Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur
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Trouble is, it's not easy to decide quite what is Elgar's 'piano' music. His only pieces that don't exist in other forms are the Concert Allegro, the late Sonatina (written for beginners), and the short 'parlour' pieces In Smyrna, Chantant, Griffinesque, Presto, Skizze, Serenade and Adieu. That's it. A few others are better known in the orchestral dress he also gave them (May-Song, for instance). There's also the piano arrangement of the Enigma, that he made for home performance. All have been recorded.
The only piece of any weight is the Concert Allegro, which is actually incomplete. Elgar tinkered with it for years (it was performed by Fanny Davies) but was never satisfied with it; it sounds it, too. The score has many pencilled suggestions for orchestration, but he never did anything more with it. There is a recording of it as a piano & orchestra piece, the arrangement by Ian Farrington.
There's also the Five Improvisations (DON has transcribed them, so they have been published) that HMV recorded with Elgar at the piano. They weren't exactly improvisations, because EE arrived at the studio with sketches, but he then tinkered around them to provide five takes. Again, the musical quality is not very high, but remembering that the 'Enigma' came out of Elgar's absent-minded improvising at the piano, the recordings are valuable.
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