Music for Relaxation 4: Adagio

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

Tracklist

1CD
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1Adagio for Organ and Strings
organ:
Alastair Ross (organist and harpsichordist)
violin:
Simon Standage (English violinist and conductor)
orchestra:
Richard Hickox Orchestra
conductor:
Richard Hickox (conductor)
recording of:
Adagio for Strings and Organ in G minor
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)
Tomaso Giovanni Albinoni9:04
2Kol Nidrei
engineer and balance engineer:
Stanley Goodall (engineer)
producer:
Paul Myers (classical record producer)
cello:
Lynn Harrell (cellist) (in 1982-02)
orchestra:
Philharmonia Orchestra (London orchestra, known as New Philharmonia Orchestra from 1964–1976) (in 1982-02)
conductor:
Vladimir Ashkenazy (Russian‐Icelandic conductor and pianist) (in 1982-02)
recorded at:
Kingsway Hall in London (Greater London), England, United Kingdom (in 1982, in 1982-02)
recording of:
Kol Nidrei, op. 47 (in 1982-02)
composer:
Max Bruch (composer and conductor) (in 1880-07)
dedicated to:
Robert Hausmann
part of:
Works of Max Bruch by opus number (number: op. 47)
recording of:
Kol Nidrei, op. 47 (in 1982)
composer:
Max Bruch (composer and conductor) (in 1880-07)
dedicated to:
Robert Hausmann
part of:
Works of Max Bruch by opus number (number: op. 47)
Max Bruch10:17
3Symphony no. 5: Adagietto
producer:
Ray Minshull (record producer)
orchestra:
Los Angeles Philharmonic (in 1976-04)
conductor:
Zubin Mehta (conductor) (in 1976-04)
balance engineer:
Simon Eadon (classical music engineer) (in 1976-04) and James Lock (James Locke, engineer) (in 1976-04)
recorded at:
Royce Hall in Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1976-04)
recording of:
Symphony no. 5 in C-sharp minor: IV. Adagietto. Sehr langsam (in 1976-04)
composer:
Gustav Mahler (composer) (from 1901 until 1902)
part of:
Symphony no. 5
Gustav Mahler49:46
4Concierto de Aranjuez : Adagio
classical guitar [Spanish guitar]:
Carlos Bonell (classical guitarist)
orchestra:
Orchestre symphonique de Montréal (Montreal Symphony Orchestra)
conductor:
Charles Dutoit (conductor)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
The Decca Record Company Limited (not a release label; for copyrights use only) (in 1981)
recorded at:
Église de Saint-Eustache in Saint-Eustache, Québec (Quebec), Canada
recording of:
Concierto de Aranjuez: II. Adagio (ended)
composer:
Joaquín Rodrigo (Spanish composer and virtuoso pianist) (in 1939)
part of:
Concierto de Aranjuez
Joaquín Rodrigo10:58
5Adagio for Strings
engineer:
Simon Eadon (classical music engineer) and Stanley Goodall (engineer)
producer:
Chris Hazell
orchestra:
Academy of St Martin in the Fields (in 1976-10)
conductor:
Sir Neville Marriner (conductor) (in 1976-10)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
The Decca Record Company Limited (not a release label; for copyrights use only) (in 1976)
recorded at:
St John’s, Smith Square in London (Greater London), England, United Kingdom (in 1976-10)
recording of:
Adagio for Strings (in 1976-10)
orchestrator:
Samuel Barber (American composer) (in 1938)
composer:
Samuel Barber (American composer) (in 1936)
premiered by:
NBC Symphony Orchestra (on 1938-11-05) and Arturo Toscanini (conductor) (on 1938-11-05)
premiered at:
[radio broadcast] (1938-11-05)
publisher:
Chappell (Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.) and G. Schirmer Inc.
arrangement of:
String Quartet, op. 11: II. Molto adagio
Samuel Barber8:49
6Adagio for Clarinet and Strings
engineer:
James Brown (Decca engineer, 1960s) (in 1961-04)
producer:
Erik Smith (British producer, pianist and harpsichordist)
cello:
Nikolaus Hübner (cellist) (in 1961-04)
clarinet:
Alfred Boskovsky (clarinetist) (in 1961-04)
double bass:
Johann Krump (double bass player) (in 1961-04)
instruments:
Members Of The Wiener Oktett (in 1961-04)
viola:
Günther Breitenbach (violist) (in 1961-04)
violin:
Anton Fietz (violinist) (in 1961-04) and Philipp Matheis (Austrian violinist) (in 1961-04)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
The Decca Record Company Limited (not a release label; for copyrights use only) (in 1962)
recorded at:
Sofiensaal in Landstraße, Wien (Vienna), Austria (in 1961-04)
recording of:
Quintet for Clarinet and Strings no. 3, op. 23: II. Adagio (in 1961-04)
composer:
Heinrich Baermann (German clarinetist and composer)
previously attributed to:
Richard Wagner (composer)
part of:
Quintet for Clarinet and Strings no. 3, op. 23
Heinrich Baermann4:48
7Carnival of the Animals: The Swan
producer:
John Mordler (producer)
cello:
Jascha Silberstein (cellist) (in 1969-12)
harp:
Marie Goossens (UK harpist) (in 1969-12)
balance engineer:
Kenneth Wilkinson (engineer) (in 1969-12)
recorded at:
Kingsway Hall in London (Greater London), England, United Kingdom (in 1969-12)
recording of:
Le Carnaval des animaux: XIII. Le Cygne (catch-all for arrangements) (in 1969-12)
composer:
Camille Saint‐Saëns (composer)
arrangement of:
Le Carnaval des animaux : XIII. Le Cygne (The Carnival of the Animals: XIII. The Swan, part of orig. Carnival of the Animals, for cello and dual piano)
part of:
Le Carnaval des animaux (catch-all for arrangements)
Camille Saint‐Saëns3:24
8New World Symphony: Largo
producer:
Ray Minshull (record producer)
orchestra:
London Symphony Orchestra (from 1966-11-21 until 1966-12-03)
conductor:
István Kertész (conductor) (from 1966-11-21 until 1966-12-03)
balance engineer:
Kenneth Wilkinson (engineer)
recorded at:
Kingsway Hall in London (Greater London), England, United Kingdom (from 1966-11-21 until 1966-12-03)
recording of:
Symfonie č. 9 e moll, op. 95 „Z Nového světa“: II. Largo (Symphony No. 9 in E minor, Op. 95 "From the New World": II. Largo) (from 1966-11-21 until 1966-12-03)
composer:
Antonín Dvořák (composer) (from 1893-01-10 until 1893-05-24)
part of:
Symfonie č. 9 e moll, op. 95 „Z Nového světa“ (Symphony no. 9 in E minor, op. 95 “From the New World”)
Antonín Dvořák12:36
9Thaïs: Meditation
producer:
John Mordler (producer)
violin:
John Georgiadis (in 1969-12)
orchestra:
London Symphony Orchestra (in 1969-12)
conductor:
Richard Bonynge (conductor and pianist) (in 1969-12)
balance engineer:
Kenneth Wilkinson (engineer) (in 1969-12)
recorded at:
Kingsway Hall in London (Greater London), England, United Kingdom (in 1969-12)
recording of:
Thaïs: Acte II. Entr’acte “Méditation” (original; for solo violin and orchestra) (in 1969-12)
composer:
Jules Massenet (French Romantic composer) (in 1894)
part of:
Classic 100: Music of France (2012) (number: 14)
part of:
Thaïs: Acte II
Jules Massenet5:49

Credits

Release

ASIN:UK: B00000421N [info]