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La Damnation de Faust (International edition)
Hector Berlioz

Bernard Haitink

La Damnation de Faust (International edition)

Price: € 12.95 9.07
Format: CD
Label: Challenge Classics
UPC: 0608917251722
Catnr: CC 72517
Release date: 01 April 2011
old €12.95 new € 9.07
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2 CD
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12.95 9.07
old €12.95 new € 9.07
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Label
Challenge Classics
UPC
0608917251722
Catalogue number
CC 72517
Release date
01 April 2011
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN
NL

About the album

A memorable performance of Berlioz' masterpiece recorded in 1999 and performed by two Dutch world class orchestras, four phenomenal soloists and a conductor of worldfame, who started his career with the Radio Philharmonic Orchestra. This were all very good reasons to bring out this concert on CD. An additional reason was the threatening intention of the Dutch government to abolish the Muziekcentrum van de Omroep (MCO) with its orchestras (Radio Philharmonic, Radio Chamber Philharmonic, Metropole, Public Broadcast Choir). This would be very bad for Dutch and international cultural life and tradition. Conductor Bernard Haitink also empazises his support to the rich musical tradition in the Netherlands and to pass on the passion to the younger generation of musicians and to keep the high quality of music alive!

Memorabele uitvoering van een meesterwerk
Dit is een opname van een gedenkwaardige uitvoering van Berlioz’ meesterwerk uit 1999 in het Concertgebouw van Amsterdam, uitgevoerd door twee Nederlandse orkesten van wereldklasse, vier fenomenale solisten en een dirigent van wereldfaam.

La Damnation de Faust, de verdoemenis van Faust, is een concertopera geschreven voor vier solisten, een koor en een orkest. De componist is de Franse Hector Berlioz, die zijn opera baseerde op Faust van Goethe uit 1828. Het verhaal gaat over Faust, die afspraken maakt met de duivel. Hij wil over een superieure wijsheid beschikken en dus sluit hij een pact met de duivel om dit te kunnen krijgen. Faust laat vervolgens zijn oog vallen op de wondermooie Helena van Troje maar voordat hij haar voor zich kan winnen, komt de duivel zijn ziel ophalen, wat overeenkomt met het pact. De algemene boodschap van dit verhaal is dat eenieder die denkt dat hij meer kennis kan bevatten dan God, dit met zijn ziel moet bekopen. La Damnation de Faust geldt als een van de meesterwerken van Berlioz.

Bernard Haitink is een Nederlandse dirigent van onder andere het Concertgebouworkest . Zijn repertoire is zeer gevarieerd en bevat ook eigentijdse muziek. Ook is hij geïnteresseerd in Franse muziek van componisten als Debussy en Ravel, maar hij dirigeert vooral werken van Duitse en Oostenrijkse componisten uit de classicistische en laatromantische periodes. Met dit album brengt Haitink een meesterwerk ten gehore, dat nergens beter tot zijn recht had kunnen komen dan in het Amsterdamse Concertgebouw, uitgevoerd door wereldklasse musici.

Artist(s)

Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra

The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra gave its first concert on 7 October 1945, led by its founder and ‘first conductor‘ Albert van Raalte, on Radio “Herrijzend Nederland”. Initially the orchestra spent most of its time in studios working on a large number of recordings for the public broadcasting system. The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic featured prominently in the Saturday Matinee as soon as the series started in 1961, and has continued to give frequent live performances ever since. The celebrated Saturday Matinee has hosted many legendary concerts. Illustrious soloists such as Kathleen Ferrier, Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Clara Haskil and Jean-Pierre Rampal have shared the stage with the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra. In 2004, the three classical orchestral formations of the broadcasting 15 system...
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The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra gave its first concert on 7 October 1945, led by its founder and ‘first conductor‘ Albert van Raalte, on Radio “Herrijzend Nederland”. Initially the orchestra spent most of its time in studios working on a large number of recordings for the public broadcasting system. The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic featured prominently in the Saturday Matinee as soon as the series started in 1961, and has continued to give frequent live performances ever since. The celebrated Saturday Matinee has hosted many legendary concerts. Illustrious soloists such as Kathleen Ferrier, Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Clara Haskil and Jean-Pierre Rampal have shared the stage with the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra.
In 2004, the three classical orchestral formations of the broadcasting 15 system were transformed into two: the present Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra and the Netherlands Radio Chamber Philharmonic. In 2006, these two orchestras, the Netherlands Radio Choir and the Metropole Orchestra joined the Dutch public broadcasting organisation NPO.
The Radio Philharmonic Orchestra has been conducted by great names such as Bernard Haitink, Jean Fournet, Hans Vonk, Sergiu Comissiona and Edo de Waart. Jaap van Zweden was named its chief conductor in September 2005. The orchestra has also worked with numerous famed guest conductors such as Leopold Stokowski, Kirill Kondrashin, Antál Dorati, Riccardo Muti, Kurt Masur and Valery Gergiev. Soon after its founding, the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic found itself foremost in Dutch musical life in the number of performances and the diversity of its repertoire, with a predilection for Dutch and contemporary works in its programming. It has honed another facet of its striking profile with a great many opera concertante performances. The orchestra has an extensive discography, ranging from legendary LPs recorded in the 1970s under such conductors as Leopold Stokowski and Antal Doráti to Jean Fournet’s much-lauded renderings of French repertoire. Under Edo de Waart, not only did it release its legendary Wagner interpretations, but also the complete orchestral works of Rachmaninov. CDs with work by contemporary composers such as Jonathan Harvey, Klas Torstensson, Jan van Vlijmen and Stravinsky have garnered prizes and much acclaim.

