Sunday 25 November 2012

[Z248.Ebook] Download PDF The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2009, by Ivan March, Edward Greenfield, Robert Layton

Download PDF The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2009, by Ivan March, Edward Greenfield, Robert Layton

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The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2009, by Ivan March, Edward Greenfield, Robert Layton

The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2009, by Ivan March, Edward Greenfield, Robert Layton



The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2009, by Ivan March, Edward Greenfield, Robert Layton

Download PDF The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2009, by Ivan March, Edward Greenfield, Robert Layton

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The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2009, by Ivan March, Edward Greenfield, Robert Layton

This completely revised edition of the Penguin Guide reviews the major classical recordings issued and reissued over the past five decades, many of which dominate the catalogue because of their sheer excellence, irrespective of recording dates. More comprehensive than ever before and now updated annually, it indicates key recordings on CD, DVD and enhanced SACD, including those in surround sound. If you want the finest available version of any major classical work (including DVDs of opera and ballet) you will find it listed and assessed in these pages. Ranging from long-established recordings to the newest releases, the latest edition represents the cream of the international repertoire and has all the information you need to select the finest classical music available.

  • Sales Rank: #193681 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-11-25
  • Released on: 2008-11-25
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.16" h x 2.46" w x 6.94" l,
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 1602 pages

Review
Indispensable, illuminating and comprehensive The Times An indispensable and comprehensive survey. Anyone who wants to make sense of all the rival versions of classical music available on CD will find a great deal of illumination The Times More valuable than ever to any serious collector of classical music Wall Street Journal The bible for the discriminating record collector Daily Telegraph

About the Author
Ivan March is a well-known lecturer, journalist and writer in the world of recorded music. He lives in London, SW6. Edward Greenfield was for forty years on the staff of the Guardian and is a regular BBC broadcaster. He lives in London, E1. Robert Layton is a journalist and broadcaster. He lives in London, NW6. Paul Czajkowski is a music writer. He lives in London.

Most helpful customer reviews

150 of 154 people found the following review helpful.
3.5 stars -- continued slippage but good news for DVD fans
By Larry VanDeSande
I've owned the Penguin Guide continuously since 1984 and the 2008 version is about the tenth edition I've purchased. I've seen this guide go from having no competition to having some competition to being a model to be copied by the likes of the All Music Guide, Rough Guide to Classical Music, Third Ear Classical Music and the annual compendium of reviews Gramophone magazine puts together and markets under the moniker Gramophone Classical Music Guide 2008 (AKA Classical Good CD, DVD, & Download Guide)

In all this time, no other guide has continuously challenged the Penguin Guide's leadership in relating what's new and different in the universe of recorded classical music. Third Ear came closest but published only one edition in 2000. Today, the Penguin Guide is still the best at what it does but, based on my review of the 2008 edition, it is changing its ways and is slipping a bit behind the classical music industry.

I say it is slipping because the 2008 edition is hardly representative of the greatest recordings that have been issued since the last edition was published in 2005. Two significant historical events occurred in 2006 -- the Shostakovich centenary and the 250th anniversary of Mozart's birth. Both birthdays generated scores of new recordings, probably more for Shostakovich than in any single year ever before. They covered one of these celebrations pretty well in their pages but didn't do so well in the other.

The new Penguin Guide did best representing the reams of new Shostakovich recordings that came out that year. The 2008 tome includes discussion on the super audio cycle of symphonies from Kitaenko on Capriccio, the excellent DVD "Shostakovich vs. Stalin: The War Symphonies", and lists as its No. 1 version of the "Leningrad" symphony the super audio version by Hofman and the Beethoven Orchestra of Bonn on MGD. This even though it did not include a single listing of the series of Shostakovich symphonies being delivered by Caetani and the Verdi Orchestra of Milan.

They didn't cover the ground on Mozart's birthday so well, however. I looked for listings of my two favorite Mozart CDs released in 2006 -- Paul McCreesh's dynamic and dramatic reading of the Great C Minor Mass on Archiv and Peter Neumann's SACD recording of the Missa Solemnis and Vesperae Solennes on MGD -- and neither were included. The Penguin Guide listed two of Neumann's older Mozart choral recordings but missed the newer super audio job that was hailed by critics worldwide. I was astonished to find only three listings of CDs of the C Minor Mass and an addiitional one on CD. Surely this masterwork deserves greater representation than the inadequate listing of performances by Karajan, Gardiner and Herreweghe!

