Category: Uncategorized
Disc 56 Deutsche Grammophon 100 Great Symphonies – Part and Glass
Arvo Part Sympnony No.3 played by the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra conducted by Neeme Jarvi
Philip Glass Symphony No.1 “Low” played by the Brooklyn Philharmonic conducted by Dennis Russell Davies
Disc 55 Deutsche Grammophon 100 Great Sympnoies – Henryk Gorecki
Symphony No.3 “Symphony of Sorrowful Songs” op.36
Joanna Kozlowska soprano and the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Kazmierz Kord
Disc 54 Deutsche Grammophon 100 Great Symphonies – Luciano Berio & Witold Lutoslawski
Berio’s Sinfonia
Per Enoksson on violin, The London VOices and the Gothenburg Symphony ORchestra conducted by Peter Eotvos
Lutoslawski’s Symphony No.3
Played by the Berlines Philharmoniker conduucted by the composer
Disc 53 Deutsche Grammophon 100 Great Symphonies – Benjamin Britten & Michael Tippet
Sinfonia da Requiem op.20 New Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by the composer (Britten)
and
Michael Tippett’s Symphony No.3. Heather Harper soprano with the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Colin Davis
Disc 52 Deutsche Grammophon 100 Great Symphonies – Copland and Bernstein
Aaron Copland Symphony No.3 played by New York Philharmonic conducted by Leonard Bernstein
and Leonard Berstein’s Symphony No.2 “The Age of Anxiety” played by Lucas Foss on piano, the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra and Leonard Bernstein conducting
Disc 51 Deutsche Grammophon 100 Great Symphonies – Oliver Messiaen
Turangalila – Symphonie
quite simply an amazing piece
Yvonne Loriod on piano
Jeanne Loriod on ondes martenot
Orchestre de la Bastille conducted by Myung-Whun Chung
The Sirtex Conundrum
So Sirtex had anounnced that is hs failed to meet the primary endpoint in the clinical trial of SIR-spheres in metastatic colorectal cancer. The somewhat overvalued shareprice proceeded to tank….from almost $40 to $17.
The stock was super over-valued but this is another story.
SIR-spheres are a way of delivering radiation treatment to cancer in the liver. In the case of the SIR-FLOX trial it was standard chemotherapy plus or minus the radiation treatment.
This was available “off-label” based on preliminary promisaring results or on trial.
The stock market release is that there was no benefit in terms of overall profression free survival but beenfit in terms of liver confined progression. There was no comment about toicity which is rumoured to be worse in the SIR-spheres arm.
This problem is not specifically a reflection on the product but the system. We have limited capacity to regulate devices at the current time. SIRT has been regulated as a device and the main requirement from a regulatory perspective is that it doesn’t kill people…..no comment about whther it helps them.
SIR-spheres almost certainly causes cancers to shrink. As a product it is manufactured according to rigid guidelines which it meets….but it doesn’t meet the standards a medication is required to meet…..actaual clinical benefit.
I will still prescribe SIR-spheres for selected situations but I have to acknowledge that the regulatory process for these products is currently flawed and it should move to a process that resembles those for medicines.In the case of the latter effectiveness not just safety is rewarded. And to be frank we need to see the full report to understand the safety of SIR-spheres.
As a Disclaimer I participated in the trial but recurited poorly and withdrew over time
Disc 50 Deutsche Grammophon 100 Great Symphonies – Arthur Honegger
Symphony No.2
Symphony No.3 “Liturgique”
Fritz Wesenigk on trumpet (Symphony 2)
Berliner Philharmoniker conducted by Herbert von Karajan
Disc 49 Deutsche Grammophon 100 Great Symphonies – Igor Stravinsky
Symphony of Psalms
The Montiverdi Choir and the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir John Eliot Gardiner
Symphomy in C and Symphony in Three Movements
The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Leonard Bernstein
Disc 48 Deutsche Grammophon 100 Great Symphonies – Harris and Schuman
Roy Harris Symphony No.3
William Schuman Symphony No.3
New York Philharmonic conducted by Leonard Bernstein