Mostrando postagens com marcador Piers Lane. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Piers Lane. Mostrar todas as postagens

16.1.22

MOSZKOWSKI : Piano Concerto In A Minor Op 17 : PADEREWSKI : Piano Concerto In E Major Op 59 (Piers Lane · BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra · Jerzy Maksymiuk) (1991) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 1 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Of the myriad piano concertos composed in the second half of the nineteenth century all but a handful are forgotten. The survivors are played with a regularity that borders on the monotonous—the ubiquitous Tchaikovsky No 1, the Grieg, Saint-Saëns’s Second (in G minor), the two by Brahms and, really, that is just about all there is on offer. Pianists, promoters and record companies play it safe and opt for the familiar. Even a masterpiece can become an unwelcome guest, especially when subjected to an unremarkable outing by yet another indifferent player, as happens so frequently today.

How refreshing, then, to have the dust brushed off two forgotten specimens of late nineteenth-century piano concertos and rendered clean and polished for inspection again. Refreshing and rewarding, for both are exactly the sort of pieces that make one wonder why we are forced to live off such a limited concerto diet. How is it that such appealing, well-crafted, imaginative works with their high spirits and luscious tunes could have vanished from the repertoire? Why is it that neither is played as frequently as, say, the Grieg Concerto? Or instead of it? What is it about them that has failed to put them in the classical pop charts? Listening to them afresh it is a teasing question to answer; the longer one ponders the matter the fewer become the justifiable, verifiable reasons why today’s audiences so rarely have the opportunity to enjoy works such as these two delightful crowd-pleasers. It is time for those who promote and play piano music to be more adventurous and imaginative in their programming before this particular corner of the repertoire dies a death from staleness and stultification.

‘After Chopin,’ wrote Paderewski, ‘Moritz Moszkowski best understands how to write for the piano, and his writing embraces the whole gamut of piano technique.’ The two pianist-composers had more than their art in common. Both were Poles (though Moszkowski was born in Breslau, then the capital of Silesia in Germany). Both were witty, cultivated men. Moszkowski’s most celebrated bon mot immortalised him—a riposte to the pompous pronouncement by Hans von Bülow, ‘Bach, Beethoven, Brahms: Tous les autres sont des crétins’ (‘All the others are idiots’), to which Moszkowski replied: ‘Mendelssohn, Meyerbeer and your humble servant Moritz Moszkowski: Tous les autres sont des chrétiens!’ (‘All the others are christians!’). Paderewski’s most famous line, incidentally, though probably apocryphal, also concerned a play on words. When mistaken by a wealthy American hostess for a famous polo player, Paderewski is supposed to have replied, ‘No,he is a rich soul who plays polo—I am a poor Pole who plays solo.’

Moszkowski also helped Paderewski in seeing that some of the younger man’s work was published. But there similarities end. As far as their lives and careers went, Moszkowski’s beginning mirrored Paderewski’s end; Padereski’s beginning mirrored Moszkowski’s end.

Born in 1854 into a wealthy family, Moritz Moszkowski began music studies at an early age in Dresden, continued at the Stern Conservatory in Berlin and then went on to Theodor Kullak, a pupil of Czerny, at the Neue Akademie der Tonkunst. (Among his fellow students there were the brothers Philip and Xaver Scharwenka who remained friends throughout his life.) He made his debut as a concert pianist in Berlin when he was nineteen and for the next 24 years gave recitals all over Europe, taught at Kullak’s Academy, conducted and composed. When he settled in Paris at the age of 43 he was a famous and well-respected musician. He was also very wealthy for, early on in his career, he had written two pieces of music which were among the most popular piano compositions of the last century. In every piano stool in the land you could find a copy of his Serenade, Op 15 No 1, and the Spanish Dances, Op 12, for piano duet.

He and his wife (the sister of Cécile Chaminade) were a popular couple, well-connected and generous in their help of other musicians. Moszkowski, like Grieg and Chopin, was more at home with the piano than anything else, though he achieved some success in London, at least, as a composer of large-scale symphonic works—Joan of Arc, for example (almost certainly an influence on Richard Strauss’s Death and Transfiguration), three Suites for Orchestra, incidental music to Don Juan and Faust, an opera Boabdil (1892) and ballet Laurin (1896). There is also the splendid, romantic Violin Concerto, Op 30—a show-stopper that, curiously, has never found a champion.

