Product Details
Holst: The Planets/John Williams: Star Wars/Strauss: Also Sprach Zarathustra

Holst: The Planets/John Williams: Star Wars/Strauss: Also Sprach Zarathustra
From Decca

Price: $17.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

17 new or used available from $12.38

Average customer review:
Music - Holst

Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. The Planets, suite for orchestra & female chorus, Op. 32, H. 125: No. 1, "Mars, the Bringer of War"
  2. The Planets, suite for orchestra & female chorus, Op. 32, H. 125: No. 2, "Venus, the Bringer of Peace"
  3. The Planets, suite for orchestra & female chorus, Op. 32, H. 125: No. 3, "Mercury, the Winged Messenger"
  4. The Planets, suite for orchestra & female chorus, Op. 32, H. 125: No. 4, "Jupiter, the Bringer of Peace"
  5. The Planets, suite for orchestra & female chorus, Op. 32, H. 125: No. 5, "Saturn, the Bringer of Old Age"
  6. The Planets, suite for orchestra & female chorus, Op. 32, H. 125: No. 6, "Uranus, the Magician"
  7. The Planets, suite for orchestra & female chorus, Op. 32, H. 125: No. 7, "Neptune, the Mystic" (w/hidden 8-part female chorus)
  8. Close Encounters of the Third Kind, film score: Suite

Disc 2:

  1. Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zoroaster), tone poem for orchestra, Op. 30 (TrV 176): Sunrise
  2. Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zoroaster), tone poem for orchestra, Op. 30 (TrV 176): Of The People of The Unseen World
  3. Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zoroaster), tone poem for orchestra, Op. 30 (TrV 176): Of Joys and Passions
  4. Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zoroaster), tone poem for orchestra, Op. 30 (TrV 176): Of The Great Longing
  5. Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zoroaster), tone poem for orchestra, Op. 30 (TrV 176): Dirge
  6. Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zoroaster), tone poem for orchestra, Op. 30 (TrV 176): Of Science
  7. Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zoroaster), tone poem for orchestra, Op. 30 (TrV 176): The Convalescent
  8. Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zoroaster), tone poem for orchestra, Op. 30 (TrV 176): The Dance Song
  9. Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spoke Zoroaster), tone poem for orchestra, Op. 30 (TrV 176): The Song of The Night-Wanderer
  10. Star Wars, Episode IV: A New Hope, film score: Suite
  11. Star Wars, Episode IV: A New Hope, film score: Suite
  12. Star Wars, Episode IV: A New Hope, film score: Suite
  13. Star Wars, Episode IV: A New Hope, film score: Suite
  14. Star Wars, Episode IV: A New Hope, film score: Suite
  15. Star Wars, Episode IV: A New Hope, film score: Suite

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #46044 in Music
  • Released on: 1998-01-13
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Dimensions: .23 pounds

Customer Reviews

Into Deep Space With Mehta And The L.A. Philharmonic5
One of the best double-CD sets in classical music is this superlative reissue of top-notch performances of space-related music by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra and the conductor who put it into world-class status, Zubin Mehta.

On Disc One, we get the orchestra's epic 1971 recording of Gustav Holst's celebrated suite "The Planets." In terms of the recording and performance, this has to rank as one of the greatest recordings this piece has ever had, right alongside Ormandy's equally vibrant 1975 RCA recording. The women's voices of the Los Angeles Master Chorale in "Neptune" are appropriately haunting and interstellar. This is followed by the orchestra and the chorale in a 13-minute arrangement of themes from the 1977 Steven Spielberg sci-fi classic CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND by John Williams, and it is something to behold.

Disc 2 opens up with the celebrated "Dawn" sequence that opens up Richard Strauss' celebrated tone poem "Also Sprach Zarathustra"--the music that became well known worldwide in 1968 thanks to director Stanley Kubrick's cagey use of it in his classic sci-fi epic 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY. Mehta and the orchestra recorded Strauss' 34 minute tone poem shortly after "2001" was released, and they came up with a version that arguably surpasses the 1954 Reiner/Chicago version that so often grabs the glory. The disc concludes with more John Williams, this time a symphonic suite of themes from STAR WARS, dating like CLOSE ENCOUNTERS from 1977. This ultra-familiar music is excellently performed and recorded.

Mehta and the L.A. Philharmonic made a great deal of fine recordings, and the four works featured on this double-disc set are proof of that. This is a two-fer that is not to be missed.

A powerful spatial combination5
I'm glad someone else realizes Mehta conducts Williams better than Williams. The phrasing and balances are much better. The Planets is excellent, although some of the newest DG 4-D wonders are good sonically. But Mehta simply lets the music play itself without too much fussing. Most impressive, however, is the Zarathustra. It is one of the best because it uses a REAL pipe organ, not one of those electronic sheep bleeting things that masks out both the orchestra and the composer's spine-tingling harmonics that make this piece so awesome. Anyway, it is a superb collection of space-related works that also stands the test of classic concert scrutiny. This is simply the best overall collection of this music available.

Out of This World5
This is the version of "Star Wars" you want. It has the raucus, almost bawdy victorious power you remember from the movie.

Likewise are the other pieces. Besides being the themes from "Star Wars", "2001: A Space Odyssey", "Close Encounters", there is the classical classic (can I say that?) work, "The Planets" by Holst.

I think the them to 2001 ("Thus Spake Zarathustra") also was the intro the famous Macintosh commerical (1984 Superbowl?).

These are more than pop-culture favorites that happen to be orchestral works. They are sophisticated and poetic, with more than easy melodies sweeping occasionally.

These are the complete suites. You might remember the glorious intro to 2001, but enjoy with this CD the full piece: almost 33 minutes.

The pace and range of the music undulates from serene, almost pastoral quietude to raging, fist in air excitement.

I fully recommend "Holst: The Planets/John Williams: Star Wars/Strauss: Also Sprach Zarathustra."

Anthony Trendl