Cinema Classics

~ Release by Various Artists (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Annotation

One of the track lengths indicated on the booklet 01 is wrong. I own the first two volumes as they were released separately years back. Booklet 1 shows Track 4: Mona Lisa as 2:24 when in fact it is 7:25. (I own both CD's and confirmed lengths). Both booklets are the same except for track length, so why did they alter the track length and just not reprint them as they are. Also the booklets on the individual released volumes have 8 pages containing more in-depth data about each track.

Annotation last modified on 2024-09-24 12:31 UTC.

Tracklist

1CD: Volume 1
2CD: Volume 2
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1A Clockwork Orange: William Tell Overture
orchestra:
Zagreb Festival Orchestra (from 1989-01-09 until 1989-01-11)
conductor:
Michael Halász (conductor) (from 1989-01-09 until 1989-01-11)
recorded at:
Koncertna dvorana Vatroslava Lisinskog (Vatroslav Lisinski Concert Hall) in Zagreb, Croatia (from 1989-01-09 until 1989-01-11)
recording of:
Guillaume Tell : Ouverture (William Tell: Overture) (from 1989-01-09 until 1989-01-11)
composer:
Gioachino Rossini (composer)
librettist:
Hippolyte Louis-Florent Bis (librettist) and Étienne de Jouy
part of:
Guglielmo Tell (italian version by Calisto Bassi)
part of:
Guillaume Tell
Gioachino Rossini12:07
2Ebben? ... Ne Andro Lontana (From La Wally)
soprano vocals:
Miriam Gauci (soprano) (from 1992-01-14 until 1992-01-17)
orchestra:
BRT Philharmonic Orchestra (Brussels Philharmonic) (from 1992-01-14 until 1992-01-17)
conductor:
Alexander Rahbari (Ali Rahbari, often credited as “Alexander” Rahbari) (from 1992-01-14 until 1992-01-17)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Naxos and HNH International Ltd. (not for release label use!) (in 1992)
recorded at:
Concert Hall of the Belgian Radio and Television in Brussels (Brussels-Capital Region), Belgium (from 1992-01-14 until 1992-01-17)
recording of:
La Wally: Atto I. “Ebben? Ne andrò lontana” (Wally) (from 1992-01-14 until 1992-01-17)
composer:
Alfredo Catalani (composer)
librettist:
Luigi Illica (in 1892)
publisher:
Lam Larghetto Music (from 1993 to present)
part of:
La Wally: Atto I
Alfredo Catalani3:25
3Ordinary People: Canon
producer:
Günter Appenheimer (producer/engineer) (in 1988-08)
orchestra:
Capella Istropolitana (in 1988-08)
conductor:
Richard Edlinger (conductor and composer) (in 1988-08)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
HNH International Ltd. (not for release label use!) (in 1987)
recorded at:
Moyzesova sieň (Moyzes Hall) in Bratislava, Bratislavský kraj (Bratislava Region), Slovakia and Concert Hall of the Slovak Philharmonic in Bratislava, Bratislavský kraj (Bratislava Region), Slovakia (in 1988-08)
cover recording of:
Canon and Gigue in D major, P. 37, T. 337: I. Canon (Canon and Gigue in D major, P. 37, T. 377: I. Canon) (in 1988-08)
composer:
Johann Pachelbel (composer)
part of:
Canon and Gigue in D major, P. 37, T. 337
recording of:
Canon and Gigue in D major, P. 37, T. 337: I. Canon (Canon and Gigue in D major, P. 37, T. 377: I. Canon)
composer:
Johann Pachelbel (composer)
part of:
Canon and Gigue in D major, P. 37, T. 337
Johann Pachelbel4:44
4Amadeus: Symphony No25 (Allegro Con Brio)Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart7:38
5Brief Encounter/The Seven Year Itch: Piano Concerto No2 (Excerpt)
piano:
Jenő Jandó (pianist) (from 1988-02 until 1988-04)
orchestra:
Magyar Rádió Szimfonikus Zenekara (Budapest Symphony Orchestra, a.k.a. Budapest Symphony) (from 1988-02 until 1988-04)
conductor:
György Lehel (conductor) (from 1988-02 until 1988-04)
recorded at:
Instituto Italiano di Cultura (Italian Institute of Culture) in Budapest, Hungary (from 1988-02 until 1988-04)
partial recording of:
Piano Concerto no. 2 in C minor, op. 18 (from 1988-02 until 1988-04)
