
George
Fest: The Music Of George Harrison
(2015/Vagrant/Hot Records Blu-ray w/2 CDs)/Naxos
Classical CDs: Lennox Berkley: Music For Solo Piano & Piano Duet
(1993/Terroni/Beedie)/Bogdanovic:
Guitar Music
(2015/Brilliant Records/Marchese)/Frank
Bridge/Cyril Scott: Piano Quintets
(1989/Terroni/Bingham String Quartet)/Leo
Brouwer: Music For Bandurria & Guitar
(2014/Chamorro/Mateo)/Domenico
Cimarosa: Overtures 4
(2014/Halasz)/Perry
Grainer: Music For Saxophones
(2014/Griggs)/Hindsmith:
Complete Piano Sonatas: Paciariello
(2014)/Simon Mayr: Requiem
(2014 CD set)/Sinigaglia:
Music For Violin & Piano
(2009/Brilliant/Genot)/Weill
Brecht: Die Sieben Todsunden
(aka Seven Deadly
Sins/1965 -
1968/Brilliant)/Eugene
Zador: Dance Symphony
(2014/Smolij/Budapest Symphony Orchestra)
Blu-ray
Picture: B- Blu-ray Sound: B CD Sound: B- Extras: D/C-
Main Programs: B/B-/B-/B/B-/B/B/B-/B-/B-/B-/B-
Our
new set of music releases are wide ranging, with a new tribute to a
late Beatle making for an exceptional tribute night and or first
cycle of classical music CDs in a while...
George
Fest: The Music Of George Harrison
(2015) is our first chance to cover a new cycle of 'Fest' concerts we
are starting to hear about (including one for Fleetwood Mac that just
happened as we post) and of the several configurations of this show's
release, Hot Records has been kind enough to send over the Blu-ray/2
CDs set that is the sonic preference over all others unless you are a
serious vinyl fan. Considering Harrison pioneered such multi-music
act and music star concerts with his legendary, classic Concert
For Bangladesh,
it is more than ironic a show would come together in his honor with
the same energy, spirit and memorability.
The
show is contained on a single Blu-ray of about two hours (with
exclusive brief interview clips between some performances) and in the
same track order, split between two compact discs as follows...
DISC
1
Introduction
Old
Brown Shoe
- Conan O'Brien
I
Me Mine
- Britt Daniel from Spoon
Ballad
of Sir Frankie Crisp (Let It Roll)
- Jonathan Bates with Dhani Harrison
Something
- Norah Jones
Got
My Mind Set On You
- Brandon Flowers from the Killers
If
Not For You
- Heartless Bastards
Be
Here Now
- Ian Astbury from The Cult
Wah-Wah
- Nick Valensi from The Strokes
If
I Needed Someone
- Jamestown Revival
Art
of Dying
- Black Rebel Motorcycle Club
Savoy
Truffle
- Dhani Harrison
For
You Blue
- Chase Cohl with Weezer's Brian Bell on guitar
Beware
Of Darkness
- Ann Wilson from Heart
DISC
2
Let
It Down
- Dhani Harrison
Give
Me Love (Give Me Peace On Earth)
- Ben Harper
Here
Comes The Sun
- Perry Farrell from Jane's Addiction
What
Is Life
- "Weird Al" Yankovic
Behind
That Locked Door
- Norah Jones
My
Sweet Lord
- Brian Wilson with Al Jardine
Isn't
It A Pity
- The Black Ryder
Any
Road
- Butch Walker
I'd
Have You Anytime
- Karen Elson
Taxman
- Cold War Kids
It's
All Too Much
- The Flaming Lips
Handle
With Care
- Brandon Flowers, Dhani Harrison, Jonathan Bates,"Weird Al"
Yankovic, Britt Daniel and Wayne Coyne
All
Things Must Pass
- Ann Wilson, Dhani Harrison, Karen Elson and Norah Jones
Of
all the performances, Jones two covers are not bad, Heartless
Bastards do a better job on the Bob Dylan classic Harrison made a big
hit than even I expected, Nick Valensi from The Strokes does the
underrated Wah
Wah
justice, Jamestown Revival is pretty good on If
I Needed Someone,
son Dhani Harrison is haunting sounding like his father in the best
way on Savoy
Truffle
and Let
It Down,
Cold War Kids are fearless on Taxman,
The Flaming Lips do not disappoint on It's
All Too Much,
the everyone returns to pull off a really good cover of Traveling
Wilburys' Handle
With Care
and they top it all off with the tittle song of All
Things Must Pass
in fine style.
Yet,
there is so much more to the show, a live show that really plays
live, feels live and is live. Alive. The artists there really love
and care about the music, it is something special, a real happening,
as real spirit to it and is one of the best recorded concerts I've
seen in a while and we see our share. If you are a fan of harrison
or any of these performers, George fest is worth going out of your
way for.
Next
are an extensive selections of
Naxos
Classical CDs, starting with Lennox
Berkley: Music For Solo Piano & Piano Duet
(1993) with Raphael Terroni and Norman Beedie on piano, this one only
runs 58:11, but might have been able to add one more track as this is
not a bad release over its six pieces in 20 tracks that give us more
than enough of an idea where Berkley is coming from. Berkeley died
sadly in 1989, so this is definitely meant as a tribute recording.
Bogdanovic:
Guitar Music
(2015) features Angelo Marchese seven pieces (at 63:34) of Dusan
Bogdanovic compositions with usually nice results, though this might
be more than many can take for over an hour, but the Yugoslavian-born
composer picked Marchese personally and both try to take the music
into intense new directions. Having encountered several such
recordings like this over the years, this is worth of its cycle, but
not one I would re-listen to all the time. Still, good enough.