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Bernard Haitink (conductor)

Bernard Haitink was born in Amsterdam and his interest in music was first stimulated when, as a child, he would go to hear concerts given by the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra under Willem Mengelberg. At the age of nine he started to have violin lessons, which he continued at the Amsterdam Conservatory, where he also studied conducting with Felix Hupka. He joined the Netherlands Radio Symphony Orchestra as a violinist but in 1954 and 1955 attended the annual courses for conductors organised by the Netherlands Radio Union, at which he studied with Ferdinand Leitner. This experience led directly to his appointment in 1955 as second conductor with the Union, sharing responsibility for four radio orchestras. Mr Haitink first attracted attention when in...
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Bernard Haitink was born in Amsterdam and his interest in music was first stimulated when, as a child, he would go to hear concerts given by the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra under Willem Mengelberg. At the age of nine he started to have violin lessons, which he continued at the Amsterdam Conservatory, where he also studied conducting with Felix Hupka. He joined the Netherlands Radio Symphony Orchestra as a violinist but in 1954 and 1955 attended the annual courses for conductors organised by the Netherlands Radio Union, at which he studied with Ferdinand Leitner. This experience led directly to his appointment in 1955 as second conductor with the Union, sharing responsibility for four radio orchestras.
Mr Haitink first attracted attention when in 1956 he substituted for Carlo Maria Giulini in a performance of Cherubini’s Requiem with the Concertgebouw Orchestra, as a result of which he was invited to be a guest conductor at some of the orchestra’s regular concerts. Having become principal conductor of the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra in the following year, he made his American debut in 1958, with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, and first appeared in Britain in 1959, on a tour with the Concertgebouw Orchestra, with whom he made his first recording during the same year.
Following the unexpected death of the Concertgebouw Orchestra’s chief conductor Eduard van Beinum, also in 1959, Haitink and Eugen Jochum were appointed joint chief conductors of the orchestra in 1961. This arrangement lasted until 1963, when Haitink assumed full responsibility for the orchestra, also becoming a guest conductor with the London Philharmonic Orchestra. He was appointed chief conductor of the LPO in 1967 and, between 1970 and 1979 he was also it's artistic director. Haitink made his debut at the Glyndebourne Festival Opera in 1972, conducting Mozart’s Die Entführung aus dem Serail, and returned to lead Die Zauberflöte in 1973 and Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress in 1975. Two years later he succeeded Sir John Pritchard as the Festival’s chief conductor, a post that he retained until 1988. While at Glyndebourne Haitink conducted a repertoire that included Beethoven’s Fidelio, Richard Strauss’s Arabella, Prokofiev’s The Love for Three Oranges and Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, in addition to the principal Mozart operas.
Having first appeared with the Royal Opera Company at Covent Garden in 1977 conducting Don Giovanni, and at the Metropolitan Opera in 1982 with Fidelio, Haitink maintained his association with Covent Garden, conducting performances of Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera, Janáček’s Jenůfa and Wagner’s Lohengrin and Parsifal, and was appointed the company’s chief conductor in 1987. Although he suffered terribly during the traumas of the closure and rebuilding of the Royal Opera House between 1997 and 1999, arguably it was his principled stand that prevented the Covent Garden orchestra and chorus from being disbanded during this period. While in command at the Royal Opera, both before and after the closure, Haitink conducted memorable accounts of the major elements of the traditional operatic repertoire, such as Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen, Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg and Tristan und Isolde, Verdi’s Don Carlo and Falstaff, Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro, Borodin’s Prince Igor, Tchaikovsky’s The Queen of Spades and Britten’s Peter Grimes. He also took the orchestra out of the opera house and led it in several notable orchestral concerts.
In addition to his operatic work in London, Haitink maintained an active concert schedule. As well as regularly appearing as a guest conductor with major orchestras such as the Berlin Philharmonic of which he is an honorary member, London Symphony, and Vienna Philharmonic, between 1994 and 1999 he was chief conductor of the European Union Youth Orchestra, and in 1995 was appointed principal guest conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra where he is currently conductor emeritus. Haitink relinquished his post at Covent Garden in 2002, becoming chief conductor of the Dresden Staatskapelle and also honorary conductor of the Concertgebouw Orchestra – the first time that such a title had been awarded in the history of the orchestra. In 2006 he took up the newly-created post of principal conductor with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
Among the many honours Haitink has received during his long career are an honorary knighthood in 1977, the Erasmus Prize in Holland in 1991, and the Order of the House of Orange-Nassau, conferred upon him by the Queen of The Netherlands for his achievements in the arts; in 2002 he was made a Companion of Honour by Her Majesty the Queen of England.
Haitink’s reserved exterior is deceptive when it comes to making music. in works with which he identifies deeply, such as the symphonies of Mahler, he is able to deliver performances of great power and passion. He is without question one of the finest conductors of the symphonies of Bruckner, possessing complete command of their individual musical architecture.
Haitink has been such a ubiquitous figure in European and American musical life that it has been easy to take him for granted; this is to do him a major injustice. As his extensive recorded repertoire demonstrates, he stands in the direct line of the great European conductors of earlier generations such as Richter, Nikisch, Weingartner and Mengelberg.

