Busoni
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post
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I was working when it came on, so I was only able to listen to it with half an ear. But I found it very interesting (Busoni is high on my list of composers whose music I want to investigate in more depth, and I'm always intrigued by his music when I do get chance to hear it.) I'll give it another listen in the near future. It would have been nice to have had a few more (and longer) musical examples, and rather less chit-chat (but that's obviously a standing criticism.) (I think that it was Sorabji's essay on Busoni in "Around Music" which first aroused my interest - I've always found that if Sorabji admired something, then it was a powerful recommendation.)
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Originally posted by peterthekeys View PostI was working when it came on, so I was only able to listen to it with half an ear. But I found it very interesting (Busoni is high on my list of composers whose music I want to investigate in more depth, and I'm always intrigued by his music when I do get chance to hear it.) I'll give it another listen in the near future. It would have been nice to have had a few more (and longer) musical examples, and rather less chit-chat (but that's obviously a standing criticism.) (I think that it was Sorabji's essay on Busoni in "Around Music" which first aroused my interest - I've always found that if Sorabji admired something, then it was a powerful recommendation.)
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Originally posted by Bryn View Post
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I bought this CD in 2013 to put a wrong right (I’d never really listened to Busoni). As wonderful as it might be, I still struggle with the work - rarely listening beyond the first movement (2nd mvt just begun as I type!). Even on my limited experience, I would recommend this performance without question.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI bought this CD in 2013 to put a wrong right (I’d never really listened to Busoni). As wonderful as it might be, I still struggle with the work - rarely listening beyond the first movement (2nd mvt just begun as I type!). Even on my limited experience, I would recommend this performance without question.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIt's a fine one, without doubt (and see from the front which piano he wisely used for it!); I still prefer Ogdon (despite the far less fine orchestral playing) as well as Donohoe and Hamelin (each conducted by Elder), but this one's certainly well worth having in a collection. I hope that you get around to listening to it all!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI ended up listening to it all the way through. I enjoyed it. On paper, it sounds as if it’s going to be OTT, but it’s not at all. I’ll definitely be returning to it.
I once told someone that when I heard the title The Piano Concerto I naturally assumed that this was the work being referred to rather than the one by Mr Nyman; likewise, I have been known (admitted partly in jest) to refer to the Busoni as The Italian Concerto...
It's a pity indeed that its sheer size and scope, the male chorus (who have to wait around an hour for their big moment) and the not inconsiderable demands on the pianist have between them contrived to keep the work off the concert platform only to be brought out of hiding on "special occasions", because it is by nature so very much a "standard repertoire" concerto in all the best senses of the phrase.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostGreat! What even Peter Donohoe - who's been deeply committed to the work for at least 30 years - describes as OTT and even vulgar in the fourth movement seems somehow to integrate into the fabric of the entire work so as never to stick out like a sore thumb or an Ivesian confrontation of opposites. Mark Elder and Fabio Luisi are two conductors whom I know of who have conducted the concerto with different pianists (I heard the latter live in Rome with Carlo Grante as soloist several years ago).
I once told someone that when I heard the title The Piano Concerto I naturally assumed that this was the work being referred to rather than the one by Mr Nyman; likewise, I have been known (admitted partly in jest) to refer to the Busoni as The Italian Concerto...
It's a pity indeed that its sheer size and scope, the male chorus (who have to wait around an hour for their big moment) and the not inconsiderable demands on the pianist have between them contrived to keep the work off the concert platform only to be brought out of hiding on "special occasions", because it is by nature so very much a "standard repertoire" concerto in all the best senses of the phrase.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI had no idea that anyone had actually described it as OTT, it just looks that way on paper. Its realisation in the performance that I have on CD, firmly contradicts that view.
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