Frank
Bridge/Cyril Scott: Piano Quintets
(1989) is one of the best 3 CDs here with Raphael Terroni on Piano
with The Bingham String Quartet exceptionally performing Bridge's
Piano Quartet in D minor, H49 a and Scott's Piano Quintet No. 1 with
such smoothness, energy and grace that it makes for an engaging,
reference performance. Definitely a nice surprise.
Leo
Brouwer: Music For Bandurria & Guitar
(2014) runs 62:35 and offers Pedro Chamorro on bandurria (a small
lute) and Pedro Mateo on Guitar, delivering a pretty good performance
of the Cuban conductors music, now likely to become a new curio with
Cuban/U.S. Relations reestablished. We get five recordings in all
including world premieres of Incidental
Music Of The Countrymen
and Micropieces,
both of which are as good as any of the pieces performed here.
Though I had minor issues with this, expect to hear about this one
again.
Domenico
Cimarosa: Overtures 4
(2014) is another one of the top 3 CDs here with Michael Halasz and
the Czech Chamber Philharmonic Orchestra Pardubice delivering the
Italian Opera composer here in a tight, warm, forward 66+ minutes
that play well and definitive to me. Being a more recent recording,
I would love to hear this one in a higher fidelity format. Too bad
this is not an SA-CD.
I
could say the same for Perry
Grainer: Music For Saxophones
(2014) with Joyce Griggs on Saxophone playing 49+ minutes of the
music from the man considered one of the greatest saxophone arrangers
ever starting with one of his own compositions, then moving onto 14
more tracks (and one more by Grainer) by usually underrated composers
(J.S. Bach's Fugue No. IV is track 10) as Joyce in joined by some
seriously top rate musicians in a work that shows the versatility,
value, pricelessness and range of the popular instrument as well as
the talent that makes this a really solid CD worth your time.
Hindsmith:
Complete Piano Sonatas
(2014) is conducted by Maurizio Paciariello, runs just over 60.5
minutes and features the entire work in three parts. Though it is a
good recording and at least an interesting piece, this does feel a
bit long and maybe I would have liked a slightly different
arrangement. Otherwise, the Paul Hindsmith work is worth hearing for
those interested and I would like to hear another after this one by
someone else to compare.
Simon
Mayr: Requiem
(2014) is one of our only CD sets here and its Sequentia takes most
of both discs to perform with a large group of name artists pulling
off in what turns out to be another world premiere recording. Mixing
Italian and German opera sensibilities, the work tends to still have
an identity of its own and all involved rightly make it into a true
event. The only issue here is at over 166 minutes, it runs a bit too
long for my tastes, but it is at least a complete work.
Sinigaglia:
Music For Violin & Piano
(2009) is a six-piece, 13-track, 65+ minutes recording of the
composers music with William Genot on Violin, Massimiliano Genot on
Piano and Carlo Negro on Piano that is not bad, but I found to be a
bit uneven overall and not as memorable as it could have been. I
can't figure out if it is the compositions, musicians or both that
are off or just not geling, but this is still a decent release if not
always memorable.
Weill
Brecht: Die Sieben Todsunden (aka Seven Deadly Sins/1965 -
1968) takes various key works by deconstructionist composers Kurt
Weill and Bertolt Brecht and presents them staring with the title
work (we are told is one of the most definitive) then moving on to
songs from Berliner Requiem, Happy End, Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt
Mahagonny, Die Dreigroschenoper and another Berliner Requiem. At
over 70 minutes, that's as filled as any single CD here, but this
ranks #4 among the classical CDs as this is the only one that could
have used a second disc. Still, this is a very valuable recording
worth going out of your way for.
Finally
we have Eugene
Zador: Dance Symphony
(2014), which comes with the subtitle Variations
On A Hungarian Folksong
as that piece is having its world premiere here on this recording in
its entirety, with Mariusz Smolij conducting The Budapest Symphony
Orchestra and at just over 71 minutes, brings to life some older,
important music. However, this has a slight run-on feel to it and
might only interest those who really want to hear this kind of music,
though most of the compositions are from 1919 and 1936, yet that is
not a problem for me. AN important release to be sure, but with a
few limits.
The
1080p 1.78 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on George
usually looks just fine, but the editors to a few unfortunate
liberties to try and get fancy with manipulated and decolored images
in a few spots that plays contrary to
the naturalness one would expect from anything representing Harrison
to the point that it is distracting, unnecessary and break continuity
up. I could live with a few darker shots and a few soft shots, but
this was wrong to do. Add the varied quality of old film and analog
video clips of Harrison that look good and the playback is near
excellent otherwise, but a little off.
Most
fans will expect a lossless 5.1, 7.1 or even 11.1 sound mix at this
point, but all the Blu-ray offers is uncompressed PCM 2.0 Stereo that
has the best sound on the list, is obviously from a finely recorded
sound source, but that soundmaster is probably even more impressive
that the 16blt/48kHz presentation we have here that is really good
otherwise. The PCM 16/44.1 2.0 Stereo on the CD set actually is
fairly good, but cannot compete with the Blu-ray's stereo-only sound.
The classical CDs range from good to a bit harsh and rough at the
edges or with more compression than desired as expected, despite the
actual recordings going back to 1966. They are likely about the best
they will sound in the format, but it is hard to tell.
Unless
you count the CDs (we don't), George
has no extras, while the rest of the CDs only offer the usual paper
text pullouts, usually multi-lingual at that.
-
Nicholas Sheffo