What new releases are you looking forward to?

Posted by: Voltaire on 02 May 2009

I am sure this thread has been started before but...What new releases are you looking forward too?

I'll start the ball rolling...

Posted on: 03 October 2018 by Kevin-W

Out next month: On 3 LPs or two CDs or two CDs and a DVD. Legendary performance, one of The Dame's best.

Posted on: 03 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

THE LARGEST COMPOSER PROJECT IN RECORDING HISTORY

32 Labels, 222CDs, 750+ Performers & Ensembles, 280 Hours of Music, 10 Hours of New Recordings including 7 World Premieres, 2 luxury hardback books, advance presentation of BWV3 Catalogue, plus digital product suite

Deutsche Grammophon and Decca proudly announce the release of the largest and most complete box set ever devoted to the work of a single composer. The 222 CD Complete Edition is the result of two years of curation and scholarship and has been developed with the cooperation of 32 labels and a team of scholars at the Leipzig Bach Archive, with an introductory DVD documentary and written welcome by its President Sir John Eliot Gardiner, and with editorial consultant Nicholas Kenyon presiding over work-by-work musical commentary.

The set marks 333 years since the birth of J.S. Bach. We can confidently say that certain numbers and numerical proportions had a special structural and sometimes religious significance for Bach. References to the number three reflect the important doctrine of God’s Tri-unity which lies at the core of Bach’s Lutheran faith. Nicholas Kenyon says: “333 is important, because one of the key Bach numbers is 3 representing the Trinity: Father, Son and Holy Ghost. The symbolism of three, and three times three, is everywhere in the collection of organ works Clavier-Übung III (1739). We often sense these underlying features in Bach’s work; while I don’t think he ever let them dominate his thinking, it was clearly a way in which he was expressing the harmony of the universe as he saw it.” The set is thus known as ‘Bach 333’.

Across 16,926 minutes of music over 5,533 tracks, Bach 333 presents every known note from the great master and opens up his world – and his impact on our world – in a uniquely immersive way: through audio, visual, printed and online materials. The set, the largest ever devoted to a single composer and exceeding in size even the massively-successful ‘Mozart 225’ Edition of two years ago, presents Bach’s complete oeuvre from 750 hand-picked performers and ensembles across 32 labels including Sony, Warner, BIS, SDG, Denon and Harmonia Mundi.

Two handsomely illustrated hardback books are included. The first book, entitled LIFE,presents a lavishly illustrated biography by leading Bach scholar Dorothea Schröder plus thirteen essays of the latest thinking from leading scholars from the Leipzig Bach Archive. The second book, MUSIC presents a new essay by doyen of Bach scholarship Christoph Wolff followed by work-by-work commentary by Nicholas Kenyon (author of The Faber Pocket Guide to Bach). Also included are complete sung texts and English translations, facsimile reproductions of key scores and a guide to further online resources including the Bach Archive’s ground-breaking Bach Digital initiative. Meanwhile, the set also conforms to the very latest research from the Leipzig Bach Archive and their new BWV3 catalogue due to be published in 2019-20. The life of Bach is further explored on DVD in Sir John Eliot Gardiner’s 90-minute BBC film ‘Bach: A Passionate Life’. The colour-coded layout of Bach 333 presents the works chronologically within one of four genres – Vocal Music, Keyboard Music, Orchestral Music and Instrumental Music. The consumer can navigate with ease across the enormous and rich array of content.

Best-in-class historically-informed performances include a handpicked set of the complete Cantatas led by outstanding contributions from Sir John Eliot Gardiner and Masaaki Suzuki, plus strong showings from Ton Koopman, Philippe Herreweghe, Gustav Leonhardt, Nicolaus Harnoncourt, Sigiswald Kuijken and more; other leading names featured across the Edition include Reinhard Goebel, Christopher Hogwood, Paul McCreesh, Franz Brüggen, Trevor Pinnock, Christophe Coin, Christophe Rousset and Rinaldo Alessandrini.

The set also presents over 50 CDs of alternative recordings including modern piano performances of all the key works from András Schiff, Murray Perahia, Angela Hewitt, Martha Argerich, Alfred Brendel and many more. 90 years of evolving Bach performance traditions in vocal and instrumental practice can be heard in legendary performances from a plethora of artists from Alfred Deller to Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, Adolf Busch to Claudio Abbado, Willem Mengelberg to Karl Richter, Edwin Fischer to Glenn Gould, Albert Schweitzer to Marie-Claire Alain, Wanda Landowska to Zuzana Růžičková, Pablo Casals to Pierre Fournier, Arthur Grumiaux to Anne-Sophie Mutter.

