Recommend a recording that shows of soundstage


Im interested if someone can recommend a particular recording that excels in image height, depth, layering and particularly, beyond the speakers imaging. I've often thought that imaging was highly recording dependent.

I recently picked up Mehta's The Planets and was astonished at what I heard.
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With classical music (the bulk of my collection), I really don't have that many recommendations based on soundstaging (I don't really listen for that quality). However, a few recordings are memorable for those qualities, sucb as:

Respighi: Church Windows (Reference Recordings)
Vivaldi: Concerti Pour Hautbois, Basson et Cordes (Astree)
Falla: Three Cornered Hat-Ansermet (Decca-JVC XRCD)
Mozart: Clarinet and Horn Concerto-de Peyer, Tuckwell, Maag (Decca)

For popular music:

Nouvelle Vague: Self Titled (might be a Q-sound recording because the soundstage is extremely wide)

Roger Waters: Amuzed to Death (Q-sound recording that even has sounds seeming to come from behind the listener)

Lambchop: Is a Woman

Be Good Tanyas: Chinatown

Cowboy Junkies: 'Neath the Covers

For Jazz, there are MANY great sounding recordings, though few stand out as far as wide soundstaging is concerned (except where wide means hole in the middle). As a general rule almost anything on ECM will sound good. Some others notable for soundstage/sound quality:

LA4: Just Friends (lp)
Mary Stallings: Fine and Mellow (lp)
Great Jazz Trio: Direct from LA (lp)
Percussion Music, on Nonesuch label, New Jersey Percussion Ensemble.
Hi, I was not a fan, my wife is, now I am a fan, Believe it or not, Michael Jackson-Greatest Hits History volume 1, has a unblievable, chills up and down your body sound stage and clarity that is something to behold!, cheers.
Took response34's advice and played Madonna's "Vogue" and was blown away by the soundstage. It did indeed extend beyond my de Capo's horizontal plane! In fact, much of The Immaculate Collection post 1984 is immaculately produced. Thanks for the tip, r34.