My favorite classical recordings


This is a new thread that I hope will have enough contributors.
Please indicate the classical performances and performers that are your favorites.
Hopefully others will contribute comments and add selections of their own.   
 

128x128rvpiano

Been listening and collecting for decades, so this is an impossible task.  I just retired and having a lot of fun pullinhi lot of fun pulling CDs of the shelves that haven’t been played for years.

  I’ll suggest a current favorite: Aldo Ciccolini 5 disc set of Debussy Piano music

One thing that interests me is how my tastes have changed.  For example my first exposure to the Mozart Symphonies were the recordings of Klemperer and Walter.  Having revisited this recently, having primarily listed to HIPP versions for the last few decades, while I felt a nostalgic appreciation, I don’t think that I will return to these very often.

  Many violin concertos from the golden age of recording, such as Heifetz/Reiner collaborations, the soloist is miked so loud relative to the orchestra that it always disappoints when Igo to a concert and the balance is natural 

I concur. Now when I listen to Haydn, Mozart, Schubert or even Beethoven sometimes, I’m turned off by the older, heavier less HIP conceptions.  
And of course the Baroque has seen an enlightenment for some time now.

I put my recordings of HIP music into the closet with my hair shirts.  I must admit that I’ve never liked the overscored, over produced, recordings of orchestral music. I welcomed Harnoncourt’s Beethoven, Berglund’s Sibelius, Mackerras’ Schubert and Brahms. What I found I loved the most was not HIP so much as the reduced forces and the clarity it brought. But, that probably explains why I love music for the solo piano and piano duets. Go figure. :-)

RV, I really don’t have a favorite that I don’t stray from often. But I do have a love for Puccini’s La Boheme by Shippers that has never diminished, and I have grown to appreciate Jean-Efflam Bavouzet’s Debussy series. They are my go-to recordings of this music now.

FWIW, and I realize it may be a bit off topic, but in a prior post you referred to crying for the love of the first movement of Mahler’s 9th. Something I can appreciate and it occurs occasionally to me, just nothing of Mahler’s so much. What, who, actually does exactly this for me is a ’pop’ singer, Eva Cassidy. If you are not acquainted with her, but appreciate a great voice and can abide something not ’classical’ in our sense, you should listen to her. She died young and unappreciated in her early 30’s, but was later discovered in England (she’s from Appalachia). Her songs are so, so, beautiful and full of heart. I cry just thinking about her and I save her music for those times when I’m emotionally prepared to hear her. It’s that exquisite, for me at least. Just hear her ’Over the Rainbow’ juxtaposed to the perennial favorite version by Judy Garland. I could go on, she really winds me up! :-)

Newbee,

I discovered Eva Cassidy a long time ago. And you’re right.  I could never listen to her without tears coming to my eyes, notwithstanding her early death.  
Like the new Dodger’s baseball pitcher, she could do it all.  No matter what style she sang she was the best at it.

Extraordinary!