Show results for

Explore

In Stock

Artists

Actors

Authors

Format

Theme

Genre

Rated

Studio

Specialty

Decades

Platforms

Size

Color

Deals

Instruments of the Orchestra
Format: DVD Genre: Special Interest-Documentary
Instruments of the Orchestra

Instruments of the Orchestra

Format: DVD Genre: Special Interest-Documentary
DVD 
List Price: $24.98
Price: $21.23
You Save: $3.75 (15%)
privacy policy
loading image
Backordered: Get it by Fri. Sep 13
Deliver to
Deluxe DVD + CD edition. Late in 1945, Basil Wright and the Crown Film Unit commissioned from Benjamin Britten the soundtrack for a film they were planning to be called Instruments of the Orchestra, which was to be part of a new post-Second World War educational drive, initiated by Muir Mathieson and featuring the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Malcolm Sargent. Britten subsequently published the music under it's more famous title A Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra. Given that the purpose of the film was to introduce a general audience, and in particular children, to the various instrumental groups of the orchestra, it was thought necessary to have what is in effect a spoken 'narration' to be written jointly by Eric Crozier, who had produced Britten's sensational operatic debut Peter Grimes the previous June, and Montagu Slater who had written the opera's libretto. Britten himself, inevitably, got involved. Britten wrote the music (a set of variations on a theme by Purcell from his opera Abdelazar) at characteristic high speed over Christmas 1945, completing the composition on New Year's Eve, and the filming took place in Wembley Town Hall the following spring and was eventually released on November 29th 1946. The black and white film is only 20 minutes long, and the 'narration' on this occasion is spoken by Malcolm Sargent at his most patronizing. But nothing can detract from the absolute genius of the music. Also included is a CD of the first ever recording in October 1946 with Sargent and the Liverpool Philharmonic; the London Symphony was apparently 'unavailable'. But Britten's own 1963 recording (without any narration), once again with the London Symphony Orchestra - the Fugue of which I used in my 1967 film Britten and His Festival - remains the definitive account of this prodigious work.
Studio: Tony Palmer Films
Number of Discs: 2
Release Date: 11/24/2017
Item #: 1944407X
UPC #: 5056083200900
Attributes: With CD
Product Type: DVD

You May Also Like