Having discovered that the fine piano concerto which I happened to catch during Through The Night a few hours ago was by Dvorak, I was reminded of an interview many years ago in which Garrick Ohlsson said it was his mission to establish this work as a mainstay of the concert hall repertoire. I don't think it's unfair to say that he hasn't succeeded (well, not yet). This led me to wonder why the popularity of one particular concerto by certain composers tends to condemn their other works in this genre to a greater or lesser degree of neglect and obscurity. Dvorak's cello concerto is an obvious example, and one particular work by each of Mendelssohn and Bruch has come to be heard to the exclusion of those composers' other concertos - which seems a pity.
'Other concertos are available'
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Some years ago I was at a concert where the 'other' Mendelssohn violin concerto was played. Despite the soloist's advocacy, and skilled performance of it, I wouldn't choose to listen to it again, and I don't think it a great work. Even if the 'other' concerto hadn't been written I'm not convinced the earlier one would have become a staple of the concert repertoire. Perhaps sometimes the reason for one concerto's dominance is that it is the better?
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostHaving discovered that the fine piano concerto which I happened to catch during Through The Night a few hours ago was by Dvorak, I was reminded of an interview many years ago in which Garrick Ohlsson said it was his mission to establish this work as a mainstay of the concert hall repertoire. I don't think it's unfair to say that he hasn't succeeded (well, not yet). This led me to wonder why the popularity of one particular concerto by certain composers tends to condemn their other works in this genre to a greater or lesser degree of neglect and obscurity. Dvorak's cello concerto is an obvious example, and one particular work by each of Mendelssohn and Bruch has come to be heard to the exclusion of those composers' other concertos - which seems a pity.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostThis led me to wonder why the popularity of one particular concerto by certain composers tends to condemn their other works in this genre to a greater or lesser degree of neglect and obscurity. Dvorak's cello concerto is an obvious example, and one particular work by each of Mendelssohn and Bruch has come to be heard to the exclusion of those composers' other concertos - which seems a pity.
In some cases it is probably related to the instrument involved: there is far less competition in cello and trumpet concertos, so they crop up more regularly perhaps? Doesn't explain the Bruch and Mendelssohn examples though.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI take it your reference to "Dvorak's cello concerto" was to his second, in B minor, rather than the first, in A major (a work which illustrates the point of your post very well.
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