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| Vaughan Williams: Orchestral Works | 
enlarge | Creators: Ralph Vaughan Williams, Sir Adrian Boult, London Philharmonic Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, Norma Burrowes, Sheila Armstrong, Susan Longfield, Marie Hayward Label: British Composers Category: Music
List Price: £6.99 Buy New: £5.12 You Save: £1.87 (27%)
Buy New/Used from £5.12
Avg. Customer Rating:   (3 reviews) Sales Rank: 1482
Media: Audio CD Running Time: 66 minutes Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 64022 UPC: 077776402222 EAN: 0077776402222 ASIN: B000002S2R
Release Date: September 9, 1991 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| | Serenade To Music | | | English Folk Song Suite: I. March (Seventeen Come Sunday) | | | English Folk Song Suite: II. Intermezzo (My Bonny Boy) | | | English Folk Song Suite: III. March (Folk Songs From Somerset) | | | Norfolk Rhapsody No.1 | | | Fantasia On 'Greensleeves' | | | In The Fen Country | | | The Lark Ascending |
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| Customer Reviews:
  Adrian Boult's Sublime VW November 21, 2008 Not many conductors match Adrian Boult's masterly performances of V-Williams music, for its rich tonal colours, noble poise and eloquence. Definitely a must-buy CD for anyone who loves VW's music!
  THE BEST RECORDING EVER OF 'THE LARK' September 16, 2007 26 out of 26 found this review helpful
I JUST WANT TO AGREE WITH EVERY WORD THAT MR JORDAN HAD SAID ABOUT THIS PARTICULAR RECORDING, NOT JUST OF 'THE LARK', BUT OF SERENADE TO MUSIC ALSO. IN FACT I JUST LOVE EVERYTHING ON THIS ALBUM! I BOUGHT MY VINYL COPY IN THE EARLY 70'S AND IT IS NOW SO WORN OUT THAT I DECIDED TO LOOK TO SEE IF A CD WAS AVAILABLE. WHAT JOY! NOT ONLY HAVE I BEEN ABLE TO FIND A CD OF MY TREASURED RECORDING, BUT WITH BONUS TRACKS, AND AT AN INCREDIBLY LOW PRICE. FOR ME THIS IS THE PURCHASE OF THE MONTH.
  The greatest 'Lark Ascending' recording January 21, 2006 85 out of 85 found this review helpful
This is the RVW disc which started my collection of his music over ten years ago. It opens with a beautifully performed 'Serenade to Music', the only vocal track on the album. If you are normally allergic to 'classical' singing and prefer instrumental pieces, this may just convert you, because it has so many bewitching moments - and besides, the vocals on this recording are not quite as forward as other versions. Again, if your opinion of British music is that it consists of 'marches and ceremonials', the English Folk Song Suite may overturn your thoughts on that genre. It certainly does include a march, but it's irresistable, and the Intermezzo is a gem. The Norfolk Rhapsody and Fen Country pieces are atmospheric tone-poems from RVW's earliest years of success, impressionistic, misty creations with a hint of folk tune. The one piece you should not hesitate to buy this disc for, though, is The Lark Ascending (with Hugh Bean on violin). There are plenty of recordings of this out there of course, but none has ever displaced this one. The recording of violin and orchestra is perfectly balanced, and the actual performances masterly. This is a popular piece, but it needs a sure touch, anything less and the poetry vanishes. Crucial (to my ears) is the sustained chord held by the orchestra right at the start - it should make you see things! If that's done right, as it is here, the piece performs its magic for the listener effortlessly from that point on. This Lark recording often turns up elsewhere, but this is the best disc to have. If it could convert a cautious new 'classical' listener like me into a RVW obsessive within its duration, then it can't come with any stronger recommendation.
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