Selected Product: | The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2008 (Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music) Paperback Edition: Revised Author: Ivan March, Edward Greenfield, Robert Layton Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) Release Date: 2007-10-10 ISBN-10: 0141033363 ISBN-13: 9780141033365 List Price: $30.00 Average Customer Rating: | | The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century ISBN-10: 0312427719 ISBN-13: 9780312427719 List Price:$18.00 The NPR Guide to Building a Classical CD Collection : The 350 Essential Works ISBN-10: 0761104879 ISBN-13: 0019628104878 List Price:$15.95 The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings: Eighth Edition (Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings) ISBN-10: 0141023279 ISBN-13: 9780141023274 List Price:$30.00 Gramophone Classical Music Guide 2008 (Classical Good CD, DVD, & Download Guide) (Gramophone Classical Music Guide) ISBN-10: 086024962X ISBN-13: 9780860249627 List Price:$34.95 The NPR Guide to Building a Classical CD Collection : The 350 Essential Works ISBN-10: 0761104879 ISBN-13: 9780761104872 List Price:$15.95 The Penguin Guide to Compact Discs and DVDs Yearbook 2006/07 Edition (Penguin Guide to Compact Discs and Dvds Yearbook) ISBN-10: 0141027231 ISBN-13: 9780141027234 List Price:$22.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2008 (Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music) by Ivan March, Edward Greenfield, Robert Layton (ISBN-10: 0141033363, ISBN-13: 9780141033365). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2008 (Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music) by Ivan March, Edward Greenfield, Robert Layton (ISBN-10: 0141033363, ISBN-13: 9780141033365). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com This book has remained the best and most successful guide to classical music for over 40 years. Fully revised by its team of eminent authors and written with wit and passion, "The Penguin Guide" offers reviews of all the latest releases as well as the finest established recordings; the greatest historic performances; the major period instrument recordings; an in-depth survey of the best of the budget-priced CDs; and, a core collection of 100 handpicked CDs that every serious classical music fan should own. Now published annually for the first time, this book is essential reading. "Indispensable, illuminating and comprehensive" - "The Times". steep decline in quality | Customer Rating: | | Sadly this publication has slipped badly. Did they really have an editor?? I loved this book in past editions-they led to my deepening appreciation of classical music and through them I made many great discoveries. This edition is a mess however-inconsistent, full of typos, confusing, repetitive, and a waste. Hope somebody straightens this out. wish I had gotten my money back. | 6 STARS! A Bible for Classical Music | Customer Rating: | | I have used all the verions of this reference bible, so to speak, for 20 years. My entire (well over 300) CD Library was based on this book. Yes, they favor British and European artists, but they work extensively with the BBC and its treasure trove of 'live' recordings over the last 60 years. The bonus is, they now include DVD reviews. | Penguin classics | Customer Rating: | | Still a good guide to classic recordings and now includes DVDs, but many of the recordings cited are unobtainable. Reviews now seem to focus on musical integrity and make no mention of the sound quality of the CDs. Still, a lot better than just guessing! | Extremely disappointing | Customer Rating: | I agree with the negative reviews posted here. I have been buying this guide regularly for decades, and look forward to each new issue avidly, despite the ever-lengthening trail of nonsensical statements that have survived cut-and-paste editing as recordings are added or (especially) deleted from the list. I can kind of forgive this particular widespread mess, as the task of editing such a huge volume with less than an army of editorial staff is truly daunting. Despite the ever-worsening series of little faults, it has always been the Gold Standard for serious collectors of classical recordings. But the latest edition has finally toppled over into the mud. For the first time there are fewer entries rather than more compared to the last full edition, and the ax has been wielded completely to several composers. Adios, Alberto Gerhard! The Guide has always been good about covering new recordings very promptly, but this time there are many, many important new issues that have not been included. The bulk is just as great as before, but that is because the space is used up with larger typeface and the introduction of superfluous boxes around chosen recordings. The plethora of distinguishing marks given to different recordings is almost impossible to parse and borders on the comical. Three stars for a fully recommended recording, three stars with a key for "key recordings", now FOUR stars for fully fully fully fully recommended recordings, and four stars with a rosette for, well, gosh, if everything else is so fully extra-special wonderful, these must be guaranteed to change your life. The evaluation process has degenerated into a form of hype. Since almost all recordings that previously received a less-than-three-star rating have been dropped, this leaves this as pretty much a Guide to Recommended Recordings. You might think it is not much of a loss to drop listings of less-recommended recordings, but it was always possible to develop an understanding of the well-marked biases and limitations of the three editors by seeing which kinds of interpretations they tended to give lower ratings, and therefore to compensate for the basic dullness and correctness of their very British critical bias. This strategy is no longer available for readers.
So, after many, many years of excitedly snapping up each new edition, I will probably not be buying any more Penguin Guides to Classical Music. (The sad demise of one of the two editors of the Penguin Guide to Jazz probably puts an end to that wonderful publication as well.) I am seriously disappointed, and, considering the hundreds of hours I have spent with the various editions of this publication, I actually feel I have lost a small corner of my life that has given me a lot of pleasure.
It may be that the Guide is still useful to newer collectors, but it a sad comedown from its own established level. | Classic music lovers' sourcebook gets better and better | Customer Rating: | | After purchasing The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings: Eighth Edition (Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings) and being very happy with it, this was an obvious choice for me to start getting a handle on my classical music collection. The book is well organized and attempts to be comprehensive, but given the expanse of classical music available, invariably some of your personal favorite recordings will be left out of this tome. (One of my all time favorites, and a recurring title of many "must have" classical music lists, Mussorgsky: Pictures at An Exhibition was left out, for example.) This volume uses a box summary with symbols and abbreviations that allow them to distinguish certain recordings from others, and it is very useful with a not-too-steep learning curve. Unlike the jazz version, this does not attempt to establish a "core collection", leaving the digging and experimenting to the reader/listener. All in all, anyone who purchases classical music on a regular basis would serve themselves well to have this book handy. |
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