Dostupnosť:
na sklade / dostupné okamžite
Katalógové číslo:
479 2954
Autori:
Bronislaw Kaper, Ennio Morricone, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Erich Zeisl, Franz Waxman, Hanns Eisler, Herman Hupfeld, John Williams, Kurt Weill, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Miklos Rozsa, Thomas Newman, Walter Jurmann, Werner R Heymann
Interpreti:
Alexander Shelley, Daniel Hope, Jacques Ammon, Maria Todtenhaupt, Max Raabe, Quintet of the Deutsches Kammerorchester Berlin, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, Sting
Vydavateľ:
DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON
1 Rózsa: Love Theme (from Ben-Hur)
Korngold: Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35
2 I. Moderato nobile
3 II. Romance: Andante
4 III. Finale: Allegro assai vivace
5 Castelnuovo-Tedesco: Sea Murmurs
6 Eisler: The Secret Marriage
7 Rózsa: Love Theme (from El Cid)
8 Zeisl: Menuhim's-Song (from Hiob)
9 Waxman: Reminiscences (from 'Come Back, Little Sheba')
10 Jurmann/Kaper: Tränen in der Geige (from Ich will dich Liebe lehren)
11 Weill: Speak low (from One Touch of Venus)
12 Korngold: Prelude and Serenade (from Der Schneemann)
13 Rózsa: Prelude and Love Theme (from Spellbound)
14 Morricone: Love Theme (from Nuovo Cinema Paradiso)
15 Williams: Theme (from Schindler's List)
16 Newman: American Beauty (from American Beauty)
17 Heymann: Irgendwo auf der Welt (from Ein blonder Traum)
18 Hupfeld: As Time Goes By (from Casablanca)
In this album Daniel Hope shines a new light on Hollywood scores as he takes a widescreen musical journey, seeking out the echoes of exiled European composers, such as Miklos Rózsa, John Waxman, Hanns Eisler, Erich Wolfgang Korngold. The center piece is the famous Violin concerto by Erich Wolfgang Korngold.
The album also contains contemporary soundtrack classics such as Schindler´s List, American Beauty and Cinema Paradiso to reflect on the strong musical influence the Exile composer had and still has on contemporary film composers.
Guest artists featuring on this record are no one less than Sting who performs in a new arrangement on “The Secret Marriage” – a Hanns Eisler composition (originally with lyrics of Bertold Brecht, to which Sting wrote his own lyrics back in 1987) – and German singer phenomenon Max Raabe on the famous “Speak Low” by Kurt Weill. Top Arranger Paul Bateman provided brand new orchestral arrangements.