Editorial Product Review:Album Description:Having orchestrated Gershwin's piano works (at the request of Gershwin's family), numerous Grieg songs, and more recently a symphonic synthesis of Janacek's The Makropulos Case, Jose Serebrier compiled a sequence of orchestral interludes from Bizet's Carmen to try to extend its magic to the concert hall. Carmen Symphony, unlike the well-known Carmen Suites, follows the thread of the opera. Serebrier has always been fascinated my the music of the Mexican composer Silvestre Revueltas, and Mexican Dance is his homage to this original composer. This, and Serebrier's own Night Cry are world premiere recordings. The United States Marine Band, the oldest professional musical institution in the United States regularly invites prominent conductors. This is a recording of a concert performance in 2007.
Product Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
More related to this product:
click for more
More related to this product:
Disc 1:- 1. Prelude
- 2. The Cavalry
- 3. Habanera
- 4. Seguidilla
- 5. Fugato
- 6. Interlude 1
- 7. Toreador
- 8. Interlude 2
- 9. Andante cantabile
- 10. Interlude 3
- 11. The Wedding
- 12. Gypsy Dance
- 1. Los trabajadores agricolas (The Agricultural Workers)
- 2. Danza del trigo (Wheat Dance)
- 3. Les peones de hacienda (The Cattlemen)
- 4. Danza final (Final Dance) (Malambo)
- 1. Allegro non troppo
- 2. Allegretto scherzando
- 3. Andante
Buyer Reviews
Average Buyer Rating:

Customer Rating: 
-
BEST BAND RECORDING EVER
It seems rather incredible that this recording is taken from a live concert, because the balances between the different sections is so perfectly achieved, and there is such perfection in the playing. However, what comes across in this CD is the excitement of a live performance, the magic, especialy in the Carmen Symphony by Bizet-Serebrier.
I remember that this work won the Latin GRAMMY a couple of years ago on a CD with the orchestral version. This new band version is even better and more lively than the previous one. Carmen Symphony is a terrific work.
The United Sates Marine Band are obviously great, and they seem inspired by the baton of Jose Serebrier, who conducts them in masterful performances of the Suite from the Ballet "Estancia" by Alberto Ginastera in a riveting performance. Just as exciting is the Concerto Grosso by Heitor Villa-Lobos, which displays the incredible tecnique of four soloists from the band. Serebrier's version of the Revueltas work, "Mexican Dance", will surely become a favorite. My own predilection is for Serebrier's own "Night Cry", a very moving work for brass instruments, which the audience obviously embraced.
Customer Rating: 
-
Impressively uneven
After finished listening to this (on paper) attractive program, I felt compelled to write this review. This is a live ocassion recorded in the suburbs of Washington DC. From the reaction, the audience had a good time, and rightly so. But a live concert "does not necessarily a good home listening ocassion make".
The Bizet symphony is a Serebrier concoction further arranged for wind band. It goes for 33 minutes. Everyone knows Bizet's music is exciting and colourful, but this performance is so dull, it made the ocassion interminable. It has to be Serebrier's fault, not Bizets, nor this wonderful band.
The suprising fact is how the Revueltas and, most especially, the Ginastera are so much livelier. In fact, the Ginastera arrangement of the Estancia Dances is so good, it makes you forget there are no strings here! A true blockbuster.
The Serebrier piece is a dud; eight inconsequential minutes; just terrible. The Villa-Lobos on the other hand, is quite a discovery. A 16 minute Concerto Grosso which I never heard before and, thus, must not be widely recorded (incidentally, I hear a harp in the orchestration. The notes do not mention that.)
That the live ocassion finished with "The Stars an Stripes Forever" was most appropriate. Especially since, here again, the band pulls all stops and it is a rousing encore finale!
Take out the Bizet and Serebrier pieces and you have an outstading release.