Reddit mentions: The best baroque dance suites music

We found 24 Reddit comments discussing the best baroque dance suites music. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 16 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

1. Bach - The Complete Brandenburg Concertos / Pearlman, Boston Baroque

    Features:
  • Timber Press OR
Bach - The Complete Brandenburg Concertos / Pearlman, Boston Baroque
Specs:
Height4.92125 Inches
Length5.59054 Inches
Number of items2
Release dateJuly 1996
Weight0.4825 Pounds
Width0.3937 Inches
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2. Satie: The Early Piano Works (Incl. The 3 Gymnopedies)

    Features:
  • DE LEEUW REINBERT
  • MUSICA CLASICA
  • INTERNATIONAL
  • MUSIC
Satie: The Early Piano Works (Incl. The 3 Gymnopedies)
Specs:
Height0.39 Inches
Length5.59 Inches
Number of items2
Release dateMarch 1998
Weight0.25125 Pounds
Width4.96 Inches
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3. Bach Edition: Complete Works (155 CD Box Set)

Bach Edition: Complete Works (155 CD Box Set)
Specs:
Height5 Inches
Length5.25 Inches
Number of items155
Release dateOctober 2006
Weight8.6175 Pounds
Width15 Inches
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5. Mozart: Requiem

Mozart: Requiem
Specs:
Height0.39 Inches
Length5.63 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateJanuary 1988
Weight0.23375 Pounds
Width4.96 Inches
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7. Locatelli: Concerti Op.4

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  • PETERSON TRIO OSCAR / JACKSON
  • JAZZ
  • INTERNATIONAL
  • MUSIC
Locatelli: Concerti Op.4
Specs:
Height0.37 Inches
Length4.92 Inches
Number of items2
Release dateApril 2009
Weight0.23 Pounds
Width7.07 Inches
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8. Baroque Adagios

VARIOS INTERPRETESMUSICA CLASICAINTERNATIONALMUSIC
Baroque Adagios
Specs:
Height0.39 Inches
Length5.59 Inches
Number of items2
Release dateFebruary 2002
Weight0.238125 Pounds
Width4.96 Inches
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9. The Complete Bach Edition (154 discs)

Shrink-wrapped
The Complete Bach Edition (154 discs)
Specs:
Height5.75 Inches
Length5.71 Inches
Number of items154
Release dateMarch 2012
Weight9.859375 Pounds
Width14.69 Inches
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10. Complete Works of J.S. Bach

Complete Works of J.S. Bach
Specs:
Height5.75 Inches
Length16.46 Inches
Number of items172
Release dateSeptember 2010
Weight8.1175 Pounds
Width6.18 Inches
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11. Bach: Complete Edition

Bach: Complete Edition
Specs:
Number of items157
Release dateSeptember 2010
Weight8.548125 Pounds
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12. Bach: Mass in B minor

    Features:
  • Music
Bach: Mass in B minor
Specs:
Height0.94 Inches
Length6.18 Inches
Number of items2
Release dateFebruary 1986
Weight0.41 Pounds
Width6.02 Inches
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13. The Bells of St. Genevieve and Other Baroque Delights

The Bells of St. Genevieve and Other Baroque Delights
Specs:
Height0.33 Inches
Length5.62 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateJanuary 1992
Weight0.24 Pounds
Width4.92 Inches
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15. Monteverdi: Vespers of 1610 (Vespro della Beata Vergine)

    Features:
  • Used Book in Good Condition
Monteverdi: Vespers of 1610 (Vespro della Beata Vergine)
Specs:
Height0.43 Inches
Length4.84 Inches
Number of items2
Release dateJuly 2006
Weight0.26875 Pounds
Width5.59 Inches
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16. Kathleen Battle & Wynton Marsalis: Baroque Duet

Kathleen Battle & Wynton Marsalis: Baroque Duet
Specs:
Height0.33 Inches
Length5.62 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateApril 1992
Weight0.24 Pounds
Width4.92 Inches
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🎓 Reddit experts on baroque dance suites music

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where baroque dance suites music are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 26
Number of comments: 4
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 7
Number of comments: 1
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Total score: 3
Number of comments: 1
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Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1

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Top Reddit comments about Baroque Dance Suites:

u/spike · 2 pointsr/classicalmusic

OMG, that is such a fabulous CD. You started at the top.

What got me started was Maria Bayo, Opera Arias and Cantatas.

