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Thread: Goofy TV Ad

  1. #1
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    Goofy TV Ad

    Three or four years ago I saw an ad on TV for "the most relaxing Classical album in the world...ever !"

    I never respond to such things but I decided to order this one to play in the desktop at work where something relaxing would be of significant change.

    I play it once a month or so and I have really grown to like this arrangement of Classical works...............36 selections (2 CDs).


    Anybody else buy this ?

  2. #2
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    what's on it?

    I suppose "relax" is a relative term: having my heart and soul absorbed in music IS relaxing. If I can kick back and passively enjoy it, that may be more relaxing than say, concentrating like mad trying to count out the measures in some Portnoy induced madness of alternating time signatures (rest assured I fail miserably). But I would say both activities are relaxing endeavors.


    There are too many intricacies going on in most classical music that my head tries to figure out. I had some Christopher Parkening playing Vivaldi concertos on the other day and a coworker walked by wondering how I wasn't falling asleep with such relaxing music. I had to laugh as I was responding to the music with far too much attention trying to visualize how he was creating such tone and emotions out of his guitar. It got a bit too distracting so I had to switch to some metal prog for white noise...of course that didn't work either.

    I do remember a goofy TV ad that begins with the theme from the Polovetsian Dances by Borodin with some guy saying, "remember this wonderful melody? Most people know it as 'A Stranger in Paradise" but did you know it originally is the Polovetsian Dances from the opera Prince Igor?" or something like that. One day when I had the Borodin piece cranked on my dorm stereo (The Telarc pressing with the flip side having the killer Firebird Suite) someone popped his head in my room quoting the ad: "remember this wonderful melody?" Of course, this would have been 27 years ago....my God, and to think I can remember the ad AND the incident in my dorm! Sheesh.

    And for the record, the Telarc recording of the Firebird Suite/Plovetsian Dances would never make anyone's top 10 most relaxing albums.

    cheerios,
    tj

  3. #3
    Sure, sure... Auricauricle's Avatar
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    I think you head the nail on the head...Good music, no matter what genre, is never relaxing: it is absorbing and involves every ounce and fibre of your being.

    Relaxing?

    Ha!!

  4. #4
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    what's on it ?

    Track list :

    Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D major, BWV 1068 Air 'on the G string'
    Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach
    Performed by Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
    Conducted by Neville Marriner


    Peer Gynt, incidental music, Op. 23 Morning
    Composed by Edvard Grieg
    with Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
    Conducted by Neville Marriner


    Canon and gigue, for 3 violins & continuo in D major, T. 337 Canon
    Composed by Johann Pachelbel
    Performed by Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
    Conducted by Neville Marriner


    Cantata No. 147, "Herz und Mund und Tat und Leben," BWV 147 (BC A174) Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring
    Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach
    Performed by Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
    Conducted by David Willcocks


    Gymnopedie for piano No.1
    Composed by Erik Satie
    Conducted by Louis Fremaux


    Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major ("Elvira Madigan") K. 467 Andante
    Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
    with Stephen Hough
    Conducted by Bryden Thomson


    Lakmé, opera Viens, Mallika
    Composed by Leo Delibes
    with Mady Mesple, Danielle Millet
    Conducted by Alain Lombard


    Requiem, for 2 solo voices, chorus, organ & orchestra, Op. 48 In Paradisum
    Composed by Gabriel Faure
    Conducted by David Willcocks


    Clair de lune, for piano (Suite Bergamasque No. 3), L. 75/3
    Composed by Claude Debussy
    with Dame Moura Lympany


    Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64 Andante
    Composed by Felix Mendelssohn
    with Yehudi Menuhin
    Conducted by Efrem Kurtz


    The Swan (from "Carnival of the Animals"), original (for 2 pianos & ensemble) and arrangements
    Composed by Camille Saint-Saens
    with Osian Ellis, Jacqueline du Pre


    Symphony No. 3, Op. 36 ("Symphony of Sorrowful Songs") Lento e largo - Tranquillissimo
    Composed by Henryk Gorecki
    with Osian Ellis, Jacqueline du Pre


    Concerto for flute, harp & orchestra in C major, K. 299 (K. 297c) Andantino
    Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
    with James Galway, Fritz Helmis
    Conducted by Herbert von Karajan


    Violin Concerto, for violin, strings & continuo in F minor ("L'inverno," The Four Seasons; "Il cimento" No. 4), Op. 8/4, RV 297 Unspecified excerpt
    Composed by Antonio Vivaldi
    with Yehudi Menuhin, Lysy Gstaad
    Conducted by Alberto Lysy


    Enigma Variations, for orchestra, Op. 36 Nimrod
    Composed by Edward Elgar
    Conducted by Sir Adrian Boult


    Blow the Wind--Pie Jesu
    Composed by Jocelyn Pook
    with Melanie Pappenheim, Jocelyn Pook, Kathleen Ferrier


    Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini (Introduction and 24 Variations), in A minor for piano & orchestra, Op. 43 Variation 18
    Composed by Sergey Rachmaninov
    with Cecile Ousset
    Conducted by Simon Rattle


    Pavane, for orchestra & chorus ad lib in F sharp minor, Op. 50
    Composed by Gabriel Faure
    with Gareth Morris
    Conducted by David Willcocks


