or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
 
 
Express Checkout with PayPhrase
What's this? | Create PayPhrase
Sorry!
More Buying Choices
35 used & new from $2.89

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
 
   
Available to Download Now
 
Buy the MP3 album for $9.49
 
 
 
 
The Planets
 
See larger image
 

The Planets [ENHANCED]

Brett Dean (Composer), Gustav Holst (Composer), Colin [Composer] Matthews (Composer), Matthias Pintscher (Composer), Kaija Saariaho (Composer), Mark-Anthony Turnage (Composer), Simon Rattle (Conductor), Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra (Orchestra)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews) More about this product

Price: $17.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
  Special Offers Available
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
In Stock.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com. Gift-wrap available.

Only 2 left in stock--order soon (more on the way).

Want it delivered Tuesday, November 10? Choose One-Day Shipping at checkout. Details
24 new from $11.41 11 used from $2.89
Buy the MP3 album for $9.49 at the Amazon MP3 Downloads store.


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.


Disc 1:

Samples
Song TitleArtist Time Price
listen  1. The Planets - Suite for large orchestra Op. 32: I. Mars, the Bringer of War (Allegro)Sir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 7:25$1.99 Buy Track
listen  2. The Planets - Suite for large orchestra Op. 32: II. Venus, the Bringer of Peace (Adagio)Sir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 8:59$1.99 Buy Track
listen  3. The Planets - Suite for large orchestra Op. 32: III. Mercury, the Winged Messenger (Vivace)Sir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 4:02$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. The Planets - Suite for large orchestra Op. 32: IV. Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity (Allegro giocoso)Sir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 8:02$1.99 Buy Track
listen  5. The Planets - Suite for large orchestra Op. 32: V. Saturn, the Bringer of Old Age (Adagio)Sir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 9:35$1.99 Buy Track
listen  6. The Planets - Suite for large orchestra Op. 32: VI. Uranus, the Magician (Allegro)Sir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 6:04$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. The Planets - Suite for large orchestra Op. 32: VII. Neptune, the Mystic (Andante) [with women's choir]Sir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 7:02$1.99 Buy Track
listen  8. Pluto, The RenewerSir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker/Rundfunkchor Berlin 6:12$0.99 Buy Track


Disc 2:

Samples
Song TitleArtist Time Price
listen  1. Asteroid 4179 - ToutatisSir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 4:36$0.99 Buy Track
listen  2. Towards OsirisSir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 7:55$1.99 Buy Track
listen  3. CeresSir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 6:40$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. Komarov's FallSir Simon Rattle/Berliner Philharmoniker 7:49$1.99 Buy Track


Frequently Bought Together

The Planets + Schubert: Symphony No. 9 "The Great" + Berlioz: Symphonie fantastique; La mort de Cléopâtre
Price For All Three: $51.94

Show availability and shipping details

  • This item: The Planets ~ Brett Dean

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

  • Schubert: Symphony No. 9 "The Great" ~ Franz Schubert

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

  • Berlioz: Symphonie fantastique; La mort de Cléopâtre ~ Hector Berlioz

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details


Special Offers and Product Promotions

  • Get $1 worth of MP3 downloads from Amazon MP3 after you order your item. Here's how (restrictions apply)

Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

Stravinsky: Symphony Of Psalms/Symphony In C/Symphony In Three Movements

Stravinsky: Symphony Of Psalms/Symphony In C/Symphony In Three Movements

~ Sir Simon Rattle
4.0 out of 5 stars (2)  $16.98
Shostakovich: Piano Concerto No. 1; Concertino; Piano Quintet

Shostakovich: Piano Concerto No. 1; Concertino; Piano Quintet

~ Martha Argerich
5.0 out of 5 stars (5)  $16.98
Nielsen: Clarinet & Flute Concertos

Nielsen: Clarinet & Flute Concertos

~ Emmanuel Pahud
5.0 out of 5 stars (1)  $16.98
Shostakovich: Symphonies #1 & 14 - Sir Simon Rattle, Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra

Shostakovich: Symphonies #1 & 14 - Sir Simon Rattle, Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra

~ Dmitri Shostakovich
4.8 out of 5 stars (4)  $16.98
Osvaldo Golijov: Ainadamar

Osvaldo Golijov: Ainadamar

~ Osvaldo Golijov
4.5 out of 5 stars (16)  $14.99
Explore similar items

Product Details

  • Orchestra: Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra
  • Conductor: Simon Rattle
  • Composer: Brett Dean, Gustav Holst, Colin [Composer] Matthews, Matthias Pintscher, Kaija Saariaho, et al.
  • Audio CD (September 12, 2006)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Enhanced
  • Label: EMI Classics
  • ASIN: B000H80LEK
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #119,552 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Is it chance or serendipity that Simon Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic timed their new recording of Holst's The Planets to coincide with the current astronomical upheaval? Though Holst learned of the discovery of Pluto four years before he died, it probably did not occur to him to add another movement, especially since the work's last section, "Neptune, the Mystic," ends in an other-worldly, ethereal fade-out, enhanced by an off-stage wordless women's chorus. He would have been surprised by the latest development in Pluto's status, but undoubtedly pleased that his ultimately incomplete Suite-- which had become more popular than he had expected or thought it deserved--had inspired another British composer, Colin Matthews, to write a successful companion piece, "Pluto, the Renewer," in 2000. Moreover, the Berlin Philharmonic added to Holst's galaxy by commissioning four composers to write a movement each for a Suite called "Asteroids." This is its premiere recording.

The idea of "music of the spheres" goes back to antiquity; perhaps the most famous example of its influence is the slow movement of Beethoven's second "Rasumovsky" String Quartet. Holst gives each of his planets its mythological characteristics: "Mars" is forcefully war-like, "Venus" melodiously peaceful; "Mercury" is a fleet, skittish Scherzo, "Jupiter" rambunctious but suddenly songful. "Saturn" is a soft, solemn march, and "Uranus" murmurs and glitters. The work's most striking element is the scoring. A huge orchestra produces enormous contrasts (underlined by the recording), incredibly colorful sound effects and lush, dense, sonorities, with a lot of melodic doubling and undulating accompanying figures. The sound-world of the "Asteroids" is also based on instrumental colors and effects: whispers, shimmers, crashes and extreme registers. All this is just right for this virtuoso orchestra. Edith Eisler


Tags Customers Associate with This Product

 (What's this?)
Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
 

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

 

Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A worthy musical view of space that eschews bombast, April 23, 2007
By Larry VanDeSande (Mason, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This recording will forever be remembered as the commodity that arrived simultanous with Pluto being decertified as a planet in 2006. It appears this was more happenstance than providence or marketing plan by DG since Simon Rattle's notes indicate he made these concert recordings after not conducting "The Planets" for more than 20 years. His notes also indicate his desire to include the second recording of Colin Matthews' "Pluto".

This concert (some call it "live") recording of "The Planets" strikes me as geared more to musical values than bombast, perhaps being more studied than necessary, and/or executed more for refinement than grandiloquence. Whichever one you subscribe to, I think you get the point -- this recording won't compete with those that go for broke boastfully and/or emotionally but it works on the same level as Claudio Abbado's famous Vienna Philharmonic version of Tchaikovsky's 4th Symphony: it makes music where many others make noise.

My personal favorite recording of "The Planets" is Adrian Boult's 1950s-era mono recording with the London Philharmonic (then called the Promenade Philharmonic) that once arrived on a $1.99 Westminster LP and was wretchedly engineered in fake stereo. That recording is still available in good mono via a Haydn House burn of pretty good quality, made from the LP where you can still hear an occasional rough patch of the needle.