But of all the melodious and elegant works of Moritz Moszkowski it is his Piano Concerto in E, Op 59, that most strongly begs for revival. It is not a short work and it is not an easy work for the soloist, but its grateful pianistic writing, its memorable themes and its sunny optimism make its present neglect quite incomprehensible. No one could pretend that it is deep music, but if, as one writer put it, ‘it fails to stir the intellect, it sets the pulses tingling’. Were it to be given at a major music festival in place of the usual fare it would bring the house down; given a televised performance, it would re-establish itself as one of the most popular concertos in the repertoire— a status which it enjoyed for many years before the First World War, especially in Germany and the UK (the composer himself was the soloist in its British premiere at a Philharmonic Concert on 12 May 1898).

The Concerto is dedicated ‘à Monsieur Josef Casimir Hofmann’—a singular tribute to a 22-year-old—who had studied briefly with Moszkowski in his teens. It is one of the very few written in the key of E major. It was also virtually the last large-scale work that Moszkowski attempted. Ten years after its composition he was, at the age of 54, already a recluse, constantly ill. He had lost his wife and daughter, his son had been summoned to serve in the French army, and he was, as one friend described him, ‘no longer buoyed by ambition’. He sold all the copyrights of his music and invested the enormous capital in German, Polish and Russian bonds. With the advent of the First World War he lost everything and lingered on till 1925, too sick in body and mind to do anything, dying of stomach cancer in Paris, a pauper.

The musical world still looks down its nose at the mention of the name of Moritz Moszkowski. He is all-too-readily pigeon-holed by the derogatory label ‘polished salon music composer’. He was not an original, one is reminded; he added nothing new to musical language; he wrote nothing that others had not written better before him. But are these good enough reasons to ignore the facile, joyous, champagne-brilliance of Moszkowski’s music and help to dissuade all but a handful of imaginative pianists from tackling his entertaining Piano Concerto?

Ignacy Jan Paderewski’s Piano Concerto in A minor, Op 17, is chronologically the older of the two works, though written by the younger of the two composers. Paderewski, born in November 1860 in Kurylowka, Podolia (Russian-Poland), was a still virtually unknown 28-year-old when he composed his one Concerto. (His only other large scale work for piano and orchestra is the Fantaisie Polonaise, Op 19, written some five years later.) Though he had made his debut at the tender age of eleven, his career proper as a solo pianist did not take off until his mid-twenties after extensive studies with the great pedagogue Theodor Leschetizky. A spectacular recital in Paris in March 1888 and a further one in Vienna in November the same year were the starting points for a performing career that would make his name synonymous with the piano and lend it near-legendary status during his lifetime.

Before his lessons with Leschetizky, his musical life had been a penurious uncertainty for his early dreams of becoming a soloist were wedded to those of becoming a composer. He took courses in composition at the Warsaw Conservatory between 1875 and 1877 while simultaneously touring provincial Russian towns with the Polish violinist Cielewicz. In 1878 he joined the piano faculty in Warsaw, but left four years later to study composition with Friedrich Kiel in Berlin. Here he met Anton Rubinstein who, at that time, occupied the position in the piano world which Liszt had held (and which was to shortly become Paderewski’s). Rubinstein was of the opinion that Paderewski should take his compositional abilites more seriously and the younger man, with characteristic diligence and determination, set about doing just that. He studied orchestration with Heinrich Urban in Berlin and then, financed by the the celebrated Polish actress Modjeska, left for Vienna and his seminal tutelage with Leschetizky.

1888, the year of Paderewski’s Paris and Vienna debuts, was also the year of the composition of the Piano Concerto—the year when the two driving forces of his creative life emerged finally from the wilderness to meet in triumph. His state of mind at the time is etched into every bar of the concerto, revelling in exuberant pianism and fervent emotion.

