One of The Gathering Note’s affiliate partners is Emusic. Regular readers and especially readers from the very beginning know that I think highly of Emusic. For those who don’t know, Emusic is a subscription download service that offers one of the best classical music catalogs online. It boasts Naxos, LSO Live, San Francisco’s in house label, CSO Rsound, BIS, CPO, Artek, Chandos and many other labels familiar to classical music fans.
If the breadth of the catalog isn’t enough, Emusic’s pricing is a deal. For roughly $.25 a track, you download a set number of tracks each month according to the number of tracks you want each month. Do the math. A disc with one, four movement Bruckner symphony prices out at about $1.00 (Tintner’s cycle on Naxos, Norrington’s vibrato free recordings, and Haitink’s CSO recording of the Seventh are all available for download).
New subscribers to Emusic get 25 tracks free! The offer is a great way to experiment with new repertoire and dip your toe into the music download water. Periodically, we will assemble lists of albums totaling at most 25 tracks, the number of tracks you would get free as a new subscriber.
For this inaugural Emusic 25 I will focus on Beethoven and Brahms, two of the most familiar names in classical music.
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