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Ormandy Conducts Holst: The Planets and Debussy: La Mer

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Uploaded by on Mar 6, 2008

This DVD pays tribute to a representative of the famous conductor personalities of the last century: Eugene Ormandy (1899-1985), who was both energetic and graceful on the podium, was known for his infallible ear and prodigious memory. He became famous for his relationship with the Philadelphia Orchestra, which he served as Musical Director from 1936 until 1980. Under his direction, the orchestra developed its legendary warm, textured, romantic "Philadelphia" or "Ormandy" Sound. Claude Debussy (1862--1918) and Gustav Holst (1874--1934) belonged to a generation of composers that influenced the musical output of the early champions of modernism. Debussy began working on La Mer in September 1903 and the work received its first performance in Paris in 1905. Bound up with the art of the three painters whom Debussy admired above all others - Turner, Monet and Hokusai - it best represents Debussy's working method: whereas a painting can reproduce the effects of light only statically, music can combine a variety of effects and convey an even more lively impression of their fleeting nature. Gustav Holst wrote his symphony The Planets between 1914 and 1917. It consists of seven movements each representative of a planet and based on thoughts and ideas associated with the respective Roman deity associated with that planet. The live recordings that are reissued here provide impressive evidence of the extent to which the then seventy-eight-year-old Ormandy, who conducted with unassuming gestures and eagle-eyed alertness, and the orchestra, which was brilliant in every section with opulent sonorities, could rely on one another. Together they embody American orchestral culture at its best.

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Uploader Comments (NaxosUSA)

  • So what exactly is the piece that they are playing? A lot or parallelism. What is the chord progression at 2:oo through 2:30?

  • This is from the beginning of "Jupiter , The Bringer of Jollity" from Holst's The Planets.

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All Comments (24)

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  • cut off just before the chorale?!?!? the best part dude cumon tell me there is a part 2

  • I didnt know Fidel played Trombone

  • Well, I think they'd like you to buy it. :-) I might have to myself, this is wonderful stuff.

  • Naxon,

    Ormandy died in 1980.

  • Eugene Ormandy and the wonderful Philadelphia Orchestra were such an amazing unique combination. Thank you for sharing this wonderful conductor and orchestra with us. I am so grateful.

  • I would like the video more if you include the rest of this video!! I hate the damn interruptions!!!! Ormandy, give me of this dazzling performance!!!

  • Eugene Ormandy is the master of all things. Nobody can out perform the master. This Jupiter has, color, depth and substance. He makes Jupiter so perfect and glorious. Not even the Japanese conductors can outstrip Ormandy's mastery. Ormandy can make Holst's piece as if he had composed this incredible piece himself.

  • I have this DVD. It's awesome. I had to go all the way to the TSO to get it though.

  • Where is the rest of it?

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