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Whistle Stopper - Soul of the Tango: The Music of Astor Piazzolla

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List Price: $17.98
Our Price: $7.99
Your Save: $ 9.99 ( 56% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Sony
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0074646312223 Format: Enhanced Label: Sony Manufacturer: Sony Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Sony Release Date: 1997-10-02 Studio: Sony
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Beautiful Comment: This is the best I have run into for practicing as well as just listening, this really is the "Soul of the Tango"! simply amazing!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Tango Comment: I was looking for a bit more cello in this cd. That aside, this was a great choice.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Must... Comment: If you love Astor Piazzolla's music, this is one of the best disc ever... Yo-Yo MA's Cello get a new level with this masterpieces, Mumuki is my personal favorite... Also recommended Astor Piazzolla In Portrait (DVD).
Customer Rating:      Summary: Another kind of tango Comment: I bought this cd because I heard the piece called Libertango by Piazzolla and really liked it, Piazzolla is considered a new kind of tango and some tango lovers or tango experts say his music isn't exactly tango, I'm just a music lover and I think the music is pretty great and performed by YO YO MA sounds even better. I highly reccomend it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Dessert Island! (intentional) Comment: This is one of my top ten recordings all time, any instruments, any genre. Up there with the best of the best like "Kind of Blue." The Assad brothers are rhythmically intense and just plain amazing. Yo-Yo is clearly inspired and they are all "in the zone." The tango suite is my favorite part of this recording. Regresso al Amor rips my heart out every time I listen to it, and I actually physically have tears many times. I would also recommend Astor's "Tango Zero Hour."
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Editorial Reviews:
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Yo-Yo Ma might seem like an unlikely protagonist for the tango, but this intrepid musical explorer has taken his task seriously, collaborating with experienced tango musicians. Ma even participates in a posthumous collaboration with one 1987 Piazzolla recording. Furthermore, while he's obviously the headliner here, he doesn't dominate the arrangements nearly as much as he does the billing and photography of the disc. While the result isn't your essential Piazzolla album (that would have to include more of the composer's own playing), it's an atmospheric and convincing collection, perhaps a good introduction for those who don't know the music. --Leslie Gerber
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