If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
I like the First Piano Concerto. It's a very convincing essay in the Romantic "single extended movement" concertante genre that probably started with Weber's Konzertstück, and packs a great deal into its 20-minute span. What those two other bits of music they play after it are, and what they have to do with it, I have no idea.
>_>
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Zimmermann/Rattle, Cali? That does sound too ideal! :)
Give or take a few 'm' s and 'n' s, yes Bbm!
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
I enjoy the First when listening to it but it was very striking hearing it in such close juxtaposition to the Second which just came across as much more interesting - and that is no reflection on the performers .
I enjoy the First when listening to it but it was very striking hearing it in such close juxtaposition to the Second which just came across as much more interesting - and that is no reflection on the performers .
I envy you very much the chance to make that comparison. Should have got my act together!
A Prom repeat, perhaps...?
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
I'm very suspicious of that 'classic' epithet. To my ears, Curzon and Szell are so slow in the Adagio that the notes barely cohere into a line. And I find myself wishing that in the second subject of the first movement, Gilels would just get on with playing the tune in a straightforward manner. The BaL 1st concerto winner was Freire/Chailly, which is magnificent in every way and superbly recorded to boot.
I found that Freire/Chailly set rather underwhelming .
Like Barbirollians I was at the Sheffield City Hall concert (my first visit since regular attendances in the 1960s and 70s). I did feel that Sunwook Kim was having some difficulty in taming the City Hall's Steinway in the first movement of No. 1, though the subsequent movements sounded fine, and No. 2 after the interval was wonderfully engrossing, and a far more satisfying experience. Good to hear that both works have been recorded in the studio. Incidentally, I noticed that a gentleman sitting nearby had a large frying pan under his seat. I don't recall this happening in my visits of previous decades. Is this a new Northern concert-going tradition? He didn't use it on this occasion...
Perhaps because the reviews had been such raves I was expecting more . I shall dig them out and listen again - at the time I thought good but not the be all and end all they were presented as being .
My absolute favourites apart from Gilels are the aforementioned Curzon/Szell , Rubinstein/Reinerand the Kovacevich/Sawallisch on EMI in No1 and Solomon and Richter/Leinsdorf in No2 .
Like Barbirollians I was at the Sheffield City Hall concert (my first visit since regular attendances in the 1960s and 70s). I did feel that Sunwook Kim was having some difficulty in taming the City Hall's Steinway in the first movement of No. 1, though the subsequent movements sounded fine, and No. 2 after the interval was wonderfully engrossing, and a far more satisfying experience. Good to hear that both works have been recorded in the studio. Incidentally, I noticed that a gentleman sitting nearby had a large frying pan under his seat. I don't recall this happening in my visits of previous decades. Is this a new Northern concert-going tradition? He didn't use it on this occasion...
No frying pan under my seat ! Yes good to see on twitter that they have recorded the works as well .
Incidentally, I noticed that a gentleman sitting nearby had a large frying pan under his seat. I don't recall this happening in my visits of previous decades. Is this a new Northern concert-going tradition? He didn't use it on this occasion...
Tha' never knows when it might come in handy tha' knows!
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
There was a time when the idea of a desert island existence without the Brahms piano concerti would have been absurd. That's no longer true. But I always preferred the first concerto, I find it more unhinged, more thrilling, though the second certainly contains many beauties, voluptuous in a way. I always enjoyed the Arrau recording, but good recordings seem to abound.
When I was younger David Wilde came to our town to play both concertos on the same night, though at the time I didn't realise quite what a feat it was.
The best live performance of the First I ever heard was with Krystian Zimerman live at the RFH not long after he'd won the Chopin competition, an unprecedentedly electric experience for me in a classical concert hall (sadly there are few of his discs I've enjoyed particularly since, finding them somewhat over thought, with one very big exception of a disc he made playing and conducting the Chopin concerti with the specially formed Polish Festival Orchestra. It was revelatory to me at the time, and I tried to persuade everyone I knew who couldn't tolerate Chopin's way with an orchestra, to listen to it. I liked his early solo record of the Chopin Waltzes too.).
I've never got on with the second concerto, and always been incredibly moved by the first. The opening of the third movement of No 2 is the exceptional part for me (back in Dec 1982 I heard Peter Donohoe in Liverpool, very shortly after the Moscow Competition and that was a 'live-in-the-memory-forever' moment - in the same concert was an amazing Tchaikovsky 6 - Marek Janowski conducting - for once the audience didn't applaud after the third movement and there was real menace in the performance that I have never heard since). Backhaus playing No 2 on one of the Philips 100 Great Pianists discs is probably the most I've enjoyed it. But No 1 takes me to a different place altogether.
I've never got on with the second concerto, and always been incredibly moved by the first. No 1 takes me to a different place altogether.
Alone no longer!
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Comment