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Les Quatre Saisons
 
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Les Quatre Saisons [Import]

Swingle SingersAudio CD
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (May 17, 2004)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: Philips Import
  • ASIN: B0001ZA1LC
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #80,747 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Allegro
2. Largo
3. Allegro (Danse Pastorale)
4. Canon In D Major
5. Sinfonia (Cantata Bwv 209 "Non Sia Che Dolore")
6. Adagio (Oboe Concerto In D Minor)
7. Overture From "The Marriage Of Figaro"
8. Allegro
9. Fugue- Molto Allegro

Editorial Reviews

Remastered reissue for the French vocal group. Digipak. Details TBA. Universal. 2004.

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars more dazzling and lovely arrangements by the Swingle Singers, March 31, 2011
This review is from: Les Quatre Saisons (Audio CD)
I knew the Swingle Singers and had two or three of their CDs in my library, but it is only recently that I decided to explore more systematically their recordings, in the context of a "transcription" spree that was initiated - or rather, rekindled - by the chance listening to a CD of transcriptions by the London Brass, Carmen: Bold As Brass. My love of transcriptions is older than that, though, and if I recall it was initiated both by the CD of the Four Seasons played by the Japanese New Koto Ensemble (the Koto is a kind of traditional Japanese cither, The Four Seasons, Water Music Suite, Royal Fireworks Suite (New Koto Ensemble of Tokyo)) and by Bach's Goldberg Variations played on accordion by Stephan Hussong (listed on this website only as an mp3 download unfortunately, Johann Sebastian Bach: Goldberg Variationen - Jan P. Sweelink: Fantasia, but available in CD form on the European sister companies under ASIN B000027AA9).

The fascination of transcriptions is that they enable you to hear the old warhorses in new timbral guise that is often ear-catching, and sometimes even illuminating. It's like your wife showing up with a new sexy lingerie: new thrills to the old routine. But there is more even than that to the Swingle Singers. As I've contended in my other reviews, the special fascination of the Swingle's arrangements and realizations derives, I think, from two factors: first, they elevate to the status of high art what we all do, inadvertently, without even thinking about it, in a very rudimentary manner, walking on the street, washing the dishes, ironing or vacuuming - and, of course, showering: humming our favorite tunes. Second, they return instrumental music to its very essence and origin: the human voice, this essence in the name of which it is expected of instrumentalists to make their instrument sing, even when their acoustical properties are radically different from those of the voice, like the plucked-string-harpsichord or the struck-string piano.

This disc is the straight reissue of an LP published in 1972 (but apparently recorded in 1969, although that is not indicated on the CD; I've gotten that from the apparently well-informed entry on Wikipedia) by the "original" French group formed by Ward Swingle (in fact only four members remained from the group that recorded the chart-making "Jazz Sébastien Bach" ten years before, Jazz Sebastian Bach, soprano Christine Legrand, mezzo Claudine Meunier, tenor Ward Swingle and bass Jean Cussac), a year before they disbanded (isn't it sadly ironic that the last disc of the French group was titled "Bitter Ending", a composition by the French jazzman André Hodeir?).

This disc is great. It goes from dazzling to lovely. Dazzling? The way the Swingles trill and play the appoggiaturas - pardon, the bird chirping - in the first movement of "The Spring", or again how the men tremulate (tremolo) at 1:32 in the same movement, underpinning the virtuosic volubility of the exchanges between the two solo violins - pardon, sopranos. Awesome. Or the Marriage of Figaro Overture. Why was it never done like that at the opera? It would be great - and think about cost-cutting! Lay off the 50 instrumentalists and hire the Swingles!

Lovely ? When the sensuously caressing soprano voice unfolds over the silky tapestry provided by the others, bringing out emotions from the depths, as in the 2nd movement of Vivaldi's Spring, or in the Adagio of Marcello's Oboe Concerto. Enrapturing.

And the Pachelbel Canon. You know, we "serious" music lovers look down on the popular and syrupy hits like Albinoni's spurious "adagio" (in fact the composition of the 20th Century musicologist Remo Giazotto) or Pachelbel's canon ; that (we view it) is classical music for the ignoramuses, muck served to the pigs. We pinch our noses and gracefully taste at more subtle or elaborate meals. But this here, as sung by the Swingles, is irresistibly lovely. It must be the pig in me reacting.

Some criticisms? Sure! Why only 32 minutes of this? In LP days, OK, maybe, especially if you wanted great sonic quality, so they needed not to clog those grooves. But in CD era? I simply don't get the point of these "original jacket collection" type of reissues. What's the point of getting 30 minutes on a CD when you can pair two LPs and give us 60 or more? Just for getting the glands of nostalgia of the older, LP-raised generation to salivate? And there aren't even any liner notes! I'm not listening to this for nostalgia, but because it spurs my enthusiasm, now, here and today, and I want more of it per CD! Why hasn't Universal done here what Polygram did in the early 1990s with their pairing of the two Jazz Sébastien Bach LPs of the Swingles (link above) and their "Going Baroque" and "Anyone for Mozart" albums, reissued on CD as Anyone For Mozart, Bach, Handel, Vivaldi?? This is really milking the cows - or the sows, maybe.

And a regret: hey, Swingle Singers, wherever you are, hope you're reading this: you've been in existence now for nearly 50 years, and you've managed to record ONLY the Spring from Vivaldi's Four Seasons ? C'mon you guys, stop idling! I want the complete Seasons! I want the complete concertos of Vivaldi! Beethoven's Symphonies, Scarlatti's 555 sonatas and Soler's Fandango. I want the whole repertoire sung by you! If I'm lucky I've got 50 more years to go, so you can do it! NOW GET TO WORK!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Better than original arrangements, December 18, 2008
By 
frankebe (redwood city, ca United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Les Quatre Saisons (Audio CD)
In my opinion, this is the best recording Swingle ever made. The French group is just miles above the later English group. The string bass and percussion are just loud enough to be barely above the subliminal level, and they give the group that tad of extra Body to avoid the emptiness of A Cappella. The singing is exquisite, especially the soprano solo in the Mozart fugue. The original album in America was titled "The Joy of Singing", and in France it's listed as "Les Quarte Saisons". I'm hoping that if anyone is Google searching for these titles, they will wind up here... Buy as many copies as you can and give them away, before this recording goes out of print again.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Four Seasons -Swingle Singers, May 12, 2007
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This review is from: Les Quatre Saisons (Audio CD)
It is a very good record of the early swingle performances.
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