Product Details
Monumental Works for Winds

Monumental Works for Winds
From Naxos

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Track Listing

  1. Aida, opera: Triumphal March
  2. Symphonies of Wind Instruments, for 24 wind instruments (1920 version)
  3. Symphony No. 6 ('For Band'), Op. 69: Adagio - Allegro
  4. Symphony No. 6 ('For Band'), Op. 69: Adagio sostenuto
  5. Symphony No. 6 ('For Band'), Op. 69: Allegretto
  6. Symphony No. 6 ('For Band'), Op. 69: Vivace
  7. Schwanda the Bagpiper, opera: Polka and Fugue
  8. Emblems, for concert band
  9. Children's March (Over the Hills and Far Away), folk song for piano & military band (RMTB 4)
  10. Crown Imperial, coronation march for orchestra

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #143987 in Music
  • Released on: 2006-10-31
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .23 pounds

Editorial Reviews

ClassicsToday.com
10/10 for Artistic Quality & Sound Quality


Customer Reviews

Spectacular Performances of Wind Band Classics5
I'm not quite sure why this album is entitled 'Monumental Works for Winds.' Why 'monumental'? Be that as it may, most of the works included here are among the most popular and most often played by good (emphasis on the word 'good') wind bands. Of course, some of them are actually transcriptions. The works here originally written for wind band are Copland's 'Emblems', Persichetti's Symphony No. 6, Grainger's 'Children's March' and Stravinsky's 'Symphonies of Wind Instruments'. The other works are orchestral pieces that in their originals have a preponderance of wind/brass sonorities.

The first track, Verdi's 'Triumphal March' from Aida, was transcribed by that bandmaster of a bygone era, Giuseppe Creatore (now mostly remembered as 'the great Creatore', so-called by Professor Harold Hill in 'The Music Man.') It is indeed a monumental piece if only because one cannot hear it without thinking of an opera stage crowded with elephants, soldiers and Egyptian dancing girls. It is given a terrific performance by the United States Marine Band who let us know immediately that they are among the very best such ensembles in the world.

Stravinsky's great neoclassic 'Symphonies of Wind Instruments' is given in its original 1921 version. The playing here is extremely subtle, with conductor Michael J. Colburn fashioning a flexible, almost impressionistic rendition. One becomes aware of just how expert this band is. The clarinet section is one of the best I've ever heard with their ability to play softly and smoothly very much like a good violin section might.

Perschetti's mighty symphony for band, his No. 6, has been recorded many times and is surely one of the greatest works for wind band ever written by an American. The rhythmic snap of the Marine band must be heard to be appreciated, and again the clarinets are peerless in the Adagio movement. Weinberger's 'Polka and Fugue' from his opera Schwanda the Bagpiper is well-known from its initial full-orchestra recording by Felix Weingartner. The transcription by Glenn Cliffe Bainum is expert. The upper winds are given complex pianissimos to perform and acquit themselves admirably. The flute and piccolo pianissimos are breathtaking. The brass are stupendous in the final moments of the fugue.

I had never heard Copland's 'Emblems' before, although I'd read of it. It is an eleven minute work written in 1963 and is typical of his more knotty abstract style. However, his use of 'Amazing Grace' as a recurring theme gives it an unmistakably folkloric American cast. It's a brilliant piece given a brilliant performance.

The final two tracks, Grainger's 'Children's March' from Over the Hills and Far Away, and Walton's 'Crown Imperial March' are British to the core, arising as they do from the strong and deep current of British wind band music. The Grainger (actually written when Grainger was serving as a musician the US Army!) is given a winsome performance while the Walton, written for the coronation of King George VI (and transcribed for band by W.J. Duthoit) is suitably noble, and nobly played.

Make no mistake, this is a superb CD from beginning to end and stands among the best wind band recordings of recent times.

Scott Morrison

Not just monumental, but momentous5
This display of virtuosity from "The President's Own," the U.S. Marine Band, now ranks right alongside the extensive discography of the Eastman Wind Ensemble with Frederick Fennell in my pantheon of wind ensemble/wind band/concert band recordings. Start with the Persichetti Symphony #6, where all discussions of transcendent 20th Century wind ensemble writing must start -- this actually surpasses Fennell in my estimation, because there is not a ragged bar in it (once or twice, the Eastman rushes a little as it transmits its enthusiasm for this great work). But then add in Stravinsky's Symphonies of Wind Instruments and the other great performances on this disk and you a stupendous, fulfilling piece of programming and consummate performance.

Monumental Works for Band.5
A great title and a great CD. From start to finish I found this CD a pleasure to listen to. The music is significant yet entertaining. The playing is first class, maybe flawless is a better description. My favourite track is the "Crown Imperial" March by William Walton. The band achieves a huge sound in this dramatic and pompous march, at times you would swear you are listening to a symphony orchestra. I particularly like the discipline and the precision in the performances on this CD. All sections project well, achieving a pleasant balance of instruments.