Arguably a cheeky orchestration by Lucien Cailliet. The finale is certainly resplendent. Wish there were more recordings for Bach-Cailliet transcriptions.
Lucien Cailliet was clarinetist and arranger for the Philadelphia Orchestra. I spoke to Lucien Cailliet's son (also a musician) in Madison, Wisconsin years ago, and he verified that some of Cailliet's arrangements and transcriptions were marketed as Stokowski's for publicity purposes. Indeed, this one is Cailliet's, and wonderful!
Arguably a cheeky orchestration by Lucien Cailliet. The finale is certainly resplendent.
Wish there were more recordings for Bach-Cailliet transcriptions.
this is such a banger Bach a real one
Found this gem at my local thrift store for just $1. The last 40 seconds are a colossal shout of plangent, unrestrained, and ephebophilic ecstasy.
You found an orchestra for 1 dollar. Interesting
That ending was epic
possibly an unpopular opinion, but I think the Calliet version is superior to a Stokowsky's
Tuning: 0c: A4 = 440Hz
Isn't this the Stokowski transcription?
No, the Cailliet
Lucien Cailliet was clarinetist and arranger for the Philadelphia Orchestra. I spoke to Lucien Cailliet's son (also a musician) in Madison, Wisconsin years ago, and he verified that some of Cailliet's arrangements and transcriptions were marketed as Stokowski's for publicity purposes. Indeed, this one is Cailliet's, and wonderful!
@@rayostwaldmusic7769 Thanks for your comment. After 8 years, I'm still here, still learning.
@@rayostwaldmusic7769 of course he was a clarinet player 😂
That explains the opening lmao