Sinfonia of London, John Wilson - Lerner & Loewe: My Fair Lady (2025) [Hi-Res] [Dolby Atmos]

  • 03 Oct, 12:49
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Artist:
Title: Lerner & Loewe: My Fair Lady
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Chandos
Genre: Classical
Quality: Dolby Atmos (E-AC-3 JOC) / flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 96.0kHz +Booklet
Total Time: 02:10:06
Total Size: 741 / 657 mb / 2.39 gb
WebSite:

Tracklist

CD1
01. My Fair Lady: Overture
02. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 1, Opening Scene
03. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 1, Why Can’t the English?
04. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 1, Wouldn’t It Be Loverly?
05. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 2, Come On, Eliza, Slip Your Old Dad Half a Crown to Go Home On
06. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 2, With a Little Bit of Luck
07. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 2, Change of Scene
08. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 3, In Six Months - In Three If She Has a Good Ear and a Quick Tongue
09. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 3, I’m an Ordinary Man
10. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 3, Change of Scene
11. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 4, How'd Ya Like That?
12. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 4, With a Little Bit of Luck (Reprise)
13. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 4, Change of Scene
14. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 5, Say Your Vowels
15. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 5, Just You Wait
16. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 5, The Servants’ Chorus
17. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 5, The Rain in Spain
18. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 5, I Could Have Danced All Night
19. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 5, Change of Scene. Race Track Fanfare
20. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 6, Colonel Pickering, I Don't Understand
21. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 7, Ascot Gavotte
22. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 7, End of Gavotte and Blackout Music
23. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 8, Officer, I Know This Is Wimpole Street
24. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 8, On the Street Where You Live
25. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 9, Eliza’s Entrance
26. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 9, Introduction to Promenade
27. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 10, Promenade
28. My Fair Lady, Act I: Scene 11, Embassy Waltz

CD2
01. My Fair Lady: Entr’acte
02. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 1, You Did It
03. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 1, Just You Wait (Reprise)
04. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 2, On the Street Where You Live (Reprise)
05. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 2, Show Me
06. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 3, The Flower Market
07. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 3, Get Me to the Church on Time
08. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 3, Change of Scene
09. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 4, Now, See Here, My Good Man
10. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 4, A Hymn to Him
11. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 4, Change of Scene
12. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 5, Well, Eliza, You've Had a Bit of Your Own Back
13. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 5, Without You
14. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scenes 6 & 7, I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face
15. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 7, Music for Curtain Calls
16. My Fair Lady, Act II: Scene 7, Exit Music
17. My Fair Lady, Act I, Original Ending: Come to the Ball
18. My Fair Lady Act I, Original Ending: Dressing Eliza Ballet
19. My Fair Lady, Act I, Original Ending: Say a Prayer for Me Tonight
20. My Fair Lady, Act I, Original Ending: Bridge After Say a Prayer for Me Tonight
21. My Fair Lady, Act I, Original Ending: Ballroom Introduction - Embassy Waltz
22. My Fair Lady, Act I, Freddie's Song (Original Version): End of Ascot
23. My Fair Lady, Act I, Freddie's Song (Original Version): On the Street Where You Live
24. My Fair Lady, Utility Cue: Why Can’t the English?
25. My Fair Lady, Utility Cue: Get Me to the Church on Time
26. My Fair Lady, Utility Cue: Why Can’t a Woman?

John Wilson comments: My Fair Lady is the quintessential American London musical. There is not a semiquaver or a semi-colon in the wrong place. Steven Wilkie, one of the fiddle players in my orchestra, describes it as The Marriage of Figaro of the twentieth century. And when I asked the great opera conductor Richard Bonynge what the finest post-World War Two operas are, he said, My Fair Lady, Oklahoma!... theyre the great operas that will live on. We have recorded every note, including underscoring, plus all the music written but cut before opening, with the instrumentation exactly as it was on opening night. Also, thanks to recent research, we have the restored original orchestrations. The reason I want to record everything the composer, lyricist, book-writer, and orchestrator did is that I believe it is a piece of significance by people who were masters of their art and craft. This was not written in an afternoon; it was chiselled away for months. They were ruthless in excising anything they felt would not make the grade. We have a duty to set down as closely as we can their final thoughts on what they created.



  • hearts and flowers
  •  18:29
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I think you could add Grimes to the finest post-WWII operas.
  • platico
  •  23:18
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gracias...