Hall of Fame: Favourites

~ Release by Various Artists (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Tracklist

1CD
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1Piano Concerto no. 2: 2. Adagio sostenuto
recording engineer:
Tryggvi Tryggvason (classical music engineer and producer, aka Trygg Tryggvason)
producer:
Christopher Raeburn (producer)
piano:
Vladimir Ashkenazy (Russian‐Icelandic conductor and pianist) (from 1970-10-20 until 1970-10-23)
orchestra:
London Symphony Orchestra (from 1970-10-20 until 1970-10-23)
conductor:
André Previn (pianist, conductor, composer, arranger) (from 1970-10-20 until 1970-10-23)
balance engineer:
Kenneth Wilkinson (engineer) (in 1970-10)
recorded at:
Kingsway Hall in London (Greater London), England, United Kingdom (from 1970-10-20 until 1970-10-23)
recording of:
Piano Concerto no. 2 in C minor, op. 18: II. Adagio sostenuto (from 1970-10-20 until 1970-10-23)
premiered in:
Moscow, Russia (on 1900-12-15)
composer:
Sergei Rachmaninoff (Russian composer) (from 1900 until 1901-04)
part of:
Piano Concerto no. 2 in C minor, op. 18
Sergei Rachmaninov4.511:54
2La Boheme: 1. “Che Gelida Manina”
tenor vocals:
José Carreras (Spanish tenor) (in 1979-02)
orchestra:
Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden (in 1979-02)
conductor:
Sir Colin Davis (English conductor) (in 1979-02)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Philips Classics Productions (not for release label use!—classical music division of Polygram, reorganized as Philips Music Group in 1997) (in 1979)
recording of:
La bohème: Atto I, no. 6. “Che gelida manina!” (Rodolfo) (in 1979-02)
composer:
Giacomo Puccini (Italian composer) (in 1896)
librettist:
Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica
part of:
La bohème: Atto I. In soffitta (La bohème: Act I, Puccini)
Giacomo Puccini24:49
3Clarinet Concerto in A: 3. Rondo - Allegro
clarinet:
Jack Brymer (clarinettist) (in 1971-09)
orchestra:
Academy of St Martin in the Fields (in 1971-09)
conductor:
Sir Neville Marriner (conductor) (in 1971-09)
recorded at:
Walthamstow Assembly Hall in London (Greater London), England, United Kingdom (in 1971-09)
recording of:
Concerto for Clarinet in A major, K. 622: III. Rondo. Allegro (Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra in A major, K. 622: III. Rondo. Allegro) (in 1971-09)
composer:
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (classical composer) (from 1791-09-28 until 1791-10-07)
arrangement of:
Concerto for Clarinet in A major, K. 622: III. Rondo. Allegro (catch-all for arrangements)
part of:
Concerto for Clarinet in A major, K. 622
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart48:56
4Symphony no. 3: 2.3 Maestoso 2.4 Allegro
organ:
Peter Hurford (organist) (in 1982-06)
orchestra:
Orchestre symphonique de Montréal (Montreal Symphony Orchestra) (in 1982-06)
conductor:
Charles Dutoit (conductor) (in 1982-06)
recorded at:
Église de Saint-Eustache in Saint-Eustache, Québec (Quebec), Canada (in 1982-06)
partial recording of:
Symphony no. 3 in C minor “avec orgue”, op. 78: II. Allegro moderato — Presto — Maestoso — Allegro (in 1982-06)
composer:
Camille Saint‐Saëns (composer) (in 1886)
publisher:
Éditions Durand (1947–present)
part of:
Symphony no. 3 in C minor “avec orgue”, op. 78
Camille Saint‐Saëns37:45
5Requiem: 2. Kyrie
producer:
Otto Gerdes (conductor and producer)
organ:
Wolfgang Meyer (organist, harpsichordist) (from 1961-10-05 until 1961-10-12)
choir vocals:
Wiener Singverein (from 1961-10-05 until 1961-10-12)
orchestra:
Berliner Philharmoniker (Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra) (from 1961-10-05 until 1961-10-12)
conductor:
Herbert von Karajan (conductor) (from 1961-10-05 until 1961-10-12)
chorus master:
Reinhold Schmidt (chorusmaster, composer) (from 1961-10-05 until 1961-10-12)
balance engineer:
Günter Hermanns (producer/engineer) (from 1961-10-05 until 1961-10-12)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Polydor International GmbH (not for release label use!) (in 1962)
recorded at:
