Gilbert & Sullivan

Listed on 19th June, 2009 by ShareMyPlaylists.com

Genre: Classical

Total Tracks: 292

Duration: 23 hours, 16 minutes

Total plays0,000,011

Listen to this playlist for FREE on Spotify!

Playlist Description:

Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor): Overture
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: We sail the ocean blue (Sailors)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The
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Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor): Overture
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: We sail the ocean blue (Sailors)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: Hail, men-o'-war's men (Buttercup)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: I'm called Little Buttercup (Buttercup)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: But tell me, who's the youth (Buttercup, Boatswain)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: The nightingale sighed for the moon's bright ray (Ralph, Sailors, Buttercup)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: A maiden fair to see (Ralph, Sailors)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: My gallant crew, good morning (Captain Corcoran, Sailors)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: I am the captain of the Pinafore (Captain Corcoran, Sailors)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: Sir, you are sad (Buttercup, Captain Corcoran)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: Sorry her lot who loves too well (Josephine)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: Over the bright blue sea (Female Relatives of Sir Joseph Porter, Sailors, Captain Corcoran)
George Baker – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: I am the monarch of the sea (Sir Joseph, Hebe, Relatives, Sailors)
George Baker – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: When I was a lad I served a term (Sir Joseph, Relatives, Sailors)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: A British tar is a soaring soul (Ralph, Boatswain, Boatswain's Mate, Sailors)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: Refrain, audacious tar (Josephine, Ralph)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: Can I survive this overbearing (Ralph, Sailors, Hebe, Relatives, Dick, Josephine)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: Oh joy, oh rapture unforeseen (Ralph, Josephine, Sailors, Relatives, Dick)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: This very night (Josephine, Hebe, Ralph, Boatswain, Relatives, Sailors, Dick)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: Let's give three cheers (Josephine, Hebe, Ralph, Boatswain, Relatives, Sailors)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act I: Entr'acte
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act II: Fair moon to thee I sing (Captain Corcoran)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act II: Things are seldom what they seem (Buttercup, Captain Corcoran)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act II: The hours creep on apace (Josephine)
George Baker – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act II: Never mind the why and wherefore (Captain Corcoran, Sir Joseph, Josephine)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act II: Kind Captain, I've important information (Dick, Captain Corcoran)
John Cameron – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act II: Carefully on tiptoe stealing (Ralph, Josephine, Sailors, Captain Corcoran, Dick)
George Baker – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act II: Pretty daughter of mine (Captain Corcoran, Sailors, Ralph, Josephine, Boatswain, Hebe, Relatives, Sir Joseph)
George Baker – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act II: Farewell my own (Ralph, Josephine, Sir Joseph, Boatswain, Dick, Hebe, Buttercup, Relatives, Sailors)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act II: A many years ago (Buttercup, Relatives, Sailors)
George Baker – HMS Pinafore (or, The Lass that Loved a Sailor), Act II: Oh joy, oh rapture unforeseen (Ralph, Josephine, Captain Corcoran, Buttercup, Sir Joseph, Hebe, Relatives, Sailors)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Trial by Jury: Hark, the hour of ten is sounding (Barristers, Attorneys, Jury, Public)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Trial by Jury: Now jurymen hear my advice (Usher, Barristers, Attorneys, Jury, Public)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Trial by Jury: Is this the Court of the Exchequer? (Defendant, Jury, Others)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Trial by Jury: When first my old, old love I knew (Defendant, Jury)
George Baker – Trial by Jury: Silence in Court...All hail, great Judge (Usher, Others, Judge)
George Baker – Trial by Jury: When I, good friends, was called to the Bar (Judge, Others)
John Cameron – Trial by Jury: Swear thou the jury (Council for the Plaintiff, Usher, Jury)
John Cameron – Trial by Jury: Where is the plaintiff? (Counsel, Usher)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Trial by Jury: Comes the broken flower (Bridesmaids, Plaintiff)
George Baker – Trial by Jury: Oh, never, never, never (Judge, Jury, Plaintiff, Bridesmaids, Usher)
John Cameron – Trial by Jury: May it please you, my Lud! (Counsel, Others)
George Baker – Trial by Jury: That she is reeling is plain to me (Judge, Foreman, Plaintiff, Counsel, Jury, Others)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Trial by Jury: Oh, gentlemen, listen, I pray (Defendant, Bridesmaids)
George Baker – Trial by Jury: That seems a reasonable proposition (Judge, Counsel, Others)
George Baker – Trial by Jury: A nice dilemma we have here (Judge, Counsel, Defendant, Plaintiff, Others)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Trial by Jury: I love him, I love him (Plaintiff, Defendant, Jury, Public)
George Baker – Trial by Jury: The question, gentlemen, is one of liquor (Judge, Counsel, Plaintiff, Defendant, Others)
George Baker – Trial by Jury: Oh joy unbounded (Plaintiff, Counsel, Defendant, Usher, Judge, Others)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri): Overture
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Tripping hither, tripping thither (Celia, Leila, Fairies)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Iolanthe! (Queen of the Fairies, Iolanthe, Celia, Leila, Fairies)