In fact, the more I looked, the more I found great recordings issued between guides not represented. To offer a short list, here are a few:

-- No new collections of either Bach's 6 Partitas for keybard or complete recordings of Beethoven's 32 Piano Sonatas even though Seattle professor Craig Sheppard recorded both to much critical accalim during the period.

-- No listing of Jos von Immerseel's recording of Ravel's Bolero, Concerto for the Left Hand, Rhapsodie Espanol, Pavane pour unde infante defunte and La Valse that BBC Music Magazine designated its album of the year for 2006.

-- No listing of the Abbado-Berlin Philharmonic reading of the Mahler Symphony No. 6 that Gramophone called its recording of the year for 2006.

-- No listing of the Rattle-Berlin Philharmonic recording of Gustav Holst's "The Planets" and four other insterstellar pieces of music that raised some eyebrows. It wasn't the greatest recording of the music but the Penguin Guide otherwise seems to find room to include every other recording from Englishman Simon Rattle.

The fact that the Penguin Guide is now more a collection of old favorites than ever before is most aptly demonstrated in the Mahler section. In the 11 pages covering his 10 symphonies, I counted only 6 new recordings from the past edition and not one of them is really new -- they are all older recordings either seeing first light (Solit-Chicago Symphony 1 on Decca and Bernstein-Vienna Philharmonic 5 on DG) or re-recordings of older recordings (Hatink-Concertgebouw 8 on a PentaTone SACD issue). With a half-dozen Mahler cycles in progress the past few years, this seems short shrift indeed as a recommendable section.

Meanwhile, most of a decade removed from the Bach birthday in 2000, the 2008 Penguin Guide is still carrying every listing of the complete Bach cantata recordings by Harnoncourt-Leonhardt, Koopman, Suzuki and Gardiner -- twice! -- with notations for the Gardiner recordings on both Archiv and the Soli Deo Gloria series. To complete my list of what I perceive as debits in the new edition, the text is more difficult to read. The text size appears to be about the same (small) but italicized headers in much larger type (and a different text face) and boxes around what the book calls its "key" recordings more distracted than assisted me.

Some changes for 2008: The editors seem to have changed their concept a bit this time, too, by not listing every recording they talk about in text. In other words, their ongoing discussion may include recordings not listed in the headings, so keep reading to see if your favorite is there. The editors made another change -- the Penguin Guide now uses a 4-star rating system. It had always been a 3-star system until this edition. They do not address this in the text so I can't say why this happened.

I have concentrated on demerits but there are improvements in the new edition. The Penguin Guide caught a few recordings I thought might slip under its radar including a wonderful 2006 recording of Offenbach's Concerto Militaire by Pernoo and Minkowski. In addition to representative coverage of the Shostakovich year the new Penguin Guide has made a concerted effort to cover a much wider range of DVD this time, especially those for opera and sacred music. The Beethoven symphony section has nearly as many DVD as CD listings. They tend to list these in this way, always scrupulously listing the DVD director:

Wagner: Tristan und Isolde (complete; DVD version)
Wagner: Tristan und Isolde (complete: CD version)

It still has over 1,500 pages and lists most composers famous and not so famous. I think the bottom line is people that don't subscribe to critical review magazines or do not closely follow Internet review mechanisms, and look for one guide to cover the entire industry, will probably benefit by acquiring this book. Yet, perhaps the greatest demerit of this guide is that, if you don't record on a major label or on Naxos, you don't have much chance of being included in this book. For those of us that follow the industry closely, the new Penguin Guide demonstrates, more than ever before, its inability to keep up with what's going on with the hundreds of new recordings released every month.

54 of 56 people found the following review helpful.
The Guide has seen better days
By MartinP
Over the years, I have found the Penguin guide a useful reference for getting an idea of available recordings of a particular piece, and some kind of general idea of their respective merits. This latest edition, however, seems to have become too selective. Where earlier editions often seemed to list all serious contenders for a work, this one is much more limited, for instance listing no more than four recordings of Sacre du Printemps (including neither of my favourites, Chailly and MTT). For some works you may not find a listing at all (e.g., Zemlinsky's Seejungfrau). This is a pity, because this way the Penguin guide looses its main advantage over the Gramophone Good CD Guide, that has always been far more selective, and in my opinion is the more reliable source when it comes to aesthetic judgment. (E.g, the Penguin continues to list the inadequate and incomplete Kliegel as a serious recommendation for Kodaly's cello solo sonate, but doesn't bother to mention Claret or Wispelwey).

