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Space Classics

RCA Product Details - Ratings and reviews for space classics.
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Sales Rank: 539946
RCA
Released: 1995-10-10

Avg. Customer Review: 2 Star
Media: Audio CD
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Title Tracks for Space Classics
  • 1. Also sprach Zarathustra: Excerpt - Chicago SO/Fritz Reiner
  • 2. Grand Canyon Suite: Sunrise - Morton Gould & His Orch
  • 3. The Planets: Mars, the Bringer of War - Philadelphia Orch/Eugene Ormandy
  • 4. Star Wars: Main Title - National PO/Charles Gerhardt
  • 5. Close Encounter of the Third Kind: Final Scene - National PO/Charles Gerhardt
  • 6. The Planets: Venus, the Bringer of Peace - Philadelphia Orch/Eugene Ormandy
  • 7. Snowflakes Are Dancing - Isao Tomita
  • 8. The Planets: Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity - Philadelphia Orch/Eugene Ormandy
  • 9. Vn Con: Movt III - New Philharmonia Orch/Erich Leinsdorf
  • 10. By the Beautiful Blue Danube: Excerpt - Boston Pops Orch/Arthur Fiedler
  • 11. The Planets: Neptune, the Mystic - Women's Vox of Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia

Product Details
Space Classics
  • Audio CD: 0 pages (1995-10-10)
  • Publisher: RCA
  • Label: RCA
  • Format: Enhanced
  • Studio: RCA
  • Average Customer Review: 2 Star based on 2 reviews
  • Sales Rank in Music: #539946

Customer Reviews
Avg. Customer Review: 2 Star

Customer Rating: 3 Star
Summary: yes you are a snob 2000-01-19
Comment: sure this is a marketing exercise, but its fun. Tomita's electronic Debussy may not be to your taste, but its a beautiful fusion of Japanese and Western sensibilities overlain and underpinned by the combination of the electronic and classical genres, which can only be appreciated by those with a truly musical soul
Customer Rating: 1 Star
Summary: Marketing boys and their marketing toys 1999-07-07
Comment: I hate to sound like a snob, but it's hard to imagine anyone over the age of 5 being at all intrigued by this silly little CD. The music is great, well mostly great, of course, and a couple of the performances (Reiner's "Zarathustra," Gould's "Grand Canyon") are among the best out there. Others (Tomita's awful synthesized Debussy) scrape the bottom of the barrel. The big question is WHO is likely to enjoy something like this? Only children and adults with very, very limited attention spans who don't like really classical music, I'll wager.
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Space Classics