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Netherlands Radio Choir

The Netherlands Radio Choir is the largest professional choir in the Netherlands. Since its founding in 1946, the choir has performed a broad repertoire ranging from Baroque to contemporary music and has been synonymous with top-level music performed with passion. It works in various sizes and formations, depending on the music concerned and the conductor. First official chief conductor of the Netherlands Radio Choir was Kenneth Montgomery. After him came Robin Gritton, Martin Wright, Simon Halsey, Celso Antunes and Gijs Leenaars. As from the 2015-2016 season Klaas Stok is chief conductor of the Netherlands Radio Choir. Michael Gläser has been its permanent guest conductor since September 2010. The Netherlands Radio Choir has worked with guest conductors such as Marcus Creed and Peter Dijkstra,...
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The Netherlands Radio Choir is the largest professional choir in the Netherlands. Since its founding in 1946, the choir has performed a broad repertoire ranging from Baroque to contemporary music and has been synonymous with top-level music performed with passion. It works in various sizes and formations, depending on the music concerned and the conductor.
First official chief conductor of the Netherlands Radio Choir was Kenneth Montgomery. After him came Robin Gritton, Martin Wright, Simon Halsey, Celso Antunes and Gijs Leenaars. As from the 2015-2016 season Klaas Stok is chief conductor of the Netherlands Radio Choir. Michael Gläser has been its permanent guest conductor since September 2010.
The Netherlands Radio Choir has worked with guest conductors such as Marcus Creed and Peter Dijkstra, with early music specialists as Frans Brüggen, Philippe Herreweghe and Ton Koopman, and in the symphonic choral repertoire with Jaap van Zweden, James Gaffigan, Markus Stenz and Sir Simon Rattle, among others.
The choir often performs with the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra in public radio concert series, and it is regularly invited to perform with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra and the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra.
Since the early 1980s, the Netherlands Radio Choir has been a frequent guest in the Saturday Matinee series of the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam. In these concerts the choir has regularly performed pre- mieres and works by contemporary composers such as Ligeti, Boulez, Birtwistle, Kagel, Reich, Wagemans, Adès, Adams and Vleggaar. Most concerts of the Netherlands Radio Choir are live broadcasted by Radio 4. On CD the Netherlands Radio Choir excels in a broad repertoire including music by Keuris, MacMillan, Mahler, Poulenc, Rossini and Wagner.

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Composer(s)

