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| Revolutionary [Includes Bonus DVD] | ![Revolutionary [Includes Bonus DVD]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/31ERl-RlTDL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Creators: Johann Sebastian Bach, Cameron Carpenter, Frederic Chopin, Jeanne Demessieux, Marcel Dupre, Edward "duke" Ellington, Vladimir Horowitz, Franz Liszt Label: Telarc Category: Music
List Price: $17.98 Buy New: $10.03 You Save: $7.95 (44%)
New (30) Used (7) from $8.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 23 reviews Sales Rank: 1670
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 80711 UPC: 089408071126 EAN: 0089408071126 ASIN: B001DDBCWI
Release Date: September 23, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new Item. CD, DVD, Book, VHS more than 400 000 titles to choose from. ALL days Low Price !
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| Tracks:
| | Chopin: tude, Op. 10, No. 12 in C Minor "The Revolutionary" | | | Bach: "Evolutionary" Toccata and Fugue in D Minor, BWV 565 WORLD PREMIERE | | | Solitude | | | Demessieux: Octaves, from Six tudes, Op. 5 | | | Liszt: Mephisto Waltz No. 1 (The Dance in the Village Inn) | | | Carpenter: Love Song No. 1 (2008) WORLD PREMIERE | | | Dupr: Prelude and Fugue in B Major, Op. 7, No. 1 | | | Chopin: tude in C Major, Op. 10, No. 1 | | | Bach: Chorale Prelude on Nun komm, der heiden Heiland, BWV 659, from the Great Eighteen Chorales | | | Horowitz: Variations on a theme from Bizet's Carmen | | | Carpenter: Homage to Klaus Kinski WORLD PREMIERE |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description Revolutionary showcases an artist who is not only breaking ground, but who runs a musical gamut that any musician would be extremely hard-pressed to match. There are only four organ works included. Three are major pinnacles of the organ repertoire (the blistering, nearly unplayable Etude in Octaves by the French modernist Jeanne Demessieux; Prelude and Fugue in B major by Marcel Dupr; and Bach's deeply moving chorale-prelude Now Come, Savior of the Gentiles, while the fourth is the world premiere recording of Cameron's suggestive Love Song No. 1 (2008). The album's major departures, though, are found in Duke Ellington's Solitude (wittily combined with Bach's Sheep May Safely Graze); Liszt's Mephisto Waltz, and Vladimir Horowitz' Carmen Variations. Here are two of Chopin's tudes in versions so convincing that they might have been organ music; and Cameron's Evolutionary Toccata and Fugue in D Minor, an outrageous survey of the various instrumental arrangements that made Bach's work famous. All this is recorded not on a pipe organ, but on the equally revolutionary Marshall & Ogletree Virtual Pipe Organ at Trinity Church Wall Street in New York City - an organ that, rising out of the destruction of Trinity's pipe organ on September 11, 2001, continues to challenge the status quo of the pipe organ and the artistic possibilities of organ playing in general.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 18 more reviews...
A Young Organist of Refreshingly Vital "Star Power" Makes His Appearance on Recordings! January 8, 2009 The organ is such a refuge of the mediocre, the staid, the conformists among classical music's instrumentalists, that it is always a joy when an organist, such as the zesty young Cameron Carpenter, comes along who has -- ah, well, let's say it! -- real "pizazz", yea, verily even much showmanship! It is about time that an organist take up the mantle of the very much missed E. Power Biggs, who, like young Carpenter, played with rhythmic incisecisiveness (something, alas, all too rare among other organists) and uninhibited will to "take risks" and to be adventurous. As Biggs also championed the harpsichord with "pdalier" (i.e. a foot-operated keyboard) on some of his recordings, even so does Cameron Carpenter champion the improved piano equipped with pedal keyboard ("'doppio' pedal piano") of the Italian firm, Borgato. For now, though, Cameron Carpenter makes his mixed CD-DVD dbut with an organ recording of dashing vigour and musical variety, but has promised to produce a disc playing one of Borgati's instruments. If you do not know Carpenter's work, search on YouTube for some audiovisual demonstrations of what this lad is capable.
Rather than go on further, I highly recommend to Amazon customers what Fanfare (a record-reviewing magazine of great prominence) has to say about Cameron Carpenter, who is pictured on the cover of vol. 32, no. 3 (Jan./Feb. 2009), with, inside, an interview of him and a review of this disc, on pages 42-44, 46 of that issue.
Fabulous Fun!!! January 8, 2009 I'm not sure whether this is great music - well, yes I am: it isn't -or is it? Someone else will have to figure that out.
But I do know one thing: this kid is remarkably talented. I've just never seen anyone sit down (more or less) at an organ and do what he does.
Fantastically entertaining.
One more sacred cow gets blown to hell. And about time, too.
An outstanding must buy album December 12, 2008 This is a great album! The music is vigerous and exciting. The DVD shows playing technique that is unconventional and artisitc at the same time. Enjoy!!
Great technique but! December 3, 2008 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
Incredible technique with the organ. One would think that what he does is impossible, but yet he does it. Musical value is questionable but entertaining. Reminds me of Virgil Fox at his best, but technique overshadows the music to a great extent. Loved the DVD just to see it all happen. This guy can have a great future, but the musical values must be improved a great deal. Fun to listen to and watch, worth the price.
Nearly drove off the road November 28, 2008 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
I hadn't heard this Carpenter CD, yet. Tonight Jim Svejda (KUSC FM, L.A.) played three selections, the Chopin, Ellington and Carmen. I was on the way home from Thanksgiving dinner, and I really had to concentrate on the traffic while this outrageous, inventive, screamingly virtuosic avalanche came at me in the car. The Chopin was not just showoff, it was a conception of marvelous invention. Rather than being dazzled by the obvious pedal work, I was taken most by the coloristic slicing and dicing going on in the manuals; just scintillating.
Carpenter has a genuine feel for the laid back, off the beat playing that the Ellington demands. This wasn't ersatz jazz knock-off; this guy was in the moment completely. The Carmen fantasy was a funhouse of playful, and near impossible registration shifts. Even if it was played on the latest preprogrammed wonder consol, it's lighting quick and seamless rendering was breathtaking at times. That's when I had to worry about my driving the most. I heard only those three cuts, and am in the process of buying the CD. I'm going to tear the heads off of three or four friends with this.
I heard Virgil Fox many times. His was also great showmanship, but a lot less musical content.
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