John Cameron – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Good morrow, good mother (Strephon, Fairies)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Fare thee well, attractive stranger (Queen, Fairies)
John Cameron – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Good morrow, good lover (Phyllis, Strephon)
John Cameron – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: None shall part us from each other (Phyllis, Strephon)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Loudly let the trumpet bray! (Peers)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: The Law is the true embodiment (Lord Chancellor, Peers)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: My well-loved lord and guardian dear (Phyllis, Peers)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Of all the young ladies I know (Tolloller, Mountararat, Phyllis, Peers)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Nay, tempt me not (Phyllis)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Spurn not the nobly born (Tolloller, Peers)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: My Lords, it may not be (Phyllis, Lord Chancellor, Strephon, Peers)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: A shepherd I (Strephon, Tolloller, Mountararat, Lord Chancellor, Peers)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: When I went to the Bar as a very young man (Lord Chancellor)
John Cameron – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: When darkly looms the day (Strephon, Mountararat, Iolanthe, Tolloller, Phyllis, Peers)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Oh, shameless one, tremble! (Phyllis, Strephon, Tolloller, Lord Chancellor, Peers)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: In babyhood upon her lap I lay (Strephon, Lord Chancellor, Mountararat, Phyllis, Peers)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: For riches and rank I do not long (Phyllis)
John Cameron – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: To you I give my heart (Phyllis, Tolloller, Mountararat, Peers, Strephon)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Tripping hither, tripping thither (Fairies)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: The lady of my love (Strephon, Queen, Lord Chancellor, Tolloller, Mountararat, Fairies, Peers)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Go away, madam (Lord Chancellor, Queen, Phyllis, Fairies, Peers)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: Oh, Chancellor unwary (Queen, Lord Chancellor, Celia, Leila, Fairies, Peers)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act I: With Strephon for your foe (all)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: When all night long a chap remains (Sentry Song) (Private Willis)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: Strephon's a Member of Parliament (Fairies, Peers)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: When Britain really ruled the waves (Mountararat, Fairies, Peers)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: In vain to us you plead (Leila, Celia, Fairies, Tolloller, Mountararat, Peers)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: Oh, foolish fay (Queen, Fairies)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: Tho' p'r'aps I may incur your blame (Phyllis, Tolloller, Mountararat, Willis)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: Love, unrequited, robs me of my rest (Lord Chancellor)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: When you're lying awake with a dismal headache (Nightmare Song) (Lord Chancellor)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: If you go in, you're sure to win (Tolloller, Mountararat, Lord Chancellor)
John Cameron – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: If we're weak enough to tarry (Strephon, Phyllis)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: My Lord, a suppliant at your feet I kneel (Iolanthe)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: He loves! If in the bygone years (Iolanthe)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: It may not be (Lord Chancellor, Iolanthe, Queen, Fairies)
George Baker – Iolanthe (or, The Peer and the Peri), Act II: Soon as we may (all)
BBC Symphony Orchestra – Overture di Ballo [cut]
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride): Overture
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: Twenty lovesick maidens we (Maidens, Angela, Ella)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: Still brooding on their mad infatuation (Patience, Saphir, Angela, Maidens)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: I cannot tell what this love may be (Patience, Maidens)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: The soldiers of our Queen (Dragoons, Colonel Calverley)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: In a doleful train (Ella, Angela, Saphir, Maidens, Dragoons, Bunthorne)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: When I first put this uniform on (Colonel Calverley)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: Am I alone and unobserved? (Bunthorne)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: Long years ago, fourteen maybe (Patience, Angela)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: Prithee pretty maiden (Grosvenor, Patience)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: Let the merry cymbals sound (Maidens)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: Now tell us, we pray you (Duke, Colonel, Major, Dragoons, Bunthorne, Maidens)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: Your maiden hearts (Duke, Dragoons, Maidens)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: Come walk up and purchase with avidity (Bunthorne, Maidens, Dragoons, Jane, Patience)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: True love must single-hearted be (Patience, Bunthorne, Colonel, Major, Saphir, Angela)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act I: I hear the soft note (All)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: On such eyes as maidens cherish (Maidens)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: Sad is that woman's lot (Jane)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: Turn, oh turn in this direction (Maidens)
