Hi,
I can't think of a way without a bit of work. This is what I have done when I needed to get away from the CD track boundaries. Use Apple's iTunes software for ripping. It is possible to tell it to rip multiple tracks from a CD as though they are a single track (to AAC, Apple Lossless, MP3 or WAV). So if you have two symphonies on a CD, you could rip tracks 1 to 4 and create a single file from them and also create another file from tracks 5 to 9, for example. So you end up with one much larger file per symphony - and then of course the randomise function would work as you like. I use FLAC and WMA, so I have used this technique in the past to get large WAV files made up from multiple tracks and then I use other tools to convert the WAV file to the required file formats. It's good for audio books too, when a single book or chapter may be made up from many smaller tracks.
Yeah, that's pretty much the conclusion I came to, but I thought I'd ask. I don't think I'm really keen on ripping my symphonies as single tracks, though.
Thanks for your input.
Ken