Where Rattle's 2006 recording sets a somewhat stodgy pace so you can hear every instrument and every turn of the score, Boult's old recording goes full speed ahead with the largest possible voice most of the time, made from an aural perspective at the podium. The two recordings do not actually compete with each other; I find each has qualities I enjoy. I like Rattle's new version as a modern alternative. It is well-recorded in a dimension of clarity in league with Rattle's earlier recording of Mahler's "Symphony of the Thousand".

In addition, I find Rattle's toned down version far more palatable than the last modern recording of "The Planets" I listened to, the inadequate, impersonal and shallow version by John Gardiner, also on DG and billed as a stereo spectacular, that is mated to Percy Grainger's noisy "The Warriors". The only thing spectacular about Gardiner's version is how loud the band can play without saying anything. It seems incredible to me someone of Gardiner's stature would record a warhorse like "The Planets" without having any perspective on the music.

Back to this version...the disc 2 rarities, "Asteroid 4179: Toutatis", "Towards Osiris", "Ceres" and "Komarov's Fall", all sound like 1950s serial compositions to me. They add something to the overall project, and are interesting to talk about, but none seem to have much appeal on their own. Only the final "Komarov's Fall" seems really to have a beginning, middle and end. The other remind me of the stuff I used to hear on my PBS station's Friday night "Music from the Heart of Space" series. The second disk also carries a DVD on the making of "The Planets" I haven't witnessed.

So, all things considered, I think this is a good bargain for Amazon shoppers looking for a modern recording of "The Planets". When I wrote this there were a half-dozen vendors selling it used for less than $10. Unless you are really sold on cellophane, getting this two-CD 2006 production for $6.15 -- as one vendor is offering today -- is a good buy regardless of how many issues of "The Planets" you have hanging around your house.
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Space Junk, September 27, 2006
By Mark Shanks (Portland, OR) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
Rattle disappoints in a perfunctory reading of one of the most familar of concert warhorses. Mars is a bit "oogie-boogie" scary, not terrifying. Venus sulks in a warm bath of ultra-rubato. Rattle himself seems slightly embarrassed by the great central hymn of Jupiter, calling it "a nostalgic look at an England that never existed - the England of cricket fields and warm beer and bad cooking". Well, then - guess that shows US. But the most egregrious offense is cobbling together unwanted bits to, in Rattle's own words, "make a calling card for the orchestra". (Wow, that's ego for you! The Berlin Philharmonic needs a "calling card", and this dweeb is the guy to give it to them? Oh, brother!!!!) It's really just make-work for a group of completely unrelated compositional styles and the results are underwhelming in the extreme. It's bad enough that Pluto has been "downgraded" from planetary status - it now has to suffer the insult of being tagged "The Renewer" (for entirely obscure reasons) and having a tacky, alternately whispy and annoying six-minute noise-bomb associated with it. (The composer, Colin Matthews, is far better known as the producer of the Nonesuch recording of the Gorecki Third Symphony than as an orchestral composer.) Adding this piece after the ephemeral fade-out of Neptune makes as much sense as sticking chrome-plated plastic arms on the Venus d'Milo.

None of the other bits (specially commissioned, and boy do they sound like it) would make it on their own merits. As a bonus: there's a 10-minute video of Rattle discussing all this, but even that wears its welcome out quickly, too. (Hubble photos mixed with film of Rattle wearing the world's baggiest shirt match the uneven tone of this entire package.)