John Cameron – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: A magnet hung in a hardware shop (Grosvenor, Maidens)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: Love is a plaintive song (Patience)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: So go to him and say to him (Jane, Bunthorne)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: It's clear that medieval art alone retains its zest (Duke, Major, Colonel)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: If Saphir I choose to marry (Duke, Major, Saphir, Angela, Colonel)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: When I go out of door (Bunthorne, Grosvenor)
John Cameron – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: I'm a Waterloo House young man (Grosvenor, Maidens)
George Baker – Patience (or, Bunthorne's Bride), Act II: After much debate internal (Duke, Bunthorne, All)
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra – Symphony in E 'Irish': I. Andante - Allegro, ma non troppo vivace
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra – Symphony in E 'Irish': II. Andante espressivo
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra – Symphony in E 'Irish': III. Allegretto
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra – Symphony in E 'Irish': IV. Allegro vivace e con brio
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse): Overture (arr. Geoffrey Toye)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: Fair is Rose as bright May day (Bridesmaids, Zorah)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: Sir Rupert Murgatroyd (Hannah, Chorus)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: If somebody there chanced to be (Rose)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: I know a youth who loves a little maid (Rose, Robin)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: From the briny sea (Bridesmaids)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: I shipped, d'ye see, in a Revenue sloop (Richard)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: My boy, you may take it from me (Robin)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: The battle's roar is over (Richard, Rose)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: In sailing o'er life's ocean wide (Rose, Richard, Robin)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: Cheerily carols the lark (Margaret)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: To a garden full of posies (Margaret)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: Welcome gentry for your entry (Chorus)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: Oh, why am I moody and sad? (Sir Despard, Chorus)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: You understand? (Richard, Sir Despard)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: Hail the bride of seventeen summers (Chorus)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: When the buds are blossoming (Rose, Hannah, Richard, Adam, Chorus)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: Hold, bride and bridegroom (Sir Despard, Rose, Robin, Zorah, Richard, Margaret, Chorus)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act I: Oh, happy the lily (All)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act II: I once was as meek as a new-born lamb (Robin, Adam)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act II: Happily coupled are we (Richard, Rose)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act II: In bygone days I had thy love (Rose, Robin, Richard, Bridesmaids)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act II: Painted emblems of a race (Ancestors, Roderic, Robin)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act II: When the night wind howls (Roderic, Ancestors)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act II: He yields! He yields (Ancestors, Robin)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act II: I once was a very abandoned person (Sir Despard, Margaret)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act II: My eyes are fully open (Robin, Margaret, Sir Despard)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act II: There grew a little flower (Hannah, Roderic)
George Baker – Ruddigore (or, The Witch's Curse), Act II: Oh, happy the lily (All)
City Of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra – The Merchant of Venice - Suite: 1. Introduction
City Of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra – The Merchant of Venice - Suite: 3. Bourrée
City Of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra – The Merchant of Venice - Suite: 5. A la Valse
City Of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra – The Merchant of Venice - Suite: 7. Finale
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria): Overture
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: List and learn, ye dainty roses (Chorus)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Good morrow, pretty maids (Francesco, Antonio, Giorgio, Vittoria, Giulia)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: For the merriest fellows (Antonio, Chorus, Fiametta)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Buon' giorno, signorine (Marco, Giuseppe, Chorus)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: We're called gondolieri (Marco, Giuseppe)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: And now to choose our brides (Marco, Giuseppe, Fiametta, Vittoria, Gianetta, Tessa, Chorus)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Thank you, gallant gondolieri (Gianetta, Tessa, Chorus)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: From the sunny Spanish shore (Duke, Duchess, Casilda, Luiz)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: In enterprise of martial kind (Duke, Casilda, Duchess, Luiz)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: O rapture when alone (Casilda, Luiz)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: There was a time (Luiz, Casilda)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: I stole the Prince (Don Alhambra, Casilda, Luiz, Duke, Duchess)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: But bless my heart (Casilda, Don Alhambra)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Try we life-long (Casilda, Duchess, Luiz, Duke, Don Alhambra)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Bridegroom and bride (Chorus)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: When a merry maiden marries (Tessa, Chorus)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Kind sir, you cannot have the heart (Gianetta)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Do not give way (Don Alhambra, Gianetta, Tessa, Marco, Giuseppe)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Then one of us will be a queen (Gianetta, Tessa, Marco, Giuseppe)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Replying we sing (Marco, Giuseppe, Chorus)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: For everyone who feels inclined (Marco, Giuseppe, Chorus)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Come, let's away (Marco, Giuseppe, Gianetta, Tessa)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act I: Then away they go to an island fair (Chorus, Marco, Giuseppe, Gianetta, Tessa)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: Of happiness the very pith (Chorus, Marco, Giuseppe)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: Rising early in the morning (Giuseppe, Chorus)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: Take a pair of sparkling eyes (Marco)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: Here we are, at the risk of our lives (Chorus, Gianetta, Tessa, Marco, Giuseppe)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: Dance a cachucha, fandango, bolero (Chorus)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: There lived a king (Don Alhambra, Marco, Giuseppe)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: In a contemplative fashion (Gianetta, Tessa, Marco, Giuseppe)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: With ducal pomp and ducal pride (Chorus, Duke, Duchess)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: On the day when I was wedded (Duchess)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: To help unhappy commoners (Duke)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: Small titles and orders (Duke, Duchess)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: I am a courtier grave and serious (Casilda, Duchess, Marco, Giuseppe, Duke)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: Here is a case unprecedented (Casilda, Gianetta, Tessa, Marco, Giuseppe)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: Now let the loyal lieges gather round (Don Alhambra, All)
John Cameron – The Gondoliers (or, The King of Barataria), Act II: The Royal Prince (Inez, All)
London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) – Cello Concerto in D (reconstr. Sir Charles Mackerras & David Mackie): I. Allegro moderato (cadenza by Sir Charles Mackerras) -
London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) – Cello Concerto in D (reconstr. Sir Charles Mackerras & David Mackie): II. Andante espressivo -
London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) – Cello Concerto in D (reconstr. Sir Charles Mackerras & David Mackie): III. Molto vivace
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu): Overture
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: If you want to know who we are (Nobles)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: Gentlemen, I pray you tell me (Nanki-Poo, A Noble)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: A wand'ring minstrel, I (Nanki-Poo, Nobles)
John Cameron – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: Our great Mikado, virtuous man (Pish-Tush, Nobles)
John Cameron – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: Young man, despair (Pooh-Bah, Nanki-Poo, Pish-Tush)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: And have I journey'd for a month (Nanki-Poo, Pooh-Bah)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: Behold the Lord High Executioner! (Nobles, Ko-Ko)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: As some day it may happen (Ko-Ko, Nobles)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: Comes a train of little ladies (Girls)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: Three little maids from school (Yum-Yum, Peep-Bo, Pitti-Sing, Girls)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: So please you, sir, we much regret (Yum-Yum, Peep-Bo, Pitti-Sing, Pooh-Bah, Girls)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: Were you not to Ko-Ko plighted (Nanki-Poo, Yum-Yum)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: I am so proud (Pooh-Bah, Ko-Ko, Pish-Tush)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: With aspect stern (Nobles, Girls, Pooh-Bah, Ko-Ko, Nanki-Poo, Yum-Yum, Others)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act I: Your revels cease (Katisha, Nanki-Poo, Pitti-Sing, Yum-Yum, Others)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: Braid the raven hair (Girls, Pitti-Sing)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: The sun, whose rays are all ablaze (Yum-Yum)
John Cameron – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: Brightly dawns our wedding day (Yum-Yum, Pitti-Sing, Nanki-Poo, Pish-Tush)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: Here's a how-de-do! (Yum-Yum, Nanki-Poo, Ko-Ko)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: Miya sama, miya sama (Girls, Nobles, Mikado, Katisha)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: A more humane Mikado (Mikado, Nobles)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: The criminal cried (Ko-Ko, Nobles, Pitti-Sing, Pooh-Bah)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: See how the Fates their gifts allot (Mikado, Pitti-Sing, Pooh-Bah, Ko-Ko, Katisha)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: The flowers that bloom in the spring (Nanki-Poo, Yum-Yum, Pitti-Sing, Pooh-Bah, Ko-Ko)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: Alone, and yet alive (Katisha)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: Hearts do not break (Katisha)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: On a tree by a river a little tom-tit (Ko-Ko)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: There is beauty in the bellow of the blast (Katisha, Ko-Ko)
John Cameron – The Mikado (or, The Town of Titipu), Act II: For he's gone and married Yum-Yum (Pitti-Sing, Ko-Ko, Nanki-Poo, Yum-Yum, Others)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty): Overture
