Conductor's Choice

~ Release by Leonard Slatkin, Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Annotation

This release amounts to a question for the more experienced editors.

The notation at discogs says "Limited release, bonus sampler, part of two-box set with Copland Symphony No. 3 & Music for a Great City." But it was also released on its own as a promo -- you can find them on eBay, for example: https://www.ebay.com/itm/11561185134

The cover art included at discogs presumes the "part of a two-box set" thing.

The cover art I've attached is an example of the independent release. You'll see it has a notation "For Promotional Use Only". I don't think the example at eBay has that.

I have not attached the TOC from my version of the disc that came with MBID ee2e575c-450a-458c-b806-9723f21f81e7, which I also created. I don't know for sure that it's really the same. Please advise.

Annotation last modified on 2023-07-31 04:01 UTC.

Tracklist

1CD
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1Rakoczy March
orchestra:
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (St. Louis Symphony Orchestra)
conductor:
Leonard Slatkin (conductor)
recording of:
La Damnation de Faust : Première Partie : Scène 3. Marche Hongroise (Orchestre) (Rákóczi March)
composer:
Hector Berlioz (French composer)
part of:
La Damnation de Faust, op. 24: Première Partie
Hector Berlioz5:02
2Serenade No. 1: 4th Movement
recording engineer:
Paul Goodman (engineer)
producer:
Jay David Saks (producer of classical and musical theatre recordings)
editor:
Thomas MacCluskey (engineer)
orchestra:
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (St. Louis Symphony Orchestra) (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
conductor:
Leonard Slatkin (conductor) (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
recorded at:
Powell Symphony Hall in St. Louis (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
recording of:
Serenade for Orchestra no. 1 in D major, op. 11: IV. Menuetto I – Menuetto II (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
composer:
Johannes Brahms (German composer) (in 1858)
part of:
Serenade for Orchestra no. 1 in D major, op. 11
Johannes Brahms3:44
3Serenade No. 1: 5th Movement
recording engineer:
Paul Goodman (engineer)
producer:
Jay David Saks (producer of classical and musical theatre recordings)
editor:
Thomas MacCluskey (engineer)
orchestra:
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (St. Louis Symphony Orchestra) (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
conductor:
Leonard Slatkin (conductor) (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
recorded at:
Powell Symphony Hall in St. Louis (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
recording of:
Serenade for Orchestra no. 1 in D major, op. 11: V. Scherzo. Allegro (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
composer:
Johannes Brahms (German composer) (in 1858)
part of:
Serenade for Orchestra no. 1 in D major, op. 11
Johannes Brahms3:03
4Serenade No. 1: 6th Movement
recording engineer:
Paul Goodman (engineer)
producer:
Jay David Saks (producer of classical and musical theatre recordings)
editor:
Thomas MacCluskey (engineer)
orchestra:
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (St. Louis Symphony Orchestra) (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
conductor:
Leonard Slatkin (conductor) (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
recorded at:
Powell Symphony Hall in St. Louis (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
recording of:
Serenade for Orchestra no. 1 in D major, op. 11: VI. Rondo. Allegro (from 1986-04-23 until 1986-04-24)
composer:
Johannes Brahms (German composer) (in 1858)
part of:
Serenade for Orchestra no. 1 in D major, op. 11
Johannes Brahms5:31
5Symphony No. 9: 4th Movement
assistant recording engineer:
James Nichols (on 1988-12-27)
recording engineer:
William Hoekstra (on 1988-12-27)
producer:
David Frost (pianist and Grammy-winning producer of classical recordings) (on 1988-12-27) and Jay David Saks (producer of classical and musical theatre recordings) (on 1988-12-27)