Lorraine Hunt recorded a couple of Handel albums earlier in her career, these are also fabulous: Handel Arias and Arias for Durastani

If you get really interested in Handel's vocal music, you are going to have to get used to high male voices, "countertenors", who substitute for the "Castratos" that took the heroic roles in Baroque opera. A good place to start would be David Daniels.

Philippe Jaroussky is another great countertenor singing today.

Complete operas? There are 37 of them, some of which do not yet have satisfactory modern recordings. Generally speaking, the more recent the recording, the better. Some of the old ones are awful. One great exception is Rene Jacobs' 1992 recording of Giulio Cesare, Handel's greatest opera, and by extension the greatest Baroque opera. It's long, and there's a lot of "recitative" that can get a bit tedious on repeated listening, but it's a fabulous performance of a great work. Every aria and duet is a masterpiece.

Speaking of duets, one of my absolute favorite Handel albums is Love Duets by Suzie LeBlanc and Daniel Taylor. The duet from Rodelinda is phenomenal.

Great complete operas include Rodelinda,
Orlando and Radamisto.

Great dramatic oratorios include Hercules and Theodora, although the best recording of it is a DVD featuring Lorraine Hunt in a mind-blowing performance.

Good luck! This is some of the most beautiful music ever composed, and it's still not well-known enough.


u/[deleted] · 20 pointsr/AskReddit

A good starter list of a few different styles, with links to Amazon to get some samples...

  • Barber: Adagio For Strings Op.11 - Slow yet intense string piece.

  • Dvorak: New World Symphony - Good symphony with a wide range, from slow moving parts to more bombastic parts. (at times, you can hear similarities to the score from Star Wars/Imperial March)

  • Rachmaninov: Vespers - One of my personal favorites. Choral music - intense, haunting at times, interesting harmonies founded on that trademark Russian low bass.

  • Mozart: Le Nozze di Figaro A very accessible opera, and one of Mozart's most famous, perfect for a beginning opera listener.

  • Beethoven - Symphonies 5 and 9. Easily two of Beethoven's most famous symphonies. Beyond the parts you hear in movies and commercials, very moving and complex pieces. The 9th is incredibly deep, particularly the 4th movement. I literally have over a dozen recordings of this piece alone, and hear something new every time I listen to it.

  • Vivaldi: Four Seasons. You'll recognize this in quite a few places. I'm fond of the Winter suite, especially the third movement.

  • Bach: Brandenburg Concertos. A good example of Bach's counterpoint style in Baroque string music

  • Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto #2. Intense and melodic, this piece transitions from sweeping melodic lines building to full frenzy - almost chaotic at times.

  • Beethoven: Piano Concerto #5 - Emporer. You could call this a "fancy" piece - several running lines across the piano, including heavy ornamentation and embellishments, particularly in the 1st and 3rd movements. The 2nd movement is more reserved, and it's tranquility bridges the more lively movements.

  • Stravinsky: Rite of Spring. Fascinating, driving intensity - asymmetrical rhythms make this very interesting, unconventional.

  • If you're feeling adventurous and want to delve into a longer piece of a different style, Handel's Messiah or Mendelssohn's Elijah are two great oratorios.
u/Midnight_Lightning · 2 pointsr/Mozart

I highly recommend this album, conducted by Philippe Herreweghe and played on period instruments. It's my favorite recording of the Requiem, and one of my favorite albums overall. It just sucks me in from the first bar.

However, I would suggest checking out several recordings and seeing what suits you best. The Gardiner, Solti and Marriner recordings all have great aspects to them and are very highly regarded.

u/redthirtytwo · 12 pointsr/AskReddit

Snobs and purists will turn their noses down at the suggestion, but Naxos has tons of collections and boxed sets to get you into the various sub/genres.

Naxos actually uses a lot of well regarded, but out-of-print or older recordings that have been superceded by a new performer. A new performance by Yo-Yo Ma will sell better than something from 20 years ago.

An article on Stereophile on Naxos. Worth the read as an intro to the music.

FYI, Naxos is to classical what Vaynerchuk is to wine. The product is still great, but the Old Guard is offended by the new marketing.



