There's a splendid CD of (I think) all Britten's piano and orchestra works. The playing should convince everyone!
The piano and C20th British composers
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I have thouight about that a lot, PK. The composers Ireland and Bliss come to mind of the greatBrit PC. I didn't mention the Delius PC, because I have always felt, that it was not one of his strong works. Why Elgar never puit a PC down on paper, I really don't know?Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostWell Bartok, Rachmaninov and Prokofiev were all renowned piano soloists in there own right. Martinu just wrote lots in every genre. Who else, other than those equally well known as pianists, did you have in mind as being particularly fond of writing piano concertos?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Actually Vaughan Williams wrote a number of short pieces for piano including The Lake in the Mountains. We musn't forget Bax with his 4 Piano Sonatas (they are very virtuosic) and his two large scale works for piano & orchestra, the Symphonic Variations and Winter Legends as well as the Left Hand Concertante, there is also the G major concerto of Edmund Rubbra (a rather odd work, I have a two piano score of it) the concerto by Robert Simpson (very much worth getting to know) and the Walton Sinfonia Concertante.
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Kurwenal
I cannot recall offhand if he composed a piano concerto, but I would make a plea for York Bowen who was certainly prolific with solo piano music. I would also cheekily suggest Medtner, who composed magnificent (and overlooked) concerti. He may not have actually been British, but he lived in Wales (Swansea, I think) for most of his life, so the works were at least born in the UK. I am not particularly into contemporary music but I would make a plea for Thomas Ades " In Seven Days" as a grand piece, also the Macmillan "Berserking".
Great review by Simon Heffer here:
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Originally posted by Kurwenal View PostI cannot recall offhand if he composed a piano concerto, but I would make a plea for York Bowen who was certainly prolific with solo piano music. I would also cheekily suggest Medtner, who composed magnificent (and overlooked) concerti. He may not have actually been British, but he lived in Wales (Swansea, I think) for most of his life, so the works were at least born in the UK. I am not particularly into contemporary music but I would make a plea for Thomas Ades " In Seven Days" as a grand piece, also the Macmillan "Berserking".
Great review by Simon Heffer here:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/c...-spanners.html
No one has yet mentioned the piano concerto by Alan Bush - one of the most ambitious of all English piano concertos. Bush was himself a considerable pianist in his younger days and he premiered the work himself.Last edited by ahinton; 26-11-10, 13:14.
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Raymond Clarke is a pianist whose name always springs to mind in relation to British piano music. I remember him giving a recital in Manchester a decade or more ago of the piano music of Robert Simpson, not the first composer that you would associate with the piano, but it is well worth listening to if you respond to Simpson's symphonies and string quartets. At about the same time he recorded the music on CD.
Clarke has also recorded the music of another composer who is not chiefly remembered for his piano works, Havergal Brian. There are two Preludes and Fugues and a Double Fugue written about the time of the Gothic symphony as well as several short pieces. Pianists who could occasionally include some of these works in recitals would be doing a great service in keeping Brian's name in the (admittedly rather dim) spotlight.
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Originally posted by Lion-of-Vienna View PostRaymond Clarke is a pianist whose name always springs to mind in relation to British piano music. I remember him giving a recital in Manchester a decade or more ago of the piano music of Robert Simpson, not the first composer that you would associate with the piano, but it is well worth listening to if you respond to Simpson's symphonies and string quartets. At about the same time he recorded the music on CD.
Clarke has also recorded the music of another composer who is not chiefly remembered for his piano works, Havergal Brian. There are two Preludes and Fugues and a Double Fugue written about the time of the Gothic symphony as well as several short pieces. Pianists who could occasionally include some of these works in recitals would be doing a great service in keeping Brian's name in the (admittedly rather dim) spotlight.
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