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!
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
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
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