
I generally don’t listen to classical music, but I like this CD. I guess Mozart has survived all these years for a reason! It’s very uplifting to have on in the background. I’ve heard most of the music before, but usually in cheesy comercials. Sad. This is really beautiful music.
Is the country compromised because of Obama's affiliations?
Never in history has Wall Street had this much power. The military industrial complex and the Wall Street finance Oligarchs own the Democrat party.The only people who have a voice in the Obama’s councils are the Wall Street finance Oligarchs. These are the only people Obama has put on his appointments list. Upon Obama’s inauguration members of the Bilderberg group, tri lateral commission and CFR flooded into every position of power in the executive branch, replacing Tri lateral commission and CFR members from the previous administration. •Larry Summers – The one that dismantled the Glass-Steagle act. The banking act that was put in place in the 1930’s to keep banks from being the powerful Gangsters they currently are.•Allen Greenspan/ Ruben Summers – The derivatives bubble. The steinberg Advisors center piece of the current problem.•Timothy Geithner– The former President of the New York Federal Reserve (Private bank), (Robert Ruben Protégé of the Larry Summers Group) helped break apart the Glass-Steagle act permitting these banks to become criminals. Now Secretary of the U.S. Treasury department. (Bilderberg Group Trilateral Commission member)•Hillary Clinton – Bilderberg Group Council on foreign relations married to Trilateral Commission member William Jefferson Clinton.•Susan Rice – Ambassador to the United Nations (Trilateral Commission)•Gen. James L. Jones – Bilderberg Group council on Foreign Relations (Trilateral Commission)•Thomas Donilon – Deputy National Security Advisor, council on foreign relations (Trilateral Commission and CFR member)•Henry Kissinger – State department special envoy (Bilderberg group, Trilateral Commission council on Foreign Relations)•Paul Volcker – Chairman, economic recovery committee (Bilderberg group, trilateral commission council on foreign relations)•Admiral Dennis C. Blair – Director of National security (Bilderberg Group, Trilateral Commission Council on Foreign Relations)•Robert Gates – Secretary of Defense (Bilderberg group, trilateral commission council on foreign relations)•James Steinberg – (Bilderberg Group, trilateral commission council on foreign relations.)•Richard M. Haass – (Bilderberg Group, trilateral commission president, council on foreign relations) •Alan Greenspan – Presidential Advisor (Bilderberg Group, Trilateral Commission Council on Foreign Relations)•Richard C. Holbrooke – State Department Special Envoy (Bilderberg Group, Trilateral Commission Council on Foreign Relations)
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steinberg Advisors

Tags: Babs, Background, Beautiful Music, Classical Music, Keyword, Mozart, News And Reviews, Steinberg
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April 25th, 2010 at 12:34 pm
The original EMI Seraphim budget CD line has to be the greatest value for the money in the history of music. For half the price of other so-called budget lines, including the new version of EMI Seraphim and the Sony Essential Classics series, you get first-rate performances from the golden age of stereo by some of the greatest conductors of the century. On this particular title you get brilliant performances of Mozart’s 40th Symphony and Eine Kleine Nachtmusik by William Steinberg and the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra from 1958. Steinberg is an immense conductor and I have spent considerable time (and sometimes money) tracking down his great EMI recordings, which have been reissued on CD in recent years only to be deleted at an alarming rate. The remainder of this disc features Colin Davis conducting the Philharmonia and Royal Philharmonic Orchestras in Mozart’s Serenata Notturna and various Overtures from 1961-62. Most are familiar with Davis’ great recordings from the 1970s to the present, but his early recordings are a real treat. Well, with all this great music, you’ve got a classic disc at any price.
April 26th, 2010 at 12:10 am
William Steinberg’s Pittsburgh Symphony recordings have been largely ignored by the record industry in recent years. He recorded all 9 Beethoven and 4 Brahms Symphonies for Command Classics in the 1960s, later released on MCA CDs in the late 1980s. For EMI, Steinberg/Pittsburgh recorded Beethoven Symphonies 7,8; Brahms 1; Mozart 35,40,41; Haydn 94. This is great, very masculine Mozart, in fast tempos that are never out of control, and beautifully recorded by EMI’s engineers. Tempos are faster than Bruno Walter’s Columbia recordings
(CBS, made in the late 1950s, near the end of his career) and slower than Szell/Cleveland (Sony Classical) for a point of reference.
Both Mozart’s Symphony 40 and “Eine Kleine Nachtmusik” benefit from Steinberg’s full throated treatment.
Sir Colin Davis’ early 1960s recordings of “Serenata Notturna” and Overtures to “Abduction from the Seraglio,” “The Magic Flute,” “Don Giovanni” and “Cosi fan Tutte” are in excellent sound, the Philharmonia (Serenata) and Royal Philharmonic (Overtures) sounding terrific, again rich, full and masculine, as in Steinberg’s recordings.
With over 70 minutes of music, this disc is a winner, unless you are a fan of chamber orchestra or period instrument orchestra Mozart. For great sound and playing at a budget price, this is hard to beat.