Year of release 2013

Songs 14

Album time 01:05:06

Genre list Classical

This page describes Celibidache: The Berlin Recordings (1945-1957) (CD8) by Sergiu Celibidache as part of the music catalog It is meant to give search engines and visitors a fuller explanation of the release without adding invented review claims.

The album data includes release year 2013, genre area Classical, 14 tracks, total running time 1:05:06, and cover artwork available. This gives the page enough context to describe the release in a natural catalog style.

The album sequence gives visitors songs including Prokofiev, Symphony No. 1 In D Major, Op. 25 'Symphonie Classique' - I. Allegro, Prokofiev, Symphony No. 1 In D Major, Op. 25 'Symphonie Classique' - II. Larghetto, Prokofiev, Symphony No. 1 In D Major, Op. 25 'Symphonie Classique' - III. Gavotta. Non Troppo Allegro, Prokofiev, Symphony No. 1 In D Major, Op. 25 'Symphonie Classique' - IV. Finale. Molto Vivace, Prokofiev, Romeo And Juliet. Suite For Orchestra No. 2, Op. 64 B - I. Montagues And Capulets. Andante - Allegro Pesante, Prokofiev, Romeo And Juliet. Suite For Orchestra No. 2, Op. 64 B - II. The Child Juliet. Vivace, Prokofiev, Romeo And Juliet. Suite For Orchestra No. 2, Op. 64 B - III. Friar Laurence. Andante Espressivo, and Prokofiev, Romeo And Juliet. Suite For Orchestra No. 2, Op. 64 B - IV. Dance. Vivo. These titles make the page specific to this album rather than a generic music category.

The page can also be read through the track durations: Prokofiev, Romeo And Juliet. Suite For Orchestra No. 2, Op. 64 B - V. Romeo And Juliet Before Parting. Lento - Adagio is one of the longer tracks at 10:16 and Prokofiev, Symphony No. 1 In D Major, Op. 25 'Symphonie Classique' - III. Gavotta. Non Troppo Allegro is one of the shorter tracks at 1:41. The duration notes keep the text factual and tied to the actual track table.

As a catalog entry, Celibidache: The Berlin Recordings (1945-1957) (CD8) is described through its visible facts, its tracks and the metadata already available on the page. Because the text is stored after the first visit, the page keeps a consistent description over time.