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    Philip Jones Brass Ensemble - PJBE Finale (1987)

    Posted By: tirexiss
    Philip Jones Brass Ensemble - PJBE Finale (1987)

    Philip Jones Brass Ensemble - PJBE Finale (1987)
    EAC | FLAC (image+.cue, log) | Covers Included | 59:06 | 249 MB
    Genre: Classical | Label: Chandos | Catalog: CHAN 8490

    Although the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble actually formed in 1951, its first full-length concert did not take place until the 1962 Aldeburgh Festival. Moreover, the group made its first recording only in 1970. It was the first such brass ensemble to perform in the world's major concert halls and to record with the preeminent labels. Philip Jones (born 1928), the ensemble's founder, was a virtuoso trumpet player whose first important position was with the Covent Garden orchestra, where he played from 1948 to 1951. About the time he resigned from there, Jones founded the ensemble bearing his name, which consisted of a quintet of players featuring two trumpets, a horn, trombone, and tuba. Later, it expanded to ten players for selected bigger concert dates in Europe and the U.S. Jones originally conceived the idea to form the group after hearing the Amsterdam Koper Quartet, an obscure ensemble of brass players whom he had heard in an Edinburgh concert. The players most closely associated with the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble during its 35-year existence were Elgar Howarth (trumpet), who was also a well-known composer and conductor; Ifor James (horn); John Iveson (trombone); John Fletcher (tuba); and of course, Jones. Other players over the years, generally those added when ten pieces were used, included the famed horn player Alan Civil, James Watson, John Wilbraham, Rod Franks, John Miller, Denis Wick, Dave Stewart, Chris Mowat, and Frank Lloyd. After founding the group in 1951, Jones freelanced over the next few years while his ensemble made infrequent appearances, advancing little toward establishing a reputation beyond the British Isles. Jones joined the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra for four seasons, beginning in 1956, then the Philharmonia in 1960 for an identical tenure. From 1962, the PJBE slowly built a reputation that evolved as their repertory grew, especially from pieces by Giovanni Gabrieli and Johann Pezel. Jones had shorter stints with other British orchestras in the 1960s: the London Philharmonic in 1964-1965, the New Philharmonic Orchestra in 1965-1967, and the BBC Symphony Orchestra from 1968 to 1972. By the time Jones had left the BBC, his ensemble had made its first recordings and was in demand not only in the U.K., but throughout Europe and the U.S. They began to draw important commissions too, including one from American composer Raymond Premru, who composed his Divertimento for them in 1976. But the PJBE also began playing other modern works, including ones by Richard Rodney Bennett, Hans Werner Henze, and Toru Takemitsu. The ensemble also began working with choral groups, in particular with the London Bach Choir. Much of the repertory of the PJBE were transcriptions of well-known classical works. Elgar Howarth made one of Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition in 1979, which the group then premiered and recorded.
    Jones, who had allotted some of his time to teaching when he left the BBC Symphony Orchestra in 1972, retired from the ensemble in 1986, thereafter focusing his professional activities on teaching. Yet he might have continued the PJBE had a freak accident not hastened his decision to retire: he drove his automobile over his trumpet case. The group then disbanded, but re-formed under the name the London Brass. Without doubt, the PJBE was one of the most influential instrumental ensembles in terms of laying the groundwork for the establishment of similar highly successful groups, such as the Canadian Brass and the Empire Brass.

    Philip Jones Brass Ensemble - PJBE Finale (1987)

    Track List:

    Andre Previn - Triolet for Brass
    [1] Opening - 4:03
    [2] Very Still - 2:30
    [3] Fanfare - 0:25
    [4] Waltz - 2:25
    [5] Interlude I - 1:10
    [6] Interlude II - 1:38
    [7] from a Distance - 3:55
    [8] Chubbs - 2:34
    Michael Berkeley - Music from Chaucer
    [9] Triton's Trumpets - 1:25
    [10] The Grieving Queen - 3:46
    [11] A Fanfare for the Huntsmen - 0:35
    [12] The Sorrowful Knight - 1:51
    [13] The Wakeful Poet - 3:08
    [14] Witold Lutoslawski - Mini Overture - 2:53
    Zsolt Durko - Sinfonietta
    [15] Introduzione : Allegro molto - 0:48
    [16] Canone alla prima : Andante - 1:07
    [17] Prestissimo, tutti con sordino - 3:09
    [18] Developments : Andante - 3:14
    [19] Double : Piu sostenuto - 1:50
    [20] Einojuhani Rautavaara - Playgrounds for Angels

    Performers:
    The Philip Jones Brass Ensemble

    Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 3 from 29. August 2011

    EAC extraction logfile from 22. August 2018, 12:46

    Various / PJBE Finale

    Used drive : HL-DT-STBD-RE BH16NS55 Adapter: 2 ID: 0

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    Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
    Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
    Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
    Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
    Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

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    TOC of the extracted CD

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    18 | 40:13.42 | 3:14.03 | 181017 | 195569
    19 | 43:27.45 | 1:56.42 | 195570 | 204311
    20 | 45:24.12 | 13:42.20 | 204312 | 265981


    Range status and errors

    Selected range

    Filename D:\_MyRips\PJBE - Finale\CDImage.wav

    Peak level 100.0 %
    Extraction speed 3.4 X
    Range quality 99.9 %
    Test CRC B1D90FEE
    Copy CRC E1502FF6
    Copy OK

    No errors occurred

    End of status report

    –– CUETools DB Plugin V2.1.3

    [CTDB TOCID: 3_ZHRl08EwvLa5gp6V7wtc69dL8-] found
    [65f220ba] (1/1) No match


    ==== Log checksum A521AD5B8680C81589ACC95A3385970F82F016C79B05FAE39F224F07110F45FF ====

    Thanks to the Original ripper (mahlbwa)!

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