagging is all over the place.
That aside Stevee, what do you think? SQ is very good and the presentation is nice, especially for that kind of money...
I think its a great package Kevin and far more than I expected for less than £15 delivered. I have only listened to the one CD but the excellent SQ really caught me by surprise, fantastic! I was not expecting a booklet or the rather nice original artwork on the cardboard CD covers. All in all an absolute bargain and the sound quality (so far) is blowing me away.
I have now found the "missing" 9th ripped CD with 2 albums on it. It has been fetchingly ripped as "The Ref-O-Ree Records Story", complete with 25 track titles that aren't Frank's...
The good news though is that the physical CD plays the 2 albums correctly as does the ripped version, now that I have finally tracked it down!
I had a similar problem with one album on a 5 CD Robin Trower box set a while back. Eventually maybe 6 months later the main database (somewhere?) was corrected and the album, the tracks, artwork and other metadata were all sorted out automatically without my input. Hopefully the same thing will happen with this CD rip. For now I shall just look for "The Ref-O-Ree Records Story", complete with 25 track titles that aren't Frank's, whenever I wish to play them.
Streaming | CD FLAC rip
Frank Sinatra ~ In The Wee Small Hours (1955)
Originally recorded sixty years ago, this evocative (remastered) album with the glorious title track, is sounding just wonderful.
[From the Masterworks box set]
Something new for me, great for a laid back mood.
You horrible twosome have got me interested despite the fact I don't like Sinatra
Christine And The Queens - Chaleur Humaine
I shall retaliate the only way I know! French pop, nothing more, nothing less. A single from it. Not sure about the dancing mind.