Duet: And Two to Carry Your Soul Away
The Sessions: Wes Phillips
Against the Dying of the Light: the Second Cantus CD
Part 1: Wes Phillips on the CD's genesis
Bravo!: the 1998 Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival CD
"There, that's where you should put the microphone—5" from the end of my bow."
Encore: the 1997 Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival CD
"To be natural," Oscar Wilde said, "is such a very difficult pose to keep up."
Festival! The Best of the 1995 Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival
The inspiration for this project came from Stereophile's Gretchen Grogan and Erich Vollmer of the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival. Music Festivals are perhaps the healthiest aspect of classical music making, allowing ad hoc ensembles to chart the farthest reaches of the repertoire, as well as retracing the familiar ground of the great works. Why not, they thought, capture a representative selection of works performed at the 1995 Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival? This would not only document some of the great performances to be heard, but also allow music lovers everywhere to participate in what has increasingly been recognized as one of the US's best summer music festivals.
Serenade: the 1996 Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival CD
A musical highlight for us at Stereophile in 1995 was the opportunity to record several concerts at the world-famous Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival. The result was a Stereophile CD, Festivalhttps://secure.stereophile.com/stereophile/recordings.shtml">Festiva…; (STPH007-2), which features the original chamber version of Aaron Copland's Appalachian Spring, Darius Milhaud's jazz-inspired La création du monde, and the premiere recording of the 1995 Festival commission, Tomiko Kohjiba's The Transmigration of the Soul (see Stereophile, January 1996, Vol.19 No.1, p.132). We were pleased, therefore, to be asked back by the Festival in 1996. Once again we have produced a CD of live recordings, Serenade (STPH009-2), which features chamber works by Mozart, Brahms, and Dvorák.
Stereophile Test CD 3
Back in the spring of 1990, Stereophile introduced its first Test">http://www.stereophile.com//reference/176/">Test CD, featuring a mixture of test signals and musical tracks recorded by the magazine's editors and writers. Even as we were working on that first disc, however, we had plans to produce a second disc which would expand on the usefulness of the first and feature a more varied selection of music. The result was our Test">http://www.stereophile.com//features/338/">Test CD 2, released in May 1992.
Stereophile's Test CD 2
Back in the Spring of 1990, Stereophile introduced its first">http://www.stereophile.com//reference/176/">first Test CD. Featuring a mixture of test signals and musical tracks recorded by the magazine's editors and writers, it sold in large numbers—around 50,000 had been produced at last count. Even as we were working on that first disc, however, we had plans to produce a second disc that would expand on the usefulness of the first and feature a more varied selection of music. The result is our Test CD 2, introduced this month for just $7.95">http://ssl.blueearth.net/primedia/home.php">$7.95 plus postage and handling. With a playing time of over 74 minutes, the new disc should prove an invaluable tool to help audiophiles optimally set up their systems and rooms by ear—and the music's pretty good, too!—John Atkinson
Stereophile's Writers on an Audio Quest
One Saturday afternoon in August 1990, a number of Stereophile's writers—John Atkinson, Arnis Balgalvis, Robert Deutsch, Larry Greenhill, Robert Harley, J. Gordon Holt, Richard Lehnert, Guy Lemcoe, Lewis Lipnick, Peter Mitchell, Tom Norton, Dick Olsher, Don Scott, and Bill Sommerwerck—gathered together in the magazine's Santa Fe, NM listening room to discuss the "Recommended Components" listing that was due to appear in the October 1990 issue. To add a little Tabasco to the proceedings, JA had invited AudioQuest's main man Bill Low (above) to give a short talk on whatever subject was uppermost in his mind that weekend, to be followed by an open discussion.
40 Years of Stereophile: What Happened When
Stereophile: The Time Line