Product Details
The Best Choral Album in the World...Ever!

The Best Choral Album in the World...Ever!
From EMI Classics

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Gloria in excelsis Deo
  2. Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring
  3. vv 1-4, 17-20
  4. Lacrimosa
  5. For unto Us a Child Is Born
  6. The Heavens Are Telling
  7. Ave Maria
  8. Ode to Joy
  9. Va, pensiero
  10. Chorus of Slave Girls
  11. Coro de románticos (Chorus of Lovers)
  12. In paradisum
  13. Opening
  14. (Conclusion) Celebration

Disc 2:

  1. Zion hört die Wächter
  2. Pleni sunt coeli et terra
  3. Hallelujah Chorus
  4. Thou knowest, Lord
  5. Awake the harp
  6. And then Shall Your Light Break Forth
  7. L'Adieu des bergers (Shepherds' Farewell)
  8. Agnus Dei (reduced orchestra version)
  9. Beglückt darf nun dich, o Heimat (Pilgrim's Chorus)
  10. Vedi! le fosche notturne spoglie (Anvil Chorus)
  11. Laudamus te
  12. I. Maestoso ma energico (Allegro molto)
  13. Requiem aeternam
  14. (Opening) Dies irae
  15. O Fortuna

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #29023 in Music
  • Released on: 2005-06-07
  • Number of discs: 2

Customer Reviews

Diverse range but the songs are butchered...3
Well, this CD isn't horrible by any stretch, but it is irritating to someone who's more than a casual listener of choral music. I'm by no means as musically "literate" as many reviewers out there, but I have a collection of probably twenty-five or thirty choral CD's and this is one that will probably be gathering dust in the back of the CD book.

The peices are well-performed for the most part, but they are hopelessly edited. Beethoven's Ode to Joy is somewhere around twenty four minutes, but this CD only includes an arrangement of about five minutes. The beautiful Miserere is, uncut, almost eleven minutes but is cut down to five and a half minutes here.

Looking back, I should have realized the major editing that would be involved, just by the sheer number of peices on it. I'm familiar with a great many of them and I know they're too long to fit onto a seventy minute disc without some major cutting going on. I just didn't reason that out before I shelled out the money for it.

Bottom line. This CD has decent singing, but is nothing special. If you're a newcomer to this genre, you might get this as a quick overview of the different types of choral music out there, but if you're any kind of an avid listener, this CD will drive you insane with the severity of the cuts. Beginners, if you're looking for a great collection CD, you'd do better to look at "Choral Moods". It doesn't have the diversity in styles of this one, but it will introduce you to incredibly talented composers. To the old hats out there, steer clear of this one and look to CD's by your preferred individual composers themselves. It's more money, but much less frustration in the long run. The old sayings are sometimes the best: You get what you pay for.

MarMSED4
The music selections are extraordinary. The only problem has to do with the balance of sound. There are some parts that are very loud, and some that are so very soft. You have to continually adjust the volume.

I love it and I give it as a gift5
This is the first collection of choral music that I've purchased and I love it. I own copies of operas and requiems and masses, but if you attend choral concerts, as I have been recently, you learn there is a huge colletion of choral music appart from the forms I've been listening to. I appreciate the producers selecting "Song for Athene" by Tavener and "Celebration (Standing Stone)" by McCartney. They are new to me and I love them. Disk 1 ends with "Jerusalem" and Disk 2 ends with "Land of Hope and Glory." As an American I rarely hear these and I am so glad they were included. I believe this album was intended to help popularize choral music and I believe the selections do fine job towards that end.

I know snobs rage against popularizing classical music, but everyone deserves exposure to the beauty of song. I will also mention here "The East Village Opera Company" because they work to popularize opera by setting it to a rock beat. They do a fine job but also get criticized for attempting to popularize classical music.

"The Best Choral Album in the World...Ever" was so popular with my teen-age daughter that it was hard to get it back from her. I give the album as a gift to nephews and nieces.