I give it three stars for curiosity value only. The "Planets" themselves aren't anything special - there doesn't seem to be any reason for this other than to promote the add-ons. Steinberg's recording is far more involving, as are any one of Boult's instead.
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Big names produce lacklustre results, September 29, 2006
By MartinP "MartinP" (Nijmegen, The Netherlands) - See all my reviews
A website, a "making-of"enhanced CD feature, a rave review in Gramophone (it is Rattle, after all) - expectations for this issue are highly strung. Unfortunately, the sounds as such do not live up to them. This is a strangely bloodless traversal of the planetary system, with Rattle seemingly determined to go all subtle and turn the music into some kind of Rococo filigree. As in his Mahler recordings, the result can sound deliberate and mannered. Granted, at times it is definitely successful: Venus is simply breathtakingly beautiful, and Mercury's fleet-footedness is dazzling. But Mars is without menace (and without organ too, by the sound of it); Jupiter is unexhilerating, Uranus just OK but nothing more (and again, not a trace of the organ even in that spectacular upward glissando); Saturn and Neptune, finally, are seriously lacking in any sense of mystery. I suspect the recording itself is partly to blame; EMI engineering is, in my experience, rarely top notch, and the Berlin Philharmonie notoriously difficult acoustically speaking. On CD, there is lack of detail, the dynamic range does not expand quite as widely as one would hope, and strings can sound strangely lacklustre and thin. Worse though is the distancing of the woodwinds, who at times sound as if they were sent out of the hall to keep the female choir company. Then again, that choir, sounds too near rather than distant.
Overall, and taking into account engineering deficits, this may be an acceptable account of The Planets, but it is at best a very pale cousin to the top choice readings by Dutoit, Gardiner or Andrew Davis. Unlike those, however, it offers a bonus in Colin Matthews's Pluto, and four additional "Asteroids" of yet more recent date. Though the promotion of contemporary composers by such a venerable ensemble is laudable, I must admit that for me these extras did very little to heighten the appeal of this set. Pluto starts even before Neptune has quite faded out, but presenting it as an integral part of the Holst only furthers the impression that it has nowhere near the stature of the other Planets. Like three of the four Asteroids, it presents the listener with a depersonalized, generic modernism that relies heavily on extreme sound effects (harmonics, sul ponticello), jarring transitions, unrelieved dissonance, random glissandi on harps or celesta, distant percussion rumblings, and general forgettability. You'll find this kind of music in any B-horror movie soundtrack. The one exception is Turnage's "Ceres", which has just enough rhythmic and harmonic contour to sustain the impression of architectural coherence, and is indeed an interesting piece (though it still remains very much in the shade of Holst's genius). Only for die-hard Rattlites.
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
 
 
 
Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Recording
In short this is the best recording since Karajan's 1981 recording on DG

The orchestra plays without fault...the ensemble is so clean it is amazing.
Published on September 24, 2006 by R. G. Hales

4.0 out of 5 stars GREAT SOUND, GREAT PLAYING: CHALLENGING COUPLINGS
Current scientific thinking seems to have relegated Pluto from the list of fully-fledged planets in our Solar System. Read more
Published on September 20, 2006 by Klingsor Tristan

5.0 out of 5 stars The solar system keeps expanding
It was a clever idea to expand Holst's ever-popular The Planets to include five new pieces that extend the solar system beyond Neptune, the ghostly last movement, to Pluto and... Read more
Published on September 19, 2006 by Santa Fe listener

Only search this product's reviews



Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
No discussions yet

Ask questions, Share opinions, Gain insight
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
Search all Amazon discussions
   




SoundUnwound Says...

The Planets (Berliner Philharmoniker feat. conductor: Simon Rattle) opens new browser window is mainly Chamber Music and quite Classical”

Disagree? Cast your vote now! opens new browser window

Share your knowledge and explore the rest of the music world at SoundUnwound.com opens new browser window

SoundUnwound Logo

What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

The Planets
71% buy the item featured on this page:
The Planets 3.8 out of 5 stars (6)
$17.98
Holst: The Planets
12% buy
Holst: The Planets 4.4 out of 5 stars (30)
$6.99
Viola Concerto
6% buy
Viola Concerto
$24.98
Brett Dean, Composer and Performer
6% buy
Brett Dean, Composer and Performer
$20.98


Look for Similar Items by Category


Look for Similar Items by Subject

Search Music by subject:









i.e., each title must be in subject 1 AND subject 2 AND ...
 

Feedback

If you need help or have a question for Customer Service, contact us.
 Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
Is there any other feedback you would like to provide?

Your comments can help make our site better for everyone.


Your Recent History

 (What's this?)

After viewing product detail pages or search results, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.