Dave's Free Press: Journal

violence, pornography, and rude words for the web generation

 

Recent posts

(subscribe)

Recently commented posts

(subscribe)

Journals what I read

geeky politics rant silly religion meta music perl culture weird drinking london language transport sport olympics hacking media maths web photography etiquette spam amazon film bastards books bryar holidays palm telecoms cars travel yapc bbc clothes rsnapshot phone whisky security home radio lolcats deafness environment curry art work privacy iphone linux bramble unix go business engineering kindle gps economics latin anglo-saxon money cars environment electronics
Sat, 15 Jan 2011

CD review: Peter and the Wolf

There are eleventy million recordings of Peter and the Wolf, some of which are listed on Wikipedia. This one is from a disc called "Menuhin conducts Prokofiev", with the English String Orchestra, and narrated by Christopher Lee. I bought the disk solely for Peter and the Wolf, and already have other recordings of the rest of the stuff on it.

Christopher Lee can do no wrong. He is perfect. Everything he does is divine. I wish I could buy a tiny jar of his sweat, so that I could add just a drop of it to everything I cook, thereby making my cooking even more awesome. If he sweats, of course. I wouldn't be surprised if he is beyond such weak fleshy exudations.

He has a wonderful voice for narration - he speaks clearly but still with passion, conveying the excitement of the wolf chasing the duck, or snapping at the bird. This is the best recording I've heard of this work. Musically, others are better, but the narration is so important that I can easily forgive those decisions of the conductor with which I disagree.

So why only four stars? Simple. It should be paired with Britten's "A Young Person's Guide To The Orchestra", which should also be narrated by Lee, but instead shares the disk with a symphony and a violin concerto of Prokofiev.

Posted at 21:20 by David Cantrell
keywords: culture | music
Permalink | 2 Comments

I'm pretty sure I had this as an LP when I was a child. Since that was a very very long time ago I may be in error, but I suspect not. If it is that then 'tis triffic. When was it recorded?

Posted by Geeklawyer on Mon, 17 Jan 2011 at 16:06:26


This release is by Nimbus Records. What makes Nimbus so special is that their catalog is recorded in an Ambisonic format (UJH). It plays just fine on a stereo system and gives a better sense of space and acoustics than a plain stereo one. However, on an Ambisonics system (which can be set up for nothing on a Linux system) you get surround sound out of it. If you already have a dolby digital or DTS surround sound system set up you have the equipment you need.

Posted by Bearcat Sandor on Fri, 4 Feb 2011 at 00:42:40


Sorry, this post is too old for you to comment on it.

Archive