premiered in:
Moscow, Russia (on 1901-11-09)
composer:
Сергей Васильевич Рахманинов (Sergei Rachmaninoff, Russian composer) (from 1900-10 until 1901-04)
dedicated to:
Nikolai Dahl
premiered at:
[Philharmonic Society Concert] (1901-11-09)
publisher:
A. Gutheil (in 1901)
part of:
Classic 100: Piano (2025) (number: 6) and Works of Sergei Rachmaninoff by opus number (number: op. 18)
Сергей Рахманинов5:22
6Gallipoli: Adagio
engineer:
Jozef Hanak (engineer) (in 1986-03) and Ladislav Krajkovic (engineer) (in 1986-03)
producer:
Leoš Komárek (in 1986-03)
violin:
Pavel Bogacz (violinist) (in 1986-03)
orchestra:
Capella Istropolitana (in 1986-03)
conductor:
Richard Edlinger (conductor and composer) (in 1986-03)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
HNH International Ltd. (not for release label use!) and Pacific Music Co., Ltd. (in 1987)
recorded at:
Concert Hall of the Slovak Philharmonic in Bratislava, Bratislavský kraj (Bratislava Region), Slovakia (in 1986-03)
recording of:
Adagio for Strings and Organ in G minor (in 1986-03)
composer:
Remo Giazotto
previously attributed to:
Tomaso Giovanni Albinoni (Italian Baroque composer)
publisher:
Ricordi London (Casa Ricordi sublabel for Classical music) and Zomba Music Publishers Ltd. (UK subsidiary of Zomba Music Publishing)
recording of:
Adagio for Strings and Organ in G minor (catch-all for arrangements)
composer:
Remo Giazotto
previously attributed to:
Tomaso Giovanni Albinoni (Italian Baroque composer)
arrangement of:
Adagio for Strings and Organ in G minor
Tomaso Giovanni Albinoni411:27
7Sunday, Bloody Sunday: Soave Sia Il Vento (Trio Fro, Cosi Fan Tutte)
producer:
Hubert Geschwandtner (producer/engineer) (from 1990-02 until 1990-04) and Karol Kopernický (producer) (from 1990-02 until 1990-04)
bass vocals:
Peter Mikuláš (operatic bass) (from 1990-02 until 1990-04)
choir vocals:
Slovak Philharmonic Chorus (Slovak Philharmonic Choir) (from 1990-02 until 1990-04)
mezzo-soprano vocals:
Rohangiz Yachmi (mezzo-soprano) (from 1990-02 until 1990-04)
soprano vocals:
Joanna Borowska (soprano) (from 1990-02 until 1990-04)
orchestra:
Capella Istropolitana (from 1990-02 until 1990-04)
conductor:
Johannes Wildner (conductor) (from 1990-02 until 1990-04)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Naxos and HNH International Ltd. (not for release label use!) (in 1990, in 1994)
recorded at:
Moyzesova sieň (Moyzes Hall) in Bratislava, Bratislavský kraj (Bratislava Region), Slovakia (from 1990-02 until 1990-04)
recording of:
Così fan tutte: Atto I. No. 10 Terzettino “Soave sia il vento” (Fiordligi, Dorabella, Don Alfonso) (from 1990-02 until 1990-04)
composer:
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (classical composer)
librettist:
Lorenzo Da Ponte
part of:
Così fan tutte: Atto I
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart3:07
8Die Hard 2: Finlandia
producer:
Günter Appenheimer (producer/engineer) and Martin Sauer (engineer/producer)
orchestra:
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra (from 1988-02-05 until 1988-02-09)
conductor:
Kenneth Schermerhorn (from 1988-02-05 until 1988-02-09)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
HNH International Ltd. (not for release label use!) (in 1988)
recorded at:
Concert Hall of the Czecho-Slovak Radio in Praha (Prague), Czechia (from 1988-02-05 until 1988-02-09)
recording of:
Finlandia, op. 26 (for orchestra) (from 1988-02-05 until 1988-02-09)
premiered in:
Helsinki, Uusimaa, Finland (on 1900-07-02)
composer:
Jean Sibelius (Finnish composer) (in 1899)
revised by:
Jean Sibelius (Finnish composer) (in 1900)
premiered at:
Konsertti (1900-07-02)
publisher:
Breitkopf & Härtel (in 1905)
part of:
Works of Jean Sibelius by opus number (number: op. 26)
version of:
Sanomalehdistön päivien musiikki, op. 25/26: VII. Tableau 6. Finland Awakes
Jean Sibelius8:25
3CD: Volume 3