Great idea!! I think a Palladium listening room is most worthy of one of the world's great audio companies.
I'm glad something similar is being put together, because I always liked that little auditorium/listening room at Hope (no, not the one near Roy's office with cast-off furniture -- it's nearer one of the early buildings). How many people will it hold?
The 5.1 Palladium P-37/Aragon setup I was granted for my classical music "classes" was wonderful for bringing out accurate instrumental and vocalist sound qualities and dynamics. I frankly underestimated the Palladium while I was there, and only later realized how much better Palladiums were than other such setups I've heard since.
BTW, what DVD player was used at my classes?
I suggest a few classical DVDs for demo purposes, since some listeners will (or should!) ask for classical examples. I'd suggest some picks from my playlist:
J.S. Bach, Partita No. 3 for Solo Violin. Gidon Kremer, "Bach to Bach." EuroArts 2055638
Like the similar Bach six sonatas for solo cello, the writing is CONTRAPUNTAL, in which the music is made up entirely of independent melodic lines rather than the usual main melody set to harmony. One can hear more than one "voice" (high, middle, low) being played or inferred simultaneously. Although the camera does him no favors, this close-up of his flawless performance fully displays the piece’s extreme difficulty and his mastery of playing it. Note that Bach wrote EVERY note he plays, and that he plays EVERY note Bach wrote in this.
W.A. Mozart, Symphony No. 41, Finale (molto allegro). Kammerorchester CPE Bach, Haenchen cond. EuroArts 2056018
Mozart wrote this, his last symphony, 3 years before his death. The last movement is a tour de force that combines five themes into a fugal coda. This CHAMBER ORCHESTRA plays standing up, except for the cellos, and really lays into it. The precision playing by these superb musicians is amazing. Excellent conductor. Recorded in Berlin, 2005.
Antonin Dvorak, Symphony No. 9 "From the New World," first movement (Adagio - Allegro molto). Berlin Philharmonic, Abbado cond. EuroArts 20560482
Dvorak, son of a provincial butcher in what is now the Czech Republic, became a famous composer in Europe, which led to his being made Director of a new National Conservatory of Music in New York City in 1892, where he was introduced to the African-American spiritual. Dvorak wrote this symphony in 1893 using pentatonic-scale melodies that in his mind reflected Native American and African-American music. The first movement is a powerful, exciting opening to the symphony. The Largo second movement is a very famous symphony movement. The DVD was recorded in Palermo, Italy, in 2002. The Berlin Philhamonic is one of the best orchestras in the world, and this is an outstanding taping and recording IMO. One can see as well as hear precision playing and unified dynamic (loud-soft) shadings by its superb musicians. Abbado is an expressive conductor with a great connection to the orchestra.
Claudio Monteverdi, Vespers of the Blessed Virgin, Ave Maris Stella. John Eliot Gardiner, cond., et al. Archiv 073 035-9 [available only from Crotchet in the UK]
Monteverdi may have been the greatest composer of the early Baroque (early 1600s). He led the early transformation of music from the emotionally reserved Renaissance to the introduction of intensely emotional opera and the Italian madrigal. The Vespers, written in 1610, is one of the greatest musical works before 1700. It combines psalms, earthy biblical songs, and Catholic vesper liturgy into a somewhat baffling but powerful whole. Although the writing of separate parts for instruments and voices was only a recent development, the somewhat reconstructed orchestration shows remarkable skill. This was recorded in 1989 in the unique San Marco basilica in Venice, a world treasure over 1,100 years old with many lofts and domes, massively lined with precious gems and mosaic gold. Venice became a center of musical composition in part because of Monteverdi, and led as well in music printing and publishing. The vocal writing is beautiful and unsurpassingly sumptuous and rich. Ave Maris Stella (Hail, star of the sea) has an 8-part chorus (two 4-voice choirs) singing several stanzas (verses) with 4 instrumental "ritornellos" (returning passages) between them. Each ritornello is by a different set of instruments, i.e., brass, strings, winds (2 oboes and a bassoon), and a recorder quartet.
Also, consider a DVD or two from the Keeping Score series of the San Francisco Symphony, http://www.shopsfsymphony.org/shop/home.php?cat=42. I suggest the Tchaikovsky 4th or maybe the Beethoven Eroica.
Larry