editor:
Thomas MacCluskey (engineer) (on 1988-12-27)
orchestra:
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (St. Louis Symphony Orchestra) (on 1988-12-27)
conductor:
Leonard Slatkin (conductor) (on 1988-12-27)
recorded at:
Powell Hall in St. Louis (on 1988-12-27)
recording of:
Symphony no. 9 in C major, D. 944 “The Great”: IV. Finale. Allegro vivace (on 1988-12-27)
composer:
Franz Schubert (composer) (from 1825-07 until 1826-07)
part of:
Symphony no. 9 in C major, D. 944 “The Great”
Franz Schubert11:00
6Symphony No. 8: 2nd Movement
assistant recording engineer:
James Nichols
recording engineer:
William Hoekstra
producer:
David Frost (pianist and Grammy-winning producer of classical recordings) and Jay David Saks (producer of classical and musical theatre recordings)
editor:
Thomas MacCluskey (engineer)
orchestra:
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (St. Louis Symphony Orchestra) (on 1988-12-28)
conductor:
Leonard Slatkin (conductor) (on 1988-12-28)
recorded at:
Powell Hall in St. Louis (on 1988-12-28)
recording of:
Symphony no. 8 in C minor, op. 65: II. Allegretto (on 1988-12-28)
composer:
Дмитрий Дмитриевич Шостакович (Dmitri Shostakovich, composer) (in 1943)
publisher:
Boosey & Hawkes Music Publishers, Ltd
part of:
Symphony no. 8 in C minor, op. 65
Dmitri Shostakovich6:19
7Imperial March (Darth Vader's Theme)
orchestra:
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (St. Louis Symphony Orchestra)
conductor:
Leonard Slatkin (conductor)
recording of:
The Imperial March (Star Wars, Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back, Darth Vader’s Theme)
orchestrator:
Herbert W. Spencer (composer and orchestrator)
composer:
John Williams (American score composer)
publisher:
Fox Fanfare Music Inc.
part of:
Star Wars, Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back (film soundtrack)
John Williams3:08
8Symphony No. 5: 3rd Movement
recording engineer:
Paul Goodman (engineer) (from 1984-01-31 until 1984-02-01)
producer:
Jay David Saks (producer of classical and musical theatre recordings)
editor:
Thomas MacCluskey (engineer) (in 1984)
orchestra:
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (St. Louis Symphony Orchestra) (from 1984-01-31 until 1984-02-01)
conductor:
Leonard Slatkin (conductor) (from 1984-01-31 until 1984-02-01)
recorded at:
Powell Symphony Hall in St. Louis (from 1984-01-31 until 1984-02-01)
recording of:
Symphony no. 5 in B-flat major, op. 100: III. Adagio (from 1984-01-31 until 1984-02-01)
composer:
Сергей Сергеевич Прокофьев (Sergei Prokofiev, Russian composer) (in 1944)
part of:
Symphony no. 5 in B-flat major, op. 100
Sergei Prokofiev12:04
9Swan Lake, Act 1: Waltz
additional recording engineer:
Frank Rodríguez
sound engineer:
Paul Goodman (engineer) (in 1987)
additional engineer:
James Nichols
assistant engineer:
Tom Brown (Engineer)
producer:
David Frost (pianist and Grammy-winning producer of classical recordings) and Jay David Saks (producer of classical and musical theatre recordings)
editor:
Thomas MacCluskey (engineer)
orchestra:
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (St. Louis Symphony Orchestra) (from 1987-02-10 until 1987-02-24)
conductor:
Leonard Slatkin (conductor) (from 1987-02-10 until 1987-02-24)
recorded at:
Powell Symphony Hall in St. Louis (from 1987-02-10 until 1987-02-24)
recording of:
Swan Lake, op. 20: Act I, no. 2: Valse, Tempo di valse (from 1987-02-10 until 1987-02-24)
composer:
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (Russian romantic composer)
part of:
Swan Lake, op. 20: Act I
part of:
Swan Lake, op. 20: Act I (ed. Drigo)
recording of:
Swan Lake: Act I. Waltz
composer:
Пётр Ильич Чайковский (Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Russian romantic composer)
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky7:14
10The Stars and Stripes Forever
orchestra:
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra (St. Louis Symphony Orchestra)
conductor:
Leonard Slatkin (conductor)
recording of:
The Stars and Stripes Forever
composer:
John Philip Sousa (conductor and composer) (in 1896)
John Philip Sousa3:35