5 must have classical recordings


Starting into classical music. What are the must have cd's to get your feet wet. If this thread is out there, I apologize...
mattcone
Orchestral or chamber, old or new, fast or slow, voices or no voices?

Some recommendations from my collection...all should be easily found.

1) Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade. Chicago Symphony/Reiner. RCA Living Stereo.
2) Vaughan Williams - Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, Barber - Adagio for Strings et al. Saint Louis Symphony/Slatkin. Telarc.
3) Mozart - Requiem. Arnold Scheonberg Choir/Harnoncourt. Deutsche Harmonia Mundi.
4) Soundtrack - Lord of the Rings Trilogy. Composed by Howard Shore.
5) Beethoven String Quartets. Alban Berg Quartet. EMI Classics.

Happy listening!
1-Rachmaninov Concerto No.2 Evgeny Kissin- RCA Victor Red Seal
2-Barber & Meyer Violin Concertos- Hilary Hahn-Sony.
3-Essential Verdi- 2cd's of Various artists (the worlds best!)Decca.
4-Elgar-Pomp & Circumstance Marches Symphonies 1 & 2- Virgin Classics.
5-Beethoven-Triple Concerto Mutter/Yo Yo Ma/Zeltser/Karajan-Deutsche Grammophon.
Rachmaninoff plays Rachmaninoff - concerti !!! He makes all other great pianists sound like children... It's simply a great Russian poetry...

Rubinstein plays Chopin

Romantic music of Spain - Janos Starker (cellist)

Heifets ( any recording )

Maria Callas ( mad scenes )
Thrift store vinyl is a good gateway into classical music. You can often get great stuff for practically nothing. If you don't have a turntable, it's a good excuse to get one. Classical sounds better on vinyl anyway IMO.

Issac Stern's recording of Mendelssohn's Concerto in E Minor for Violin and Orchestra and Beethoven's Two Romances with the Boston Symphony (conducted by Seiji Ozawa) is one of my favorites that I discovered that way.

I'm sure you'll get plenty of "serious" recommendations from this thread, but Wendy (formerly Walter) Carlos' Switched on Bach (Bach performed on Moog synthesizers) is great fun.