There are also the mega-collection boxed sets of different composers:

Beethoven

Mozart

Bach



u/I_miss_Alien_Blue · 1 pointr/mildlyinteresting

I like you. I played sax for 6 1/2 years, studied musicianship for 4. One of my teachers was adamant that Bach was best, without question, he even bought Bach 2000 when it came out and brought it to class. I often use a Mozart collection when I study, it's like it makes me smarter. Even with some historical inaccuracies I just love the directors cut of Amadeus, which I think is on Netflix. If not that then either vivaldi's four seasons or Hungarian rhapsody no 2

u/raddit-bot · 1 pointr/listentothis

| | |
|-:|:-|
|name|Raglans|
|about artist|Raglans Formed in a festival tent in 2010 Dublin based 4 piece band Raglans launched the same year. Raglans are Stephen Kelly (lead vocals, guitar, banjo, mandolin), Ros Horan (bass, backing vocals), Conn ORunaidh (drums, backing vocals) and Liam Morrow (lead guitar, mandolin, backing vocals). Raglans blaze a trail of muscular new wave guitars, gritty pop melodies and uplifting indie folk arrangements that hops... (more on last.fm)|
|album|Raglans, released Mar 2014|
|track|White Lightning|
|images|album image, artist image|
|links|track on amazon, album on amazon|
|tags|rock, irish, folk|
|similar|High-tails, SunTalk, Side Saddle, Marsicans, Soulmates Never Die|
|metrics|lastfm listeners: 6,244, lastfm plays: 28,720, youtube plays: 301, radd.it score: 6.75|


Please downvote this comment if this data is incorrect!
I am a bot by radd.it data services. I have been requested to post these reports.

u/blanko1324 · 3 pointsr/classicalmusic

I agree. Boston Baroque has a great 2-disc set of the Brandenburgs on period instruments. Link!

u/DavidRFZ · 1 pointr/classicalmusic

If you are completely new to classical music, I'd try one of those 'Beautiful Adagios' sampler CDs that are common on adagios. Perhaps the Baroque Adagios of which Pachelbel's Canon is track one. I wouldn't pay full price, there must be similar playlists on youtube or spotify.

If you are not a newbie and are specifically looking for similar multi-violin canon-type chamber pieces, I would check out Henry Purcell's Fantasias for the Viols. There is a three parts upon a ground which is remarkably similar. The Fantasia Upon One Note is also well known.

u/KelMHill · 1 pointr/classicalmusic

Wow, quite a project! Which BCE were you working from? Amazon seems to list 2, and one has 30 more discs than the other.

http://www.amazon.com/J-S-Bach-Complete-Various/dp/B00L2SQVS4/ref=sr_1_1

http://www.amazon.com/Complete-Works-Johann-Sebastian-Bach/dp/B003LR4QPE/ref=sr_1_2

In fact, maybe there are 3 to choose from.

http://www.amazon.com/Complete-Bach-Various/dp/B006WKDT1E/ref=sr_1_6

u/Pappenheimer · 1 pointr/AskReddit

More wallowing, if you're into that kind of music: Erik Satie. Sample: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIVp05sEPhE

I highly recommend "Early Piano Works", performed by Reinbert de Leeuw..

Incredibly sad and great at the same time.

u/kihadat · 1 pointr/classicalmusic

Oh, never mind. I just thought you were into electronic music, maybe a DJ or producer, or something like that. Not to sound stuck-up or anything, but part of the reason I thought that was that 150 albums didn't seem that many. 1 complete set of just Beethoven's, Mozart's, and Bach's music comes to 410 discs already.

u/mroceancoloredpants · 7 pointsr/classicalmusic

I'll hazard some suggestions:

Mozart: Piano Concerti, Uchida/Tate/English Chamber Orchestra

Bach: Mass in B Minor, Gardiner

Debussy: La Mer/Nocturnes etc., Boulez/Cleveland

Bartok: Concerto for Orchestra, Boulez/Chicago

Beethoven: op. 59 quartets, Tokyo SQ

Webern: Works for String Quartet, Emerson SQ

Schoenberg: Pierrot Lunaire, Ensemble Intercontemporain

Bach: Orchestral Suites, Neville Marriner

Mahler: 9th Symphony, Karajan/Berlin

Schubert: Winterreise and Goethe Lieder, Fischer-Dieskau

And Karajan doing the Brahms symphonies on DVD.

u/BrainSturgeon · 2 pointsr/AskReddit

Lux Aeterna

Bells of St. Geniveve (See track 1)

Take California Propellerheads (what ever happened to them?)

u/jansseba · 2 pointsr/classicalmusic

I'm not even close to knowledgeable enough to talk about definitive recordings. I have Martin Pearlman's. That's all I have and all I've ever had. For all I know I could be outing myself as a dilettante (which I am), but this recording works for me.