Bald Ambition

Justin Hurwitz - Babylon (Music from the Motion Picture) (2022)

Justin Hurwitz - Babylon (Music from the Motion Picture) (2022)
FLAC (tracks), Lossless / MP3 320 kbps | 1:37:39 | 531 / 224 Mb
Genre: Soundtrack / Label: Paramount Pictures Interscope Records

From Damien Chazelle, Babylon is an original epic set in 1920s Los Angeles led by Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie and Diego Calva, with an ensemble cast including Jovan Adepo, Li Jun Li and Jean Smart. A tale of outsized ambition and outrageous excess, it traces the rise and fall of multiple characters during an era of unbridled decadence and depravity in early Hollywood.

Justin Hurwitz - Babylon (2022) [Official Digital Download]  Vinyl & HR

Posted by ciklon5 at Dec. 20, 2022
Justin Hurwitz - Babylon (2022) [Official Digital Download]

Justin Hurwitz - Babylon (2022) [Official Digital Download]
FLAC (tracks), Lossless [24bit-44kHz] | 1:37:39 | 1015 Mb
Genre: Soundtrack / Label: Paramount Pictures Interscope Records

From Damien Chazelle, Babylon is an original epic set in 1920s Los Angeles led by Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie and Diego Calva, with an ensemble cast including Jovan Adepo, Li Jun Li and Jean Smart. A tale of outsized ambition and outrageous excess, it traces the rise and fall of multiple characters during an era of unbridled decadence and depravity in early Hollywood.
Christoph Spering, Das Neue Orchester - Felix Mendelssohn: Symphony No.2 'Lobgesang' (2000)

Christoph Spering, Das Neue Orchester - Felix Mendelssohn: Symphony No.2 'Lobgesang' (2000)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 291 Mb | Total time: 64:48 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Opus 111 / Naïve | # OPS 2030 | Recorded: 1993

Lobgesang, Mendelssohn's ''Hymn of Praise'', is no longer a rarity on disc, with a dozen versions listed. That makes it timely that Spering, following up the success of Herreweghe's Harmonia Mundi version of Elijah (4/94), here presents a performance in period style. When the composer's preference for fast speeds is well documented, and has so convincingly been followed up by his latterday successor at the Leipzig Gewandhaus, Kurt Masur, it is perhaps surprising that Spering is far more relaxed in his choice of tempos. His overall timing—64'48'' as against Masur's 58'32''—shows what a wide discrepancy there is, and in no way does he let the music drag or become sentimental. For with clean, crisp textures this is a most refreshing performance, full of incidental beauties, of a work that for several generations was regarded as too sweet on the one hand, over-inflated on the other. Spering's clean directness and his obvious affection for the music reverses that jaundiced judgement.