You guys got me curious so I decided to take some measurements.
Telarc CD-80041
In the beginning when the cellos are playing......50 to 68, avg. 55? (guessimate)
When the bass drum/timpani gets involved........60's to 78, avg. 60's?
Cannon fires................................................80 to 86, avg. 83
Bells banging after the cannons.......................77 to 79, avg. 78 (steady)
I could not say what my listening level was because it was all over the map. One of these days I will get the instruments I need and plot the instantaneous SPL vs time graph.
Suffice to say though, you get easily 36 dB of range from the quietest moment (with just some strings in the beginning) to the loudest moment. So if you pick 70 as what you may call the listening level, you need about 20 dB of headroom to be save. Most mid range AVR (can be demonstrated mathematically) should be handle it without audible clipping in suitable rooms.
My comments are obviously based on using my specific equipment and the Telarc CD-80041 that supposedly used real cannons, in my specific room. Your mileasge may vary.
Case in point, this Telarc CD claims the cannon shots go from the initial ignition's 2000 to 3000 hz to the follow up boom's 6 hz that we can't hear, but probably could feel if our electronics and speakers can go that low, that seems to be more difficult to overcome than the concerns about headrooms and dynamic ranges..