This is a great thread! My mother was not a fan of classical music, but she believed that my younger brother and I should be exposed to it. So she purchased the Music of the World's Greatest Composers and, later, the World's Greatest Light Classical Music. Both sat on the shelf for a while, another good intention gone awry.
One day when I was about 12 or 13 and having nothing better to do, I pulled out the Music of the World's Greatest Composers and began reading the book that came with the set. The biographies of the composers fascinated me. Schubert's life particularly intrigued me because it described his death at an early age. The article then described the first performance of his Unfinished Symphony, which occurred after Schubert's death. The article related how the orchestra played the piece until its end, when the conductor turned to the audience and said, "Here the conductor laid down his pen."
Well, I had to hear that symphony. I pulled the LP from its sleeve and put it on our trusty mono Webcor phonograph. What I heard surprised me, delighted me, and moved me.
That was the first piece of classical music that I chose to listen to. Eventually, I played all of the music in both Readers Digests sets many times.
I don't think my mother ever listened to any of them. But her gift of those Readers Digests sets were a lifetime gift to me of the joy of classical music.
One day when I was about 12 or 13 and having nothing better to do, I pulled out the Music of the World's Greatest Composers and began reading the book that came with the set. The biographies of the composers fascinated me. Schubert's life particularly intrigued me because it described his death at an early age. The article then described the first performance of his Unfinished Symphony, which occurred after Schubert's death. The article related how the orchestra played the piece until its end, when the conductor turned to the audience and said, "Here the conductor laid down his pen."
Well, I had to hear that symphony. I pulled the LP from its sleeve and put it on our trusty mono Webcor phonograph. What I heard surprised me, delighted me, and moved me.
That was the first piece of classical music that I chose to listen to. Eventually, I played all of the music in both Readers Digests sets many times.
I don't think my mother ever listened to any of them. But her gift of those Readers Digests sets were a lifetime gift to me of the joy of classical music.