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DiscountDelight - Sacred Treasures: Choral Masterworks From Russia

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List Price: $15.98
Our Price: $10.79
Your Save: $ 5.19 ( 32% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Hearts of Space
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0025041110921 Label: Hearts of Space Manufacturer: Hearts of Space Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Hearts of Space Release Date: 1998-02-17 Studio: Hearts of Space
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Reverently Moving Comment: Sacred Treasures is an exceptional compilation of celebrated choral excerpts from the Divine Liturgy of the Russian Orthodox church. This impeccable recording of some of the finest Russian choirs captures the breadth and clarity of sound unique to these choirs. Although the selections are excerpts of the Divine Liturgy, the music nevertheless inspires an experience of reverence and worship. Opening and closing with the magnificent sound of Russian cathedral bells, the recording transports the listener into a special realm of beauty and peace.
Customer Rating:      Summary: An Atmosphere of Awe Comment: This may be a time when the great choral works can lend some solace to a troubled world and perhaps that is why there is a leaning toward this music from Gregorian Chant through the great composers major Passions to this realm of Russian liturgy. But it is not just time-appropriate to listen again to this magnificent CD of Choral Treasures from Russia: this is simply a recording of vast spaciousness that captures the particular mystery of Russian choral singing.
Opening with mood setting bells the recording features fine Russian and Bulgarian choirs singing works by Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky, Gretchaninov, Lvovsky and other composers less well known. The thrill that the 'Russian bottom' range of choral singing is not something that seems accessible by non-Slavic choirs. Here the basses utterly rumble with rich tone and the remainder of the chorus members sing with that special rich vowel sound that is breathtaking. There are other CDs from which to choose, but this is surely one of the finest. Grady Harp, September 05
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great Effort That Fails to Satisfy Comment: This selection includes several composers of 19th Century Russian Cathedral Music, when the Orthodox Church in Russia was at its creative height.
Yet this album fails to convey what the Orthodox Liturgy is about, and the intentions of the composers.
Listening to this album, one would believe that all Orthodox music is written at an adagio tempo, beginning in the piano range, swelling to a great climax at forte volume at some midpoint of the text, and then diminishing again to a piano. This is false: an American New Age selection of Mystical Music, not a representation of the liturgical tradition. This CD fails to capture the moments of jubilance, of loud, even shouted alleluias, of allegro tempos, of dissonant chords resolving into glorious harmonies.
For example, this CD contains several versions of the Cherubic Hymn, one of the high points of the Orthodox Eucharistic Liturgy. In Orthodox liturgy, this hymn begins with the choir singing about the choir of angels preparing for the incarnation of Christ in the Bread & Wine of the Eucharist, sung while the clergy do the preparatory prayers and incense the church & congregation. The second portion is an ecstatic welcome to that incarnation, full of alleluias, ebullient joy, rapture. This CD contains only excerpts, the first portion of the hymn: none of that exultant joy is captured here. The settings are incomplete, artificially truncated. They contain neither the complete intention of the composer nor the integrity of the liturgical text.
For students of either the composers or of Orthodox Liturgy, this CD will ineluctably fail to satisfy. Which is tragic: the choir attains a dazzing level of performance, a balance of voices, an astonishing breath-control, phenomenal intonation. The reverb is enough to indicate a vast, worshipful space, without creating so much echo as to be distracting or annoying (as some recordings of Orthodox liturgical music can be). For persons seeking a comparatively shallow, new-Age "mystical experience by media," the CD retains merit.
Customer Rating:      Summary: The Most Beautiful Sacred Choral Music I have ever heard Comment: This is simply the most beautiful sacred choral music I have ever heard. The long, sustained, exquisite harmonies transport me to another place and time -- a welcome relief from our hurried and noisy world. It soothes, it lifts, it calms, and renews the mind, body, and soul. It is a frequently played favorite at our house.
Some slow-paced choral music bogs down and drags. Although slow and soothing, this never drags, but imparts a lovely energy even in its calm. My Catholic childhood probably allows me to feel particularly at home with this music, but this is not a prerequisite to loving this CD. We have aethiest friends who also count it among their favorites. It was their first choice for calming their infant daughter.
Please don't stay away from this CD because it is sacred music. Since it is not in English, you won't be distracted by the words. It is simply a sublime listening experience for anyone.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Music from the other quarter of Christianity Comment: I love this CD. If the criticisms of the Russian Orthodox believer on this site is to be believed, then we are all missing out on the immense grandeur of sacred Slavic music. Evenso, this is a gorgeous CD. I can only imagine these voices rising up in the onion domes of the Orthodox churches. Furthermore, the basses are astounding as are the tenors. And that is why I have given only 4 stars to this CD. The acoustical recording is poor. The treble and the bass knobs need to be negated when these choirs hit the high notes or the low notes. There two other gorgeous works of sacred music that I recommend: 1. Ennio Moriccone's The Mission; 2. Rachmaninov's Vespers. Beautiful in their own right. Yes, that Ennio Morriccone.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Although this collection intends to transport the soul, it has a tremendously potent low-end depth to it that earns high marks indeed in the worlds of vocal and liturgical music. Dmitri Bortniansky's "Hymn of the Cherubim" is performed with a gracefulness that gets a warming fatness from the production, as does Alexander Gretchaninov's "I Have Chosen the Blissful," which travels with a ringing resonance. In a year of fine choral works--check out Sequentia's Hildegard cycle box, 900 Years or Arvo Pärt's Kanon Pokajanen for a "something old, something new" mix--this collection is highly valued for its sonic integrity and its excellent anthological mix. --Andrew Bartlett
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