John Cameron – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Pour, oh pour the pirate sherry (Pirates, Samuel)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: When Frederic was a little lad (Ruth)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Oh, better far to live and die (Pirate King, Pirates)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Oh, false one, you have deceived me! (Frederic, Ruth)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: What shall I do?...Climbing over rocky mountain (Frederic, Girls, Edith, Kate)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Stop, ladies, pray! (Frederic, Girls, Edith)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Oh, is there not one maiden breast? (Frederic, Girls, Mabel)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Oh, sisters, deaf to pity's name (Mabel, Girls)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Poor wandering one (Mabel, Girls)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: What ought we to do? (Edith, Kate, Girls, Mabel, Frederic)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Stay, we must not lose our senses (Frederic, Girls, Pirates)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Here's a first rate opportunity (Pirates)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Hold, monsters! (Edith, Samuel, Girls, Major-General Stanley, Pirates)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: I am the very model of a modern Major-General (Major-General, Girls, Pirates)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Oh, men of dark and dismal fate (Major-General, Samuel, Pirate King, Pirates)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: I'm telling a terrible story (Major-General, Others except Ruth)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: O master, hear one word (Ruth, Pirates, Frederic)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act I: Pray observe the magnanimity (All except Ruth)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Oh, dry the glistening tear (Girls, Mabel)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Now, Frederic, let your escort lion-hearted (Major-General, Frederic)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: When the foeman bears his steel (Sergeant of Police, Policemen, Mabel, Edith, Girls, Major-General)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Now for the pirates' lair (Frederic)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Young Frederic! (Pirate King, Frederic, Ruth)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: When you had left our pirate fold (Ruth, Frederic, Pirate King)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Away, away! my heart's on fire (Ruth, Pirate King, Frederic)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: All is prepared (Mabel, Frederic)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Stay, Frederic, stay! (Mabel, Frederic)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Ah, leave me not to pine (Mabel, Frederic)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: In 1940 I of age shall be (Frederic, Mabel)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: No, I'll be brave! (Mabel)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Though in body and in mind (Sergeant, Policemen)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: When a felon's not engaged in his employment (Sergeant, Policemen)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: A rollicking band of pirates we (Pirates, Sergeant, Policemen)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: With cat-like tread (Pirates, Policemen, Samuel)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Hush, hush! not a word (Frederic, Pirates, Policemen, Major-General)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Softly sighing to the river (Major-General, Pirates, Policemen)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Now what is this, and what is that (Girls, Pirates)
George Baker – The Pirates of Penzance (or, The Slave of Duty), Act II: Frederic here! Oh joy! (Major-General, Mabel, Frederic, Pirates, Pirate King, Girls, Policemen, Sergeant, Ruth)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Sorcerer: Overture
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Cox and Box (or, The Long-Lost Brothers) - Overture
Sir Malcolm Sargent – Princess Ida (or, Castle Adamant): Overture
City Of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra – Overture in C 'In memoriam'
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid): Overture
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: When maiden loves she sits and sighs (Phoebe)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: Tower warders, under orders (People, Yeomen of the Guard, Second Yeoman)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: When our gallant Norman foes (Dame Carruthers, Yeomen)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: Alas, I waver to and fro (Phoebe, Leonard, Meryll)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: Is life a boon? (Fairfax)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: Here's a man of jollity (Crowd)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: I have a song to sing, O! (Elsie, Point, Crowd)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: How say you maiden (Lieutenant, Point, Elsie)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: I've jibe and joke (Point)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: 'Tis done! I am a bride! (Elsie)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: Were I thy bride (Phoebe)
John Cameron – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act I: Oh, Sergeant Meryll, is it true? (Yeomen, Meryll, Fairfax, Phoebe, Wilfred, People, Elsie, Lieutenant, Dame Carruthers, Point)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act II: Night has spread her pall once more (People, Dame Carruthers, Yeomen)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act II: A private buffoon is a light-hearted loon (Point)
Pro Arte Orchestra – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act II: Here-upon we're both agreed (Point, Wilfred)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act II: Free from his fetters grim (Fairfax)
John Cameron – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act II: Strange adventure! (Kate, Dame Carruthers, Fairfax, Meryll)
John Cameron – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act II: Hark! What was that, sir? (Meryll, Fairfax, Yeomen, People, Lieutenant, Wilfred, Point, Elsie, Phoebe)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act II: A man who would woo a fair maid (Fairfax, Elsie, Phoebe)
Sir Malcolm Sargent – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act II: When a wooer goes a-wooing (Elsie, Fairfax, Point, Phoebe)
John Cameron – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act II: Rapture, rapture! (Dame Carruthers, Meryll)
John Cameron – The Yeomen of the Guard (or, The Merryman and his Maid), Act II: Comes the pretty young bride (All)
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