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Gala From Berlin - Invitation to the Dance |  | Artists: Berliner Philharmoniker, Barenboim Studio: Euroarts Category: DVD
List Price: $19.99 Buy Used: $13.00 as of 3/14/2010 00:07 CST details You Save: $6.99 (35%)
New (16) Used (4) from $13.00
Seller: zzy49 Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 24796
Format: Classical, Color, DVD, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Region: 1 Discs: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 97 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: 2051848 UPC: 880242518484 EAN: 0880242518484 ASIN: B0002MFGEQ
Release Date: November 16, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Description Invitation to the Dance is the 2001 New Year's Eve Gala Concert with the Berlin Philharmonic. The annual concert is famous for having a varied program from year to year, and in 2001 conductor Daniel Barenboim treated the world to a fantastic program of musical "dance." From Bach to Sibelius, from classical to samba, this concert has it all! The BPO and Barenboim go all out for this one, and experiencing the DVD is the next best thing to being there! Picture Format: 16:9 Sound Format: 5.1 Surround Sound, Stereo
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| Customer Reviews: Tico-tico no fubá November 4, 2007 Pedro R. C. Solberg (Rio de Janeiro,Brazil) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I ordered this CD because I had heard of this fantastic rendering of Tico-Tico no Fubá ( composed by the Brazilian Zequinha de Abreu ).
It is absolutely brilliant, as the reaction of the public clearly shows.
Not so good as I expected. November 2, 2006 Zhixing Guan (Amherst, NY, USA) 2 out of 10 found this review helpful
I bought this DVD because I thought it must include Weber's famous invitation to the dance waltz. Unfortunately, it didn't. It included many Latin America music which I really don't like. I'm very disapointed.
Invitation to the Dance - Barenboim August 11, 2006 Joyce Tarvin (Burnaby, B.C. Canada) 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
Thoroughly enjoyed this DVD made most enjoyable by the excellent filming of this concert and a nice selction of pieces making up an "Invitation to the Dance". Of course the fine playing of the Berlin Philharmoniker with maestro Daniel Barenboim goes without saying!
Simply incredible... March 10, 2006 Daniel McGlaun (Indianapolis IN, USA) 9 out of 11 found this review helpful
My fourth DVD of this most perfect of orchestras, and they keep getting better. If you want to see the best musicians in the world on their instruments, playing in a manner that is simply not possible to be any better than, in as varied musical settings as you can imagine on one single medium, this is it. These people are simply beyond all human ability in technique, ensemble and musicianship, and you will be swept away instantly by every minute of it. If you have ever played a musical instrument in your life, and have never seen Berlin play, you will not believe it. Get this DVD.
The BPO Dances November 25, 2004 J Scott Morrison (Middlebury VT, USA) 25 out of 25 found this review helpful
What a wonderful idea for a New Year's Eve Concert--nothing but dance music, from Bach to the present day played by one of the world's greatest orchestras! My only concern on starting to view this DVD was that Daniel Barenboim has never been one of my favorite conductors (nor pianist, either, for that matter) and even if he had been, it would be hard for me to imagine him being in his element with the rather lighter fare on this program. I associate him with the heaviest Germanic literature. And indeed I thought I was going to be correct in my concern at the beginning of this concert. It starts with a straightforward and rather boring performance (albeit with perfect intonation and split-second ensemble) of the 'Gavotte' from Bach's Third Orchestral Suite. But when they move into the 'Minuet' from Mozart's Divertimento in D, K. 382, something miraculous happens. Suddenly there is grace and ease and delight. From that point forward, the program goes from strength to strength. Barenboim had the wit to vary his program just enough that one was always a little surprised. For instance, Dvorák's exciting 'Slavonic Dance in G minor,' and Tchaikovsky's sweeping 'Waltz of the Flowers' are followed by Sibelius's 'Valse triste' in a slower-than-usual rendition that almost has one weeping for the beauty of both the melancholy and the perfection of the playing. Another unusual selection for what is, after all, a pops concert is the 20-minute 'Dances from Galánta' by Zoltán Kodály, played with finesse and fire in equal measure.
It has been quite some time since I saw a video of the Berlin Philharmonic and I was startled to see how young it has become. There is hardly a member who appears to be beyond his or her forties. I didn't recognize any of the principals except for the long-time leader of the violists, Wolfgang Christ. (There is a first violinist who looks like a young Hillary Clinton.) And I can't convey how impressed I am with their playing; a Rolls Royce among orchestras.
The crowning glories of this concert, aside from the two Strauss selections, the 'Emperor' Waltz and 'Thunder and Lightning,' are the Latin American pieces. I was a bit surprised at their inclusion but then remembered that, after all, Barenboim was born in Argentina. 'A fuego lento' by Horacio Salgán is a sultry tango done by the BPO with extraordinary subtlety. José Carli's sassy habañera 'El firulete,' was played as an encore. But the final piece on the concert (before the two encores, the other one being Brahms's 'First Hungarian Dance'), which had the rather staid Berlin audience on their feet, was that old chestnut of a samba, 'Tico tico,' by Zequinha Abreu (in a stunningly exciting arrangement by Cliff Colnot). Barenboim set his forces in motion and then leaned back and smiled contentedly at them when he wasn't moved to do a kind of samba of his own on the podium. It was at this moment that I began to see that my own impression of Barenboim as a rather dour fellow might be in error. He was clearly having the time of his life, as were the audience and, I confess, this viewer.
A festive concert in a marvelous set of performances by perhaps the best orchestra in the world.
Scott Morrison
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