Also, recordings are listed that are no longer available (eg., the Abbado Gurrelieder).

The rating system has acquired several new features that will guarantee utter confusion. Three stars used to be the top, but now exceptional recordings can get four. But that isn't all, exceptional recordings can also still get the familiar rosette, and moreover can be qualified as a `key' recording, identified with a little key-symbol. What all this means is completely mysterious. There are four-star recordings with an without rosettes; three-star recordings with a rosette while four-star competition goes unrosetted; there are rosette-recordings that are key and others that aren't; and key recordings may be rated anything from two and a half to four stars. Strangely, too, for some works numerous key recordings are listed, which makes one wonder what makes them 'key'. It is nonsense to pretend music criticism is an exact science, and this fussy rating system is off the mark.

I wish the ample lay-out of headers and the boxes denoting key recordings had been dispensed with to allow more room for listing additional recordings.

For those wanting a general and extensive entrance point to the classical CD and DVD market, this guide will be useful nonetheless, and it has always been an interesting tome to thumb through, if only to check your own preferences against those of these self-styled musical gurus.

29 of 30 people found the following review helpful.
Flawed, but I am ADDICTED!
By R. Nadel
The Penguin Guide has changed only slightly over the years. I am sitting here looking at my first Penguin Stereo Record Guide from 1975 in hard back (small format, though). Back then I was wrapping up post-grad college, working in a large music store as Classical buyer, and the Guide was unquestionably the most respected and authoritative summary of classical music records that could be held in one hand. 1114 pages, quaintly including reviews of the Beatles' albums (influenced perhaps by Deryck Cooke?) comparing them to Stockhausen and Boulez and furthermore identifying George Martin as their Walter Legge (for the younger set, Legge was something of a genius classical/opera producer for EMI particularly after the war).

It's true the Penguin Guide is flawed, that editorial gaffs persist, like non sequitur junk DNA accumulating over the evolutionary millennia. It is true that the rating system is ambiguous and redundant on its face. It's true that a few recordings are reviewed in the body text without their names appearing in the recordings list for a particular piece. It's true that some albums listed are out of print and other, worthy titles in print do not appear anywhere. It's true that it is not comprehensive. But all those weaknesses taken together amount to little more than annoyance, unless you really expect a single volume can satisfy the range of classical music consumers from novice to devoted long hair music buffs.

It is still the most readable, fun, unputdownable single volume reference Guide. From the first, this Guide has given me a developing vocabulary in what differentiates classical music performances and recordings. It has shown me titles I would never have known about. The consistency of their approach allows me to compare my tastes to theirs, and adjust accordingly.

But something important is changing, I think.

My copy of this latest volume has over 1550 pages in large format and bears the telling subtitle "The Perfect Guide to Building Your Classical Collection". The subtitle has changed several times from no subtitle, to "The Guide to Excellence in Recorded Classical Music", to "The Key Classical Recordings on CD, DVD, & SACD", and now "The Perfect Guide to Building...". These volumes are essentially the same in content and style yet the subtitles changed. Why?

Put simply, the world around them has changed dramatically. The number of boutique labels is growing, adding to the mass of music recorded from the 50s/60s through the 90s. The number of excellent artists seems larger than ever. Sampling and rent-before-you-buy services make direct comparisons possible in a way we didn't have before the Web. Furthermore, if you are an experienced listener like me, you have thousands of vinyl and CD titles each. It is hard enough to keep track of my own music using a relational database, let alone the thousands of new recordings each year. When I first began to collect seriously, no one had listened to as much music as they had. Most of us who have been listening for years cannot now get what we want from a single volume anymore. We need the combination of single volume baseline reference, plus classical music periodicals (I get the BBC's Music magazine and they have I don't know how many reviews each month), PLUS online resources. Amidst the volume of classical music information, there is no single place I can go; I still like my single volume Penguin as a starting place for several reviews that I can assess, and then I can move out from there to other resources.

I don't know about the future, however. With Darwinian pressures exerted by the changing environment and an aging, shrinking, classical consumer population, plus new innovations from the Web, our Penguin will need to adapt and evolve in the face of the public's Natural Selection choices lest it find itself, like such birds as the moa, dodo, and passenger pigeon, on the verge of extinction.

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