Boléro

~ Recording by Philharmonic Orchestra, Claude Estrier

Appears on releases

#TitleLengthTrack ArtistRelease TitleRelease ArtistRelease Group TypeCountry/DateLabelCatalog#
Official
5.17Bolero7:42Maurice Ravel100 Popular ClassicsVarious ArtistsAlbum + Compilation
Castle Communications (primary imprint of Castle Communications PLC)MBS CD 517
5.17Boléro7:45Maurice Ravel200 Popular Classics The Finest Music By The Greatest ComposersVarious ArtistsAlbum + Compilation
Castle Pulse (aka "Pulse" , sub-label in the Castle/Sanctuary "family")PBXCD903X
5.17Boléro7:45Maurice Ravel100 Popular Classics: Best Loved Works of the Great ComposersVarious ArtistsAlbum + Compilation
  • GB2005-05-09
Castle Communications (primary imprint of Castle Communications PLC)MBS CD 517

Relationships

orchestra:Philharmonic Orchestra (probably another Alfred Scholz pseudonym)
conductor:Claude Estrier (conductor)
recording of:Boléro (partial)

Boléro

composer:Maurice Ravel (classical composer) (in 1928)
publisher:Ed. Durand & Cie (1909–1947)
Soc. Arima (rights society?)
premiered at:Palais Garnier in Paris, Île-de-France, France (on 1928-11-22)
referred to in medleys:Can’t Stop the Classics, Part 2
This Is the Story (Clare Muldaur)
later parody versions:Bolero
Bolero
Le Parti d’en rire
later versions:Bolero (Starink version)
Bolero (arr. Hans Hasso Stamer)
Bolero (2008 Urtext edition, Breitkopf & Härtel)
Boléro (arr. Django Rheinhardt)
Boléro (arr. Ravel for 2 pianos)
Troublant Bolero
is the basis for:Lonlon
No More Boleros
arrangements:Bolero (arr. James Last)
Boléro (catch-all for arrangements)
Boléro (arr. Ravel for piano 4-hands)
Boléro Fox-Trot