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Leroy Anderson: Orchestral Music, Vol. 2
 
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Leroy Anderson: Orchestral Music, Vol. 2

Anderson , Slatkin , BBC Concert Orchestra Audio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

Price: $10.35 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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MP3 Download, 16 Songs, 2008 $7.99  
Audio CD, 2008 $10.35  

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song TitleArtist Time Price
listen  1. Woodbury FanfareLeonard Slatkin0:55$0.89 Buy Track
listen  2. Harvard Festival: A Harvard FestivalLeonard Slatkin 6:14$0.89 Buy Track
listen  3. Forgotten Dreams : Forgotten DreamsAlistair Young 2:23$0.89 Buy Track
listen  4. Whistling KettleLeonard Slatkin 1:45$0.89 Buy Track
listen  5. Horse and BuggyLeonard Slatkin 3:44$0.89 Buy Track
listen  6. The Waltzing Cat : The Waltzing CatLeonard Slatkin 2:36$0.89 Buy Track
listen  7. Home StretchLeonard Slatkin 2:46$0.89 Buy Track
listen  8. The Girl in Satin : The Girl in SatinLeonard Slatkin 2:18$0.89 Buy Track
listen  9. March of the 2 Left Feet : March of the Two Left FeetLeonard Slatkin 2:23$0.89 Buy Track
listen10. Waltz Around the ScaleLeonard Slatkin 2:44$0.89 Buy Track
listen11. Lullaby of the DrumsLeonard Slatkin 3:04$0.89 Buy Track
listen12. Jazz Legato : Jazz LegatoLeonard Slatkin 1:43$0.89 Buy Track
listen13. Jazz Pizzicato : Jazz PizzicatoLeonard Slatkin 1:59$0.89 Buy Track
listen14. Song of the Bells : Song of the BellsLeonard Slatkin 3:30$0.89 Buy Track
listen15. Song of Jupiter (arr. of Handel: Semele, HWV 58, "Where'er You Walk")David Mccallum 4:12$0.89 Buy Track
listen16. Suite of Carols (version for string orchestra): Suite of Carols (version for strings)Leonard Slatkin12:24$0.89 Buy Track


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Frequently Bought Together

Leroy Anderson: Orchestral Music, Vol. 2 + Anderson: Orchestral Works, Vol. 3 + Leroy Anderson: Orchestral Music 1 - Piano Concerto / The Golden Years / Fiddle-Faddle - Jeffrey Biegel, Piano / BBC Concert Orchestra / Leonard Slatkin
Price For All Three: $33.35

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Product Details

  • Orchestra: BBC Concert Orchestra
  • Conductor: Slatkin
  • Composer: Anderson
  • Audio CD (April 29, 2008)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Naxos
  • ASIN: B0015DM32O
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #37,755 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Editorial Reviews

Detroit Free Press, Mark Styker, May 2008

Charm is a vastly underrated quality in music. You can't fake it and you can't manufacture it, but Anderson makes it sound easy.

MuiscWeb-International, Jonathan Woolf, August 2008

Leroy Anderson's name on a disc cover is pretty much a guarantee of vitality, wit and enjoyment. The only proviso concerns performances. And as with the first volume in Slatkin's Naxos series the performances are engaging, stylistically apt and full of curvaceous allure. The fact that we have five world premiere recordings - and no mere shavings from the bench at that - is surely even more reason to look favourably on this latest, peppy entrant.

Jazz Legato has a carefree jauntiness - good tight BBC trumpets - and Jazz Pizzicato digs into the symphonic jazz vogue with whimsical indulgence. Song of the Bells is a tuneful frolic, a ¾ waltz with a touch of South of the Border about it. New to me - but not a premiere recording - is the arrangement of Where'er You Walk from Handel's Semele where the protagonist is not a tenor but a trumpeter. Here is Anderson wearing his arranger's hat - it's a grand setting, too, with more than a hint of Hamilton Harty about it. The Suite of Carols ends this enterprising, far ranging collection. Here Anderson explores some lightly sprung neo-classicism in his settings. The Wassail Song is especially potent. The disc is excellently played and conducted - and warmly recorded - so Anderson devotees will find much to excite and entertain them.