    Cantata No. 140, "Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme," BWV 140 (BC A166) Zion hört die Wächter singen (Sleepers, wake!)
    Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach
    with Consortium Musicum
    Conducted by Wolfgang Gonnenwein


    Adagio, for violin, strings & organ in G minor, T. Mi 26 (composed by Remo Giazotto; not by Albinoni)
    Composed by Tomaso Albinoni
    Performed by Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
    Conducted by Neville Marriner


    Minuet in A major, arrangements (after String Quintet in E major, Op.11/5 [aka Op. 13/5], G. 275)
    Composed by Luigi Boccherini
    Performed by Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
    Conducted by Neville Marriner


    Concerto for harpsichord, strings & continuo No. 5 in F minor, BWV 1056 Largo
    Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach
    Performed by Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
    with Andrei Gavrilov
    Conducted by Neville Marriner


    Méditation, violin & orchestra version and various arrangements (from opera "Thäis")
    Composed by Jules Massenet
    with Hans Kalafusz
    Conducted by Neville Marriner


    Piano Sonata No. 14 in C sharp minor ("Moonlight"), Op. 27/2 Adagio sostenuto
    Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven
    with Dame Moura Lympany


    Les contes d'Hoffmann, opera in 4 acts Belle nuit, ô nuit d'amour (Barcacarolle)
    Composed by Jacques Offenbach
    with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Jeannine Collard
    Conducted by Andre Cluytens


    Double Mandolin Concerto, for 2 mandolins, strings & continuo in G major, RV 532 Andante
    Composed by Antonio Vivaldi
    with Barrington Pheloung, Nigel North


    Clarinet Concerto in A major, K. 622 Adagio (excerpt)
    Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
    with Jack Brymer
    Conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham


    Cavalleria rusticana, opera (melodramma) in 1 act Intermezzo
    Composed by Pietro Mascagni
    Conducted by Riccardo Muti


    Serenade for string orchestra in E major, B. 52 (Op. 22) Moderato
    Composed by Antonin Dvorak
    Conducted by Christopher Warren-Green


    Gianni Schicchi, opera O mio babbino caro
    Composed by Giacomo Puccini
    with Montserrat Caballe
    Conducted by Sir Charles Mackerras


    Fantasia on Greensleeves, for harp, flute & strings (arranged by R. Greaves; from the opera "Sir John In Love")
    Composed by Ralph Vaughan Williams
    with The City of London Sinfonia
    Conducted by Sir John Barbirolli


    Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18 Adagio sostenuto
    Composed by Sergey Rachmaninov
    with Cecile Ousset
    Conducted by Simon Rattle


    Nocturne for string orchestra (arranged by Malcolm Sargent from String Quartet No. 2)
    Composed by Alexander Borodin
    Performed by Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
    Conducted by Neville Marriner


    Concierto de Aranjuez for guitar & orchestra Adagio
    Composed by Joaquin Rodrigo
    with Julian Bream


    Adagio for strings (or string quartet; arr. from 2nd mvt. of String Quartet), Op. 11
    Composed by Samuel Barber
    Conducted by Eugene Ormandy


    Carmen, opera, overtures & intermezzi for orchestra Entr'acte to Act III
    Composed by Georges Bizet
    Conducted by Seiji Ozawa

  5. #5
    Retro Modernist 02audionoob's Avatar
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    Maybe I'm misunderstanding the term 'relaxing' but to me, it seems like any music you enjoy is relaxing. Thrash metal could be relaxing if that's what you like.

  6. #6
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    [QUOTE=MasterCylinder]Track list :

    Peer Gynt, incidental music, Op. 23 Morning
    Composed by Edvard Grieg
    with Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
    Conducted by Neville Marriner

    ---agreed...a lot of light fluffy clouds in Peer Gynt, but a guy will wake up by the time he reaches the Hall of the Mountain King.

    The Pachabel Canon and Satie's Gymnopedie are definately of the now-I-lay-me-down-to-sleep sort of the thing. I think both of these pieces are overplayed...even non-classical music fans will recognize this stuff thinking, "haven't I heard this before just the other day?" One of Satie's Gymnopedie even appeard on the Blood Sweat and Tears album that everyone has. And if you don't own that BS&T album, it's the one that you see at every other garage sale in town.


    Concierto de Aranjuez for guitar & orchestra Adagio
    Composed by Joaquin Rodrigo
    with Julian Bream

    I'm shocked here....Rodrigo's Concierto de Aranjuez to relax a person? It must be the guitarist in me coz this piece is a riveting gut wrencher. I know it's just the adagio section here and I gotta confess I can't bring up that section in my memory right now...but you really gotta hear this piece in its entirety. If you like this, try Rodrigo's Concierto para Gentilhombre. My fav....it's based on a theme by Gaspar Sanz (hardcore ELP fans will recognize this as the instrumental tune on Love Beach)

    tj

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by teej
    One of Satie's Gymnopedie even appeard on the Blood Sweat and Tears album that everyone has. And if you don't own that BS&T album, it's the one that you see at every other garage sale in town.
    tj
    I really like Gymnopedie.............It is difficult to not like it............good bedroom music, if you know what I mean.


    BTW, I've seen Parkening play here with our local symphony twice.........good stuff.

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