The Bartok 3rd Concerto is certainly no rarity on record of course, usually as part of the complete set, with many famous recordings from Anda and Sandor, to Ashenazy and Donohoe, to Schiff, Kocsis, Grimaud, Bavouzet and beyond....
From all of which it would be near-impossible to choose a favourite. But the orchestral contribution is crucial. Long, Long Ago in a Galaxy Far Away I began with Anda/Fricsay on a rough Library Vinyl......now I usually reach first for Donohoe/Rattle or Bavouzet/Noseda.
Bartok Piano Concertos have often been garlanded with Awards from the Gramophone and elsewhere.... perhaps this starry, much-praised ubiquity has discouraged some from taking them on live....!
If anything I would have thought No.1 (almost as much a percussion concerto as one for piano) to be rarer as a separate concert piece; No.3 (his last completed composition) belongs to that final group of Bartok's later works after 1938 including the 2nd Violin Concerto, Divertimento and the Concerto for Orchestra, which tend to sound less rhythmically driven, discordant or percussive, and more tunefully approachable than his various earlier phases.
(One notes the close similarity in mood between the opening of the 3rd Piano Concerto's Religioso and the Tranquillo of Violin Concerto No.2...)
But I do think they work rather well as a sequential trilogy (even if you don't do it all in one go).
From all of which it would be near-impossible to choose a favourite. But the orchestral contribution is crucial. Long, Long Ago in a Galaxy Far Away I began with Anda/Fricsay on a rough Library Vinyl......now I usually reach first for Donohoe/Rattle or Bavouzet/Noseda.
Bartok Piano Concertos have often been garlanded with Awards from the Gramophone and elsewhere.... perhaps this starry, much-praised ubiquity has discouraged some from taking them on live....!
If anything I would have thought No.1 (almost as much a percussion concerto as one for piano) to be rarer as a separate concert piece; No.3 (his last completed composition) belongs to that final group of Bartok's later works after 1938 including the 2nd Violin Concerto, Divertimento and the Concerto for Orchestra, which tend to sound less rhythmically driven, discordant or percussive, and more tunefully approachable than his various earlier phases.
(One notes the close similarity in mood between the opening of the 3rd Piano Concerto's Religioso and the Tranquillo of Violin Concerto No.2...)
But I do think they work rather well as a sequential trilogy (even if you don't do it all in one go).
Comment