Jesus‐Christus‐Kirche (Dahlem) in Berlin, Germany (from 1961-10-05 until 1961-10-12)
recording of:
Requiem in D minor, K. 626: II. Kyrie eleison (Süßmayr Edition; choir) (from 1961-10-05 until 1961-10-12)
orchestrator:
Franz Jakob Freystädtler, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (classical composer) and Franz Xaver Süßmayr
additional composer:
Franz Xaver Süßmayr
composer:
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (classical composer) (in 1791)
part of:
Requiem in D minor, K. 626 (Süßmayr edition)
revision of:
Requiem in D minor, K. 626: II. Kyrie (original version, fragment)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart32:53
6Messiah: 2.7 Hallelujah
engineer:
Kenneth Wilkinson (engineer)
producer:
James Walker (ballet/opera conductor, classical recordings producer for Decca)
organ:
Ralph Downes
trumpet:
Alan Stringer (trumpet player)
choir vocals:
London Symphony Chorus (in 1961-08)
orchestra:
London Symphony Orchestra (in 1961-08)
conductor:
Sir Adrian Boult (conductor) (in 1961-08)
recording of:
Messiah, HWV 56: Part II, no. 44. Chorus “Hallelujah” (in 1961-08)
composer:
George Frideric Handel (German‐British baroque composer) (in 1741)
librettist:
Charles Jennens
part of:
Messiah, HWV 56: Part II
George Frideric Handel34:36
7Piano Sonata no. 14 “Moonlight”: 1. Adagio sostenuto
producer:
Wolfgang Lohse (in 1965-01)
piano:
Wilhelm Kempff (pianist) (in 1965-01)
balance engineer:
Klaus Scheibe (editor/engineer) (in 1965-01)
recorded at:
Beethovensaal (Hannover) in Hannover (Hanover), Niedersachsen (Lower Saxony), Germany (in 1965-01)
recording of:
Sonata for Piano no. 14 in C‐sharp minor, op. 27 no. 2 “Moonlight”: I. Adagio sostenuto (in 1965-01)
composer:
Ludwig van Beethoven (German composer) (in 1801)
part of:
Sonata for Piano no. 14 in C‐sharp minor, op. 27 no. 2 “Moonlight”
Ludwig van Beethoven46:03
8Symphony no. 5: 4. Adagietto
producer:
Ray Minshull (record producer)
orchestra:
Los Angeles Philharmonic (in 1976-04)
conductor:
Zubin Mehta (conductor) (in 1976-04)
balance engineer:
Simon Eadon (classical music engineer) (in 1976-04) and James Lock (James Locke, engineer) (in 1976-04)
recorded at:
Royce Hall in Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1976-04)
recording of:
Symphony no. 5 in C-sharp minor: IV. Adagietto. Sehr langsam (in 1976-04)
composer:
Gustav Mahler (composer) (from 1901 until 1902)
part of:
Symphony no. 5
Gustav Mahler49:43
9Violin Concerto no. 1: 3. Allegro
violin:
Salvatore Accardo (violinist and conductor) (in 1977-06)
orchestra:
Gewandhausorchester Leipzig (Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra) (in 1977-06)
conductor:
Kurt Masur (conductor) (in 1977-06)
recording of:
Violin Concerto no. 1 in G minor, op. 26: III. Finale. Allegro energico (in 1977-06)
composer:
Max Bruch (composer and conductor) (from 1866 until 1867)
part of:
Violin Concerto no. 1 in G minor, op. 26
Max Bruch47:07
10Finlandia
executive producer:
Otto Gerdes (conductor and producer)
producer:
Hans Weber (producer/engineer) and Otto Ernst Wohlert
orchestra:
Berliner Philharmoniker (Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra) (on 1964-10-28)
conductor:
Herbert von Karajan (conductor) (on 1964-10-28)
balance engineer:
Günter Hermanns (producer/engineer) (on 1964-10-28)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Polydor International GmbH (not for release label use!) (in 1965)
recorded at:
Jesus‐Christus‐Kirche (Dahlem) in Berlin, Germany (on 1964-10-28)
recording of:
Finlandia, op. 26 (for orchestra) (on 1964-10-28)
premiered in:
Helsinki, Uusimaa, Finland (on 1900-07-02)
composer:
Jean Sibelius (Finnish composer) (in 1899)
revised by:
Jean Sibelius (Finnish composer) (in 1900)
premiered at:
Konsertti (1900-07-02)
publisher:
Breitkopf & Härtel (in 1905)
part of:
Works of Jean Sibelius by opus number (number: op. 26)
version of:
Sanomalehdistön päivien musiikki, op. 25/26: VII. Tableau 6. Finland Awakes
Jean Sibelius9:31

Credits

Release

part of:Classic FM: Hall of Fame (number: 68) (order: 1)