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40 Famous Marches

40 Famous Marches

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Creators: Kenneth J. Alford, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, Ludwig Van Beethoven, Hector Berlioz, Georges Bizet, Arthur Bliss, Emmanuel Chabrier, Jeremiah Clarke, Eric Coates, Edward Elgar, Julius Fucik, Charles Gounod, George Frederick Handel, Sigfrid Karg-elert, Felix Mendelssohn, Giacomo Meyerbeer, Carl Nielsen, Sergey Prokofiev, Henry Purcell, Nikolai Rimsky-korsakov
Label: Decca
Category: Music

Buy New: $17.98



New (39) Used (11) from $3.77

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 10 reviews
Sales Rank: 38941

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 466241
UPC: 028946624128
EAN: 0028946624128
ASIN: B000040OX5

Release Date: February 8, 2000
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  Disc 1
  • Alla marcia
  • Grand March
  • March
  • Dead March
  • Grand March
  • No.1
  • War March of the Priests
  • March
  • March
  • Coronation March
  • Oriental Festive March
  • Turkish March
  • March

  Disc 2
  • Funeral March
  • Unspecified March
  • Wedding March
  • Marche Des contrebandiers
  • March
  • Procession of the Nobles
  • March

Similar Items:

  • Marches: Greatest Hits
  • Sousa's Greatest Hits
  • Stars & Stripes Forever and the Greatest Marches
  • Fiedler's Favorite Marches
  • Forward March! Great American Marches

Customer Reviews:   Read 5 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars March time marches on   January 5, 2008
I was actually looking for The March Of The Gladiators (he famous circus music) When I found this album, but when I read all rest of the program, I knew I had to have it.
Most of the marches are by European composers, although J.P. Sousa is included, but many of the pieces are well known to American audiences as themes from movie, radio, and television shows, even though we don't know their titles.
Together they make a fascinating, lively, and truly entertaining musical show. I love to play this disc while working. It's fun to listen to, and helps set a brisk pace. Another practical use for this disc might be for storeowners to play it in place of muzak during the last hour before closing.(It would gently encourage shoppers to shop quickly and check out.) But the best reason to buy this album is that it is, above all, great music. A quick look at the names of the composers list will tell you that.
This is a compilation disc. That is, a collection composed of selections recorded by many artists from many different albums, but it is a good one. The pieces fit together well, and each piece is a complete work of art capable of standing up on its own. There are no medleys patching together incomplete bits of unrelated themes. Each march is complete as the composer wrote it.
There are two discs,and each disc is a concert that I would gladly pay to attend if it were offered by my local symphony. If you love music, you will love this album. It's good music, it's fun, and it's good entertainment.



5 out of 5 stars Solid Basic March Collection   August 7, 2006
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Great solid basic collection, a real bargain with mostly outstanding performances. Having played several in bands and orchestras and sung one (the Rimsky Mlada), I have a good idea how they should go. As other other commentators say, there are better individual recordings, such as anything by Fennell and the Eastman band. The organ pieces just don't do this music justice, although a real cathedral organ can come close, but that's beyond these discs. The Nielsen Aladdin March is the new one for me. Berlioz by Solti is great! Buy it!


5 out of 5 stars Bold and brassy mixes well with the rest   August 14, 2004
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

I am impressed most by the variety in 40 Famous Marches on 2 CDs, a Double Decca release. The performers include Philharmonic Orchestras, a Brass Ensemble, Chamber Orchestra, organ, Symphony, and for nine selections, the Wiener Philharmoniker. I am not sure if the word schmaltzy ought to be applied to any of this, but the Wiener Philharmoniker often exhibits a unique sound which is not quite the same as any of the other selections. The final five selections are all performed by the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble under Elgar Howarth in ADD/DDD format in 1983 and 1985. Two of those five are rousing marches by John Philip Sousa, another called `Entry of the Gladiators' is typical of songs played by live bands at circuses, and the remaining two are from movie soundtracks. `Colonel Bogey' is famous from the movie about British prisoners of war building a railroad bridge for the Japanese in World War Two, the Bridge over the River Kwai.

The major source of variety in these 40 selections is that many of them are taken from operas and even a ballet, Tchaikovsky's famous `The Nutcracker--March.' I originally found this collection when I was searching for `Funeral March of a Marionette' by Charles Gounod (1818-1893) which has a theme that is famous from its use by a television series hosted by Alfred Hitchcock. If you can't remember how that goes, you ought to buy this collection and listen for it early: it is selection 4 on the first CD. The main theme was fun to play and easy to learn in a book of piano lessons, but the rest is quite whimsical and worth listening to, and people who play organ with pedal notes might still be able to find music for playing the entire arrangement, difficult though it is for someone like me, who becomes confused when too many things are going on at the same time.

There was something on this CD that sounded weird, and I had to check to see what it was, and it was just someone playing the organ, but he was trying to play `The Ruins of Athens -- Turkish March' by Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827).

Something by Handel sounds so much like the beginning of a movie that I expect someone to start singing, `The hills are alive with The Sound Of Music,' but this CD is something else. The first CD starts and ends with marches from `Pomp and Circumstance' by Edward Elgar, so people who have been to a lot of graduation ceremonies will be expecting plenty of familiar music. The 6:32 time is slightly longer than the Wagner's `Tannhauser -- Grand March' on the first CD, but long graduation ceremonies may play it even longer, until all the diplomas are handed out.

Verdi, Strauss, Schubert, Prokofiev, Berlioz, these famous composers might be recognized by people who know music, but the `Wedding March' by Felix Mendelssohn is famous with everybody for what it is used for. If you haven't heard it lately, maybe you should hear it a few times so you won't be so nervous the next time it comes around.



5 out of 5 stars 40 Famous Marches - a great collection!!   November 21, 2003
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

This is a wonderful collection. What a wide collection of exciting pieces, all in one affordable package!! It encompasses so many composers and styles, from the majesty of Elgar and Walton, to upbeat Sousa to schmaltzy Strauss. It also includes such classic marches as Meyerbeer's Coronation, a pinnacle of the French opera style, the timeless Wedding March of Mendelssohn, and the brilliant organ piece, Marche Triomphale of Sigfrid Karg-Elert. There are also some interesting oddball selections like the mysterious Things to Come of Bliss (composed for the H.G. Wells film), the jaunty Chabrier marche, and oriental flair of Nielsen's Aladdin.
In reading some of the other criticisms, it is true that the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble perhaps is not the best or most noted ensemble. However, overall, the pieces they play are either Sousa or patriotic-sounding tunes. Their only forays into the true classical realm are the Grand Marches from Tannhauser and Aida, and they are not half bad. So don't let those pieces keep you from buying the CD - 1) because most of the songs they do play are great and 2) they only play in 1/4 of the music....



5 out of 5 stars Classics on Parade   May 1, 2003
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

If you're looking for a collection of marches from classical music, this would be a fine one to get.
It contains recordings made from 1958 to 1996 by some of the world's great orchestras, plus several numbers by the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble, and four arranged for organ.
The first 35 marches include many of the best-known classical marches, plus three "coronation" marches, written as far back as the end of the seventeenth century (The Prince of Denmark's March) up to 1954 (The Dam Busters). The last five pieces are "popular" marches played by the Jones Ensemble.
The liner notes give a nice history of marches, including where most of the ones in this collection fit into that scenario.
A great collection of marches by classical and popular music "masters".


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