| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 837.1 | The Original Recording | MAGES::BURR |  | Fri Jul 31 1987 14:13 | 5 | 
|  | I believe this recording was the first recording of the work and the one
responsible for bringing the Pachelbel Canon it's current popularity, and 
hence isn't just another recording of the piece.
						Rod Burr
 | 
| 837.2 | Yes, probably the first | STAR::BIGELOW | Bruce Bigelow, DECnet-VAX | Fri Jul 31 1987 15:46 | 8 | 
|  |     re: .1    Yes, I think so, but I wasn't sure so I didn't say anything.
    
    By saying "yet another recording..." I was referring to the number
    of recordings that have been made, not trying to call this another
    "me too" recording.  It's certainly the first I ever heard, and
    the best (in my opinion).  What I don't understand is why every
    other version I've ever heard insists on using a tempo so much faster.
    
 | 
| 837.3 | Brass Anyone? | NCADC1::PEREZ | The sensitivity of a dung beetle. | Sun Aug 02 1987 07:09 | 10 | 
|  |     I also have this recording and like it too.  
    
    If anyone's interested, for something a bit different "Oh no, yet
    another recording of "Pachelbel's Greatest Hit" the Canadian Brass
    have a CD out of the Pachelbel Canon...
    
    I haven't heard it, but I saw it in one of the stores.  I think
    they're music is normally well done and "different".
    
    D
 | 
| 837.4 | Music History 101 | DSSDEV::CHALTAS | No thanks, I'm trying to quit... | Mon Aug 03 1987 08:26 | 12 | 
|  |     Well, the infamous Kanon strikes again!
    
    Mr. P's Kanon in D is actually 1/2 a keyboard piece -- 'Kanon and
    Gigue'.  The MHS recording (which is most likely the one that
    made it famous) is of an arangement for strings (3 violin parts
    and continuo?), and is considerably 'Romanticized' (for lack
    of a better word).  The tempo is 'too slow' and the arangement
    bears no resemblance to the way Mr. P wrote the music.  Nevertheless,
    it's wonderful stuff.  I've NEVER seen a recording of the original,
    but there are a great many arangements that have been recorded.
    
    			George
 | 
| 837.5 | The Brass's version is very nice... | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Mon Aug 03 1987 09:30 | 8 | 
|  |     
    The Canon can be found on the Canadian Brass's latest live album,
    Canadian Brass Live!
    
    They had some pretty funny remarks to make about the royalties on
    a piece recorded as often as the Canon...
    
    DFW
 | 
| 837.6 |  | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Mon Aug 03 1987 22:42 | 8 | 
|  | RE: .4, .5
I am bored to tears by both the string arrangement and the Brass's.  Both
sound like so much trite, schmaltzy claptrap.  The original keyboard
arrangement sounds interesting.  Has anybody recorded the Canon and Gigue
as the composer intended it to be played?
--PSW
 | 
| 837.7 | I think Stutgart (sp?) | AUTHOR::GREENMAN |  | Tue Aug 04 1987 08:32 | 13 | 
|  |     The history of this thing is sort of interesting. Toward the end
    of WWII, folks were going through this bombed-out church in Germany
    (I think Stutgart), found a box of P's music and brought it to
    Karl Munchinger. I don't know if he was heading the Stutgart
    Chamber Orch at that point, but anyway he arranged it (the Kanon
    and Gigue) and they were the first orch to perform (and I assume
    record) it. They are definitaly heavy on the strings - I don't
    know what actual performance practice was when/where ever P actually
    originally wrote/performed the pieces. [This is from a Karl Haas
    program from maybe 10 years ago, but I think I'm remembering it
    right.]
    
    Charlie
 | 
| 837.8 | Tafelmusik | 6397::STROUBLE |  | Tue Aug 04 1987 13:22 | 9 | 
|  |     I have a recording of the kanon and gigue on a CD called Tafelmusik
    by Reference Recordings. The liner notes say that the original 
    instrumentation is used, being three solo violins and continuo.  
    The timing for the whole piece is 5'43". It's very baroque sounding,
    my guess is that it's the original arrangement.
    
    I heard the same music on record used for demos at Goodwins in
    Cambridge. The recording is excellent, it's been recommended
    by others in this conference.
 | 
| 837.9 | Another Version | SSGVAX::LUST | Reality is for those that can't handle drugs | Thu Aug 13 1987 16:29 | 19 | 
|  | For another outstanding recording of the Kanon (correct spelling) in D, 
try the version recorded by the Franz Liszt Chamber Orchestra on TELDEC.
It is a beautiful recording played by a group who really know their stuff.
The disc has about 60 minutes of music on it - lots of old warhorses, but
played so well.
A partial list of the collection follows:  
	Pachelbel:		Kanon and Gigue in D
	Haydn:			The Cuckoo
				Seranade in C
	Handel:			Largo
	
The CD is entitled "Modern Favorites"
One of my favorite CD's.
Dirk
 | 
| 837.10 | Pachelbel ad naseum (a jazzy rendition??) | WCSM::ECTOR | Every little bit hurts - B.H. '64 | Tue Nov 03 1987 20:30 | 12 | 
|  |     
    
    If anyone is bored being bored with the Kanon in D, there's yet
    another version by George Winston on Windham Hill. Coming fast upon
    the Xmas season again, it can be found as the flip to the 45 of
    Winston's December, which has found it's way into the "Christmas
    45's", probably in your local store sooner than you can say "Santa
    Claus." Can you say "Santa," I knew that you could.
    
    				The Cruiser
    
    
 |