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Angel Dances

Product ID : 46894394


Galleon Product ID 46894394
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About Angel Dances

Product Description Although the Berlin Philharmonic is Not an Ensemble that One Would Normally Associate with Recordings of Television Themes, Showtunes Or South American Tango, Its Equally Famous World-renowned Cello Section, the 12 'cellists of the Berlin Philharmonic, Most Certainly Are. Their Previous Recordings "as Time Goes By", "Round Midnight" and "South American Getaway" Met with Commercial and Critical Success, the Latter Receiving a Grammy Nomination for "Best Small Ensemble Performance". All this from a Group of Players who Formed Over 30 Years Ago with Just One Piece in their Repertoire! on this Album, the 'cellists Move Into a More Reflective Musical World, Combining Voices and Instruments in Sacred Music from a Variety of Backgrounds. The Album Includes a Wide Range of Repertoire, from the Cool Serenity of Debussy's Submerged Cathedral to the Passion of Piazzola's Angel Trilogy. Amazon.com This is an extraordinary recording - extraordinary in concept, planning, preparation, and execution. Orchestras have been known to let an entire violin section stand up and play Paganini's "Perpetual motion" in unison - often with dubious results - but a cello section that can transform itself into a multi-layered ensemble is unique. Of course it only works if the section belongs to a great orchestra and consists of great individual players. The sound these cellists produce is incredible, from the sonority of an orchestra to delicate, transparent lines, from somber darkness to celestial radiance. They must have very strong thumbs: much of the music lies in the stratospheric thumb-position. Indeed, it is often hard to believe that these are cellos, not violins, or flutes and oboes. Their intonation, balance and unanimity are impeccable, and their stylistic versatility equals their technical command. The program, in excellent arrangements, some by the players themselves, ranges from a 17th-century Carissimi prayer (with chorus) through Bach, Mendelssohn, Debussy, Verdi, Piazzolla, whose Tango Suite gives the disc its title, Pärt, whose "Fratres" is heard in its original version, punctuated by bass-drum thuds, to contemporary Gospel shouts (with a jazz singer) by Volker Schlott, a Berlin-based jazz musician. The program ends with a frankly emotional, beautiful piece written for the 12 Cellists by Markus Stockhausen, who joins them on trumpet and flugelhorn. The recording's only flaw is its excessive dynamic contrast; let your ears revel in the Cellists' sound, but keep a finger on the volume control. --Edith Eisler