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Classical 101

The Gift of Music: Holiday Gift Ideas for the Classical Music Fan in Your Life

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Pixabay

These new recordings have brought me a lot of pleasure over the past few months. May they do the same for you.

Here are a few gift suggestions for the lovers of classical music in your life. (The recordings are available as downloads and, merciful God, as CDs.)

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amazon.com

Brahms: The Symphonies
Andris Nelsons conducts the Boston Symphony Orchestra

The four symphonies by Johannes Brahms are an aural high-calorie delight — richly orchestrated with often more than one melody working its way through.

For years, the Boston Symphony, my hometown band, was marketed as "The Aristocrat of Orchestras." (Would such a brand be possible in these more cynical times?)

Certainly, they sounded sublime; the term "elegant" comes to mind in the acoustically glorious Symphony Hall. These recordings of live performances capture the hall’s acoustic splendor — a perfect setting for an orchestra sill aristocratic, but unafraid to be a bit raucous when the music so demands.

Boston Symphony conductor doesn't forget that Brahms loved the country dances and tavern songs he heard during his daily walks through Vienna. This treasure is a three-CD set from the Boston Symphony’s own label.

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Palestrina: Missa Papae Marcelli and Motets
The Sistine Chapel Choir conducted by Massimo Palombella

This time last year, CBS' 60 Minutes did a . The point was made that music-making in the most beautiful, august space in the world had gone downhill for years.

A new conductor, Massimo Palombella, and a college of cardinals — many of whom manage to stay awake during its concerts — have revitalized the choir. The result is a lovely new recording of music by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1525-1594).

In 1551, Palestrina was named maestro di musica of the Vatican’s Cappella Giulia. Today’s descends from the composer’s career within the Vatican.

Included on the recording is the famed Pope Marcellus Mass. This splendid mass earned its namesake, Pope Marcellus II, one of his two footnotes in history. (The other one is the fact of his death three weeks after being named Pope in 1551.)

Never mind. His holiness rejoices in heaven for this splendid new recording. The Sistine Chapel has been a miracle since Michelangelo painted its ceiling in 1512. In 2017, the Sistine Chapel Choir is back.

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amazon.com

Sibelius: Kullervo and Kortekangas: â€‹M¾±²µ°ù²¹³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô²õ
Minnesota Orchestra, YL Male Voice Choir, soprano Lilli Paasikivi, baritone Tommi Hakala, conducted by Osmo Vanska

For years, I’ve been trying to convince the to collaborate with the , the and the gentlemen of the  to present the Kullervo symphony by Jean Sibelius.

Sibelius repudiated Kullervo later in his life, considering it juvenilia. But being a great composer doesn’t mean you are always right.

The Minnesota Orchestra and conductor with the YL Male Voice Choir give a thrilling performance of this story taken from the Kalevala. It’s a tragedy, a brother-and-sister couple who doesn't know about their relation.

The orchestra gallops and sings. The vast expanse of Sibelius' musical loneliness blends with a quasi-operatic telling of the story. Columbus Symphony et al, pay attention!

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​P°ù±ð³Ù³Ù²â&²Ô²ú²õ±è;³Û±ð²Ô»å±ð:&²Ô²ú²õ±è;‸¾°ù±ð²¹³¾²õ

South African soprano is on her way to becoming opera’s No. 1 box-office attraction.

It's a compact, dazzling, light soprano, with just enough metal to sustain the drama of Gaetano Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor, Vincenzo Bellini’s La Straniera and Charles Gounod's Romeo et Juliette. For contrast, we get the razzle-dazzle coloratura of Giacomo Meyerbeer's Dinorah and all of the above in the splendor of Bellini's La Sonnambula.

Sometimes it's nice to wallow in a beautiful voice. Wallow here.

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Christopher Purdy is Classical 101's early morning host, 7-10 a.m. weekdays. He is host and producer of Front Row Center – Classical 101’s weekly celebration of Opera and more – as well as Music in Mid-Ohio, Concerts at Ohio State, and the Columbus Symphony broadcast series. He is the regular pre-concert speaker for Columbus Symphony performances in the Ohio Theater.
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