No Strings | St. Michel Strings | Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings | Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta | Strings of Freedom | Serenade for tenor, horn and strings | Puppet Strings | No Strings Attached ('N Sync album) | Lucerne Festival Strings | Living Strings | I've Got No Strings | Hollyridge Strings | Clifford Brown with Strings | 4 Strings | 101 Strings |
The tracks named Adagio for Strings are remixes of the famous song with the same name by Samuel Barber.
Frank refuses, because he hasn't cooked since the Korean War, where he sickened his fellow troops by using bad meat and has become traumatized because of it (Frank's memory is dramatized with a reenactment in which the onset of food poisoning is set to Barber's "Adagio for strings", as in the film Platoon).
Orchestrator John Morgan enlarged all sections of the orchestra for the latter, referring to Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings as Herrmann's main influence on the score in the liner notes.
Works featured in recent seasons have included Mendelssohn's Symphony No. 3, Beethoven's Symphonies 6 and 7, Barber's Adagio for Strings, Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf (narrated by the Reverend Professor Peter J. Gomes), and Villa-Lobos' Sinfonietta No. 1.
David Jackson and Hugh Banton were unannounced guests and played a Soundbeam-medley and a Samuel Barber Adagio for strings on the church organ respectively.