Cheap Vaughan Williams: The Nine Symphonies; Job (Box Set) (Music) (William Shimell, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Vernon Handley, Colin Chambers, Mair Jones, Ian Balmain, Nigel Black, Jonathan Small, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra) Price
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| ARTIST: | William Shimell, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Vernon Handley, Colin Chambers, Mair Jones, Ian Balmain, Nigel Black, Jonathan Small, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | Angel Records |
| FEATURES: | Box set |
| TYPE: | 20th/21st Century Ballet, 20th/21st Century Orchestral Music, 20th/21st Century Symph. with Mult. Solo Voice & Chorus, 20th/21st Century Symphony, 20th/21st Century Symphony with Solo Voice and Chorus, Ballet, Box Sets (Audio Only), Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Concerto, Oboe Concerto, Orchestral, Orchestral & Symphonic, Symphonic, Viola Concerto |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 7 |
| UPC: | 724357576024 |
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Customer Reviews of Vaughan Williams: The Nine Symphonies; Job (Box Set)
Excellence throughout On balance, this is probably the best set of Vaughan Williams symphonies out there today. Vernon Handley was a protege of Adrian Boult and you can hear a likeness in the way the two approach the music of their countryman. Boult may have had an advantage, being alive at a time Vaughan Williams was composing and premiering a number of the symphonies after they were composed. <
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>The passage of time has left us two outstanding sets of Vaughan Williams symphonies by Boult, including a latter stereo version. I have heard both sets and they are wonderful. I prefer this one, however. Handley does things with some of the lesser played Vaughan Williams scores that, I believe, gives him an edge as the best of today's interpreters. <
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>His version of the "Sea" Symphony No. 1 -- which is not a favorite of mine -- stacks up with anything out there. It avoids the bombastic approach taken by some conductors that do not completely understand the music or Vaughan Williams style. Even the new Atlanta Symphony version of the "Sea" Symphony does not exceed the vigor, loveliness and fine singing on parade under Handley's baton. <
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>Handley also does wonderful things with the lesser known Symphonies 8 and 9, which some critics went wow over when Bernard Haitink recorded them together on one CD a few years back. Personally, I never heard the message of the dramatic 8th Symphony until I listened to this set. <
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>Handley is hardly at a loss in the more well-known symphonies, either. His renditions of the "London" Symphony 2, "Pastoral" Sympony 3, Symphony 4 and "Antarctica" Symphony 7 are up with the best versions ever recorded. Handley's version is the first time I ever heard the chimes of Big Ben in the "London" symphony. His trip to Antarctica in Symphony 7 is probably the best one out there today and rivals the famous mono version Boult did 50 years ago, less the spoken tracts at the beginning and between sections. <
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>Handley is equally fine in Vaughan Williams two violent symphonies, Nos. 4 and 6. In Symphony 4, he is especially visionary, understanding that the composer was not really writing about the impending world war when he penned the symphony in the late 1930s. Vaughan Williams said it was more about human interaction and communication and you hear this from Handley, who eschews much of the needless violence other conductors put into the score. <
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>It is only the Symphony No. 5 where I find a clear preference to versions by Andre Previn in either of his stereo versions. Previn's 1988 Telarc recording also includes "Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis", perhaps Vaughan Williams' best-known melody. This is preferable to Handley's Symphony 5 diskmate, the "Flos Campi" Suite, which provides another moment for the Liverpool Philharmonic Choir to shine. Previn endows the wonderful symphony with more romance and emotion than Handley. <
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>That's not to say Handley's recording is a dog. Hardly! His is an exquisite recording of some of the world's most beautiful music. It lacks little and competes with the best out there. All told, this is a five star set with beautiful and, when appropriate, powerful and visceral playing from the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra. <
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>There are other fine Vaughan Williams set extant -- both Boult sets, the exceptionally well-recorded Thomson on Chandos, various recordings by Previn & Hickox and those by Bakels on Naxos -- but no complete set quite captures Ralph Vaughan Williams as three dimensionally as this one. My only complaint is Classics for Pleasure could have mated Handley's equally brilliant version of "Job: A Masque for Dancing" with one of the shorter symphonies and did not.