 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The lost world of Leroy Anderson, April 29, 2008
By 
Jim Shine (Dublin, Ireland) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Leroy Anderson: Orchestral Music, Vol. 2 (Audio CD)
Three months after volume 1, here's volume 2 in Naxos's complete orchestral works; I think there's 3 (or maybe 4) more discs to come. This one offers 5 first recordings as well as more familiar fare such as The Waltzing Cat. I enjoyed volume 1, my fears that I would suffer an overdose of too-sweet light music proving unfounded. Importantly, Anderson's gift for a good tune was accompanied by great skill as an orchestrator, so there's always plenty of variety and the idiom doesn't pall. The music is very much of a particular time - to someone such as myself who was born around the time of the latest compositions on this album, Anderson's music always conjures up images of a fifties America that seems long gone. Those pieces from 1970, then, certainly don't sound like 1970 (the year of, for example, George Crumb's Black Angels and Philip Glass's Music With Changing Parts). Fortunately, music may change but popular taste isn't obliged to change with it, and I suspect there's a new audience out there now for a proper Anderson revival.
As for this volume, I find I enjoyed it even more than its predecessor. Why this might be, I'm not sure - there just seemed to be more highlights. Or perhaps the BBC Concert Orchestra were more settled in the idiom - these pieces were recorded a year after the first volume. Anyway, the highlights include some of the premieres, such as the nice bright Woodbury Fanfare that kicks off the disc, the oddly baroque-sounding Whistling Kettle, and the Lullaby of the Drums, which is guaranteed not to send anyone to sleep. Another gem is the March of the Two Left Feet, a manic dance with tricky off-beat percussion. The disc ends with 2 examples of Anderson's orchestrations of music not his own: Song of Jupiter is a version of Handel's Where'er You Walk, with trumpet, and the Suite of Carols is - well, you can probably work that out yourself (unusually for Naxos, the individual pieces aren't separately tracked here).
So, if you're already an Anderson fan there's no need to hesitate, and if you've not yet sampled the series, I'd recommend this ahead of volume 1 (which is also recommended!).
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More of Leroy Anderson's Easy Listening Americana, June 26, 2008
This review is from: Leroy Anderson: Orchestral Music, Vol. 2 (Audio CD)
When I was a kid I thought Leroy Anderson's music was the best there was. (This was, of course, before I discovered Bach, Beethoven and Brahms.) His music was omnipresent on the radio -- remember when classical music was everywhere on the airwaves? -- and somehow it represented all that was quintessentially American. Now that I'm a grownup and possibly a little more sophisticated I can hear Anderson's music for what it is: beautifully crafted light music drenched in simple values, patriotism and nostalgia. It is the musical equivalent of Norman Rockwell's illustrations. Anderson's music sold like hotcakes in the 40s and 50s but I don't think I've heard any of his music live for a good three decades; its fashion has passed. Still there is a place for it, and possibly not just for fossils like me.

This is the second of what will be a series of recordings of all of Anderson's music. And we're the better for that. (The first in the series is here: Leroy Anderson: Orchestral Music 1 - Piano Concerto / The Golden Years / Fiddle-Faddle - Jeffrey Biegel, Piano / BBC Concert Orchestra / Leonard Slatkin.) He wrote more than the familiar 'The Typewriter', 'Fiddle Faddle', 'Bugler's Holiday' and 'Blue Tango'. The Anderson family -- the composer died in 1975 -- have released a number of pieces for their first recordings. There are plenty of those pieces on this disc but it also includes such familiar entries as 'Horse and Buggy', 'The Waltzing Cat', 'Jazz Legato' and 'Jazz Pizzicato.' I was struck by the sweet 'Forgotten Dreams', the racing 'Home Stretch', the tango 'Girl in Satin', and devilishly intricate 'March of the Two Left Feet.'

Leonard Slatkin, for all his international renown, is as American a conductor as we're likely to find these days, and he's a perfect choice for these recordings. He conducts the spirited BBC Concert Orchestra. The pianist Alistair Young (featured in 'Forgotten Dreams') and trumpeter David McCallum (featured in 'Song of Jupiter') also deserve mention.

Recommended for those who have a taste for finely crafted, melodious, and beautifully orchestrated, consistently good-natured music.

Scott Morrison
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