Highlights among 10 hours of entirely new recordings include a new recording of the Sonatas & Partitas for solo violin by period specialist Giuliano Carmignola, as well as 7 premieres of works never recorded before - 6 alternative Chorale versions and Beethoven’s only completed arrangement of a Bach work.

16 CDs entitled “Bach Interactive” and “Bach after Bach” form the basis of a major offering to enrich our experience and understanding of Bach’s unique impact on composers and composition ever since; from Mozart and Beethoven to today’s masters such as Arvo Pärt and György Kurtág. Included are albums devoted to Bach à la Jazz(Stéphane Grappelli, Stan Getz, Jacques Loussier, Bill Evans and more) and New Colours of Bach - remixers, composers and artists of our own time.

Sir John Eliot Gardiner, President, Leipzig Bach Archive: “This superb array of recordings is to be welcomed and valued on different levels simultaneously. First, it displays the colossal range and sheer variety of Bach's output; then the challenges of performing it and how these have evolved - exemplified by the multiplicity of recorded interpretations assembled here for the first time. Listening to any of these CDs will surely induce in you a heightened sense of consciousness – of the role of music which Bach enriched and extended so brilliantly. For him music was pure necessity. It occupied his whole being: to compose it and perform it demanded multiple skills, a capacity to solve puzzles and challenges, and a way of making sense of the world in which he lived. In our day the music of J.S. Bach continues to affect and change people’s lives in the most profound way. It has the power to reflect our innermost concerns and even to mitigate the way we respond to contemporary events.”

“Bach is regularly singled by composers across all traditions from jazz, pop, world and classical for his unique importance,” says Paul Moseley, Universal Music Group’s Director of Bach 333. “We have set out to do him, his life, his world, full justice, taking in current and past performance practice, fresh scholarship and the latest media, to produce something that will educate, entertain and deepen our relationship with probably the most influential composer of all time.”

Peter Wollny, Executive Director, Leipzig Bach Archive: “Deutsche Grammophon’s invitation to collaborate on the Bach 333 Edition was both a challenge and a welcome opportunity to bring the Archive’s research to the attention of the musical world through the recorded medium. We sincerely hope this Edition opens eyes and ears around the world to the universal relevance of Johann Sebastian Bach’s creative oeuvre both today and in the future.”

Bach 333 is released worldwide on October 26th in two language versions – English and German. The flagship Edition is accompanied by a 2CD entry level product Peaceful Bach and a suite of 13 digital products including Bach à la Jazz and New Colours of Bach, all aimed at achieving the widest possible awareness and engagement.

Release: 26 October 2018

 

Posted on: 03 October 2018 by kuma

DG is coming out of number of remastered historical recording ( Shellac Project ) this year but the one I am interested in this Erich Kleiber recording from 1929.

Not counting on a better sound quality. Rather surprised they used a modest set up for the playback ( with that turntable and pick up, they are losing a lot of info off the original records ) and only digitised at 24/96.

Posted on: 04 October 2018 by ewemon

Posted on: 04 October 2018 by ewemon

New John Mellencamp album entitled Other Peoples Stuff out Nov 16th. 

Not much out there on it yet as it seems to be cloaked in mystery at the moment.

His label aren't releasing any info on it.

Posted on: 04 October 2018 by ewemon

Jeff Tweedy entitled Warm.

Posted on: 04 October 2018 by ewemon

Kate Bush remastered

PRE-ORDER Kate Bush Remastered in Vinyl I (LP Box Set – The Kick Inside, Lionheart, Never For Ever and The Dreaming)
PRE-ORDER Kate Bush Remastered in Vinyl II (LP Box Set – Hounds of Love, The Sensual World, and The Red Shoes*)
PRE-ORDER Kate Bush Remastered in Vinyl III (LP Box Set – Aerial*, Director’s Cut* and 50 Words For Snow*)
PRE-ORDER Kate Bush Remastered in Vinyl IV (LP Box Set – a NEW 4LP rarities collection of 12″ mixes, remixes, b-sides and covers)
Posted on: 04 October 2018 by ewemon

Posted on: 04 October 2018 by ewemon

Posted on: 04 October 2018 by ewemon

Posted on: 04 October 2018 by ewemon

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

End of November

 

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

Beginning of November

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

Beginning of November

 

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

Beginning of November

 

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

Beginning of November

 

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

Beginning of November

 

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

End of October

 

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Bert Schurink

Mid October

 

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by Kevin-W

26th October. Chuckles does Stravinsky:

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by ewemon

Remastered cd's

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by ewemon

Posted on: 05 October 2018 by ewemon