Hector Berlioz

Hector Berlioz is perhaps the most romantic of the romantics. His continuously changing moods split the traditional symphony orchestra into countless divisions, and his idealistic longing faded the borders between symphony, opera and oratoria. No wonder that this revolutionary expression gained little appreciation in its own time. The public of that age had barely overcome Beethoven's innovations. Reciprocally, Berlioz resented the audience and its conventions of the prevailing concert practice. In one of his writings, Berlioz dreamed of a Utopian city called Euphonia, in which commerce was banned and the arts stood at the centre of civilisation.  It wasn't until after his death that Berlioz gained the recognition he deserves. The most music lovers will know Berlioz from his Symphonie Fantastique,...
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Hector Berlioz is perhaps the most romantic of the romantics. His continuously changing moods split the traditional symphony orchestra into countless divisions, and his idealistic longing faded the borders between symphony, opera and oratoria. No wonder that this revolutionary expression gained little appreciation in its own time. The public of that age had barely overcome Beethoven's innovations. Reciprocally, Berlioz resented the audience and its conventions of the prevailing concert practice. In one of his writings, Berlioz dreamed of a Utopian city called Euphonia, in which commerce was banned and the arts stood at the centre of civilisation. It wasn't until after his death that Berlioz gained the recognition he deserves. The most music lovers will know Berlioz from his Symphonie Fantastique, in which he portrayed several opium visions. With this out of control 'bad trip', he tried to win over the famous Shakespeare actress Harriet Smithson. Some other highlights of his career are his epic opera La Damnation de Faust, his symphony Roméo et Juliette, his Requiem and the opera Les Troyens.


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Press

Play album Play album
Disc #1
01.
La Damnation de Faust - Première partie: Scène 1 - Plaines de Hongrie
06:10
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
02.
La Damnation de Faust - Première partie: Scène 2 - Ronde des paysans
04:14
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
03.
La Damnation de Faust - Première partie: Scène 3 - Marche hongroise
04:53
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
04.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 4 - Nord d’Allemagne
04:59
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
05.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 4 - Chant de la fête de Pâques
07:35
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen
06.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 5 - Méphistophélès et Faust: O pure émotion
02:41
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
07.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 6 - Choeur de buveurs: A boire encore!
02:31
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen
08.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 6 - Chanson de Brander: ?Certain rat, dans une cuisine
03:37
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
09.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 6 - Vrai Dieu! Messieurs, votre fugue
01:22
(Hector Berlioz) Bernard Haitink, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen
10.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 6 - Chanson de Méphistophélès: Une puce gentille
04:22
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
11.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 7 - Air de Méphistophélès: Voici des roses
02:55
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
12.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 7 - Choeur de gnomes et de sylphes. Songe de Faust: Dors, heureux Faust
07:01
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
13.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 7 - Ballet des sylphes
02:39
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
14.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 7 - Faust: Margarita!
01:12
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
15.
La Damnation de Faust - Deuxième partie: Scène 8 - Choeurs de soldats et chanson d’étudiants
05:48
(Hector Berlioz) Bernard Haitink, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen

Disc #2
01.
La Damnation de Faust - Troisième partie: Scène 9 - La retraite
01:09
(Hector Berlioz) Bernard Haitink, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen
02.
La Damnation de Faust - Troisième partie: Scène 9 - Air de Faust: Merci, doux crépuscule
05:53
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
03.
La Damnation de Faust - Troisième partie: Scène 10 - Méphistophélès et Faust
01:03
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
04.
La Damnation de Faust - Troisième partie: Scène 11 - Marguerite: Que l’air est étouffant
03:07
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
05.
La Damnation de Faust - Troisième partie: Scène 11 - Le roi de Thulé
05:30
(Hector Berlioz) Bernard Haitink, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen
06.
La Damnation de Faust - Troisième partie: Scène 12 - Évocation
01:53
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
07.
La Damnation de Faust - Troisième partie: Scène 12 - Menuet des follets
06:14
(Hector Berlioz) Bernard Haitink, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen
08.
La Damnation de Faust - Troisième partie: Scène 12 - Sérénade de Méphistophélès
02:20
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
09.
La Damnation de Faust - Troisième partie: Scène 13 - Final. Duo, trio et choeur
05:52
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
10.
La Damnation de Faust - Troisième partie: Scène 14 - Trio et choeur
05:45
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
11.
La Damnation de Faust - Quatrième partie: Scène 15 - Romance. Marguerite: D’amour l’ardente flamme
10:46
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
12.
La Damnation de Faust - Quatrième partie: Scène 16 - Invocation à la nature
05:13
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
13.
La Damnation de Faust - Quatrième partie: Scène 17 - Récitatif et chasse
03:42
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
14.
La Damnation de Faust - Quatrième partie: Scène 18 - La course à l’abîme
03:19
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
15.
La Damnation de Faust - Quatrième partie: Scène 19 - Pandæmonium
04:26
(Hector Berlioz) Bernard Haitink, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen
16.
La Damnation de Faust - Quatrième partie: Scène 19 - Épilogue sur la terre
01:29
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
17.
La Damnation de Faust - Quatrième partie: Scène 19 - Dans le ciel
11:40
(Hector Berlioz) The Netherlands Radio Choir, Thomas Quasthoff, Charlotte Margiono, Vinson Cole, Jaco Huijpen, The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
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Videos

Bernard Haitink & The Radio Philharmonic Orchestra - La Damnation de Faust

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