Paderewski began its composition in his apartment in Vienna, after his triumphant recital in Paris. ‘I wrote it in a very short time. I scored it in ’89 in Paris,’ he recalled in his memoirs, published in 1939:

    When I finished [the] concerto, I was still lacking in experience. I had not even heard it performed—it was something I was longing for. I wanted to have the opinion then of a really great orchestral composer. I needed it. So without further thought I took my score and went directly to Saint-Saëns. [Saint-Saëns had been unfailingly kind to him on previous occasions, attending his concerts when he had played the French master’s Fourth Piano Concerto.] But I was rather timid … I realised on second thoughts that it was, perhaps, presumption on my part to go to him. Still I went to his house nevertheless. I was so anxious for his opinion. He opened the door himself. ‘Oh, Paderewski, it’s you. Come in,’ he said. ‘Come in. What do you want?’ I realised even before he spoke that he was in a great hurry and irritable, probably writing something as usual and not wanting to be interrupted. ‘What can I do for you? What do you want?’ I hesitated what to answer. I knew he was annoyed. I had come at the wrong moment … ‘I came to ask your opinion about my piano concerto,’ I said very timidly. ‘I ——.’ ‘My dear Paderewski,’ he cried, ‘I have not the time. I cannot talk to you today. I cannot.’ He took a few steps impatiently about the room. ‘Well, you are here so I suppose I must receive you. Let me hear your concerto. Will you play it for me?’ He took the score and read it as I played. He listened very attentively. At the Andante he stopped me, saying, ‘What a delightful Andante! Will you kindly repeat that?’ I repeated it. I began to feel encouraged. He was interested. Finally he said, ‘There is nothing to be changed. You may play it whenever you like. It will please the people. It’s quite ready. You needn’t be afraid of it, I assure you.’ So the interview turned out very happily after all, and he sent me off with high hopes and renewed courage. At that moment in my career, his assurance that the concerto was ready made me feel a certain faith in my work that I might not have had then.

Paderewski had wanted to play the premiere of the work himself but Madame Essipoff (a formidable pianist and Leschetizky’s wife at that moment) said, ‘as she had introduced some of his (Paderewski’s) compositions already in Vienna, she would like to do this concerto too.’ She had been studying it for several weeks. It was a request that Paderewski acceded to somewhat reluctantly but was, after all, ‘glad to have her do it, because I had not studied the concerto sufficiently for a great public performance.’

Thanks to the influence of Leschetizky, to whom Paderewski dedicated the work, the first performance was conducted by no less than Hans Richter, possibly the most influential European conductor of the day, and had ‘an immediate success’.

To re-apply the words of Sir Thomas Beecham (who, incidentally, was coached by Moszkowski in orchestration), these two Concertos have a ‘refinement and distinction that never fails to fall fragrantly on the ear, and offers to the musical amateur, who may feel at times that the evolution of his art is becoming a little too much for either his understanding or enjoyment, a soothing retreat where he may effectively rally his shattered forces.’ Hyperion
        
Moritz Moszkowski (1854-1925)    
    
Piano Concerto in E major Op 59 [36'55]
        
Ignacy Jan Paderewski (1860-1941)    
    
Piano Concerto in A minor Op 17 [35'07]

Conductor – Jerzy Maksymiuk
Leader – Geoffrey Trabichoff
Orchestra – BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Piano – Piers Lane

d'ALBERT : Piano Concerto No 1 In B Minor (First Recording) • Piano Concerto No 2 In E Major (Piers Lane · BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra · Alun Francis) (1994) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 9 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

When d’Albert appeared in 1881 at one of Hans Richter’s concerts in London he played his own Piano Concerto in A, but the work was never published and has not survived. However, from a review in The Musical Times of November 1881 we can reasonably deduce that the Concerto had the traditional three movements. The reviewer stated that it was ‘uncompromising in its pretensions to rank with the chief of its kind; largely developed, ambitious in style and character, and rigidly observant of classical form, while redundant in matter’.

This criticism remains a common one to be directed at composers so young, and is hardly surprising given the stubborn confidence we know d’Albert had in his work. However, limited note does seem to have been taken since three years elapsed before the appearance of the B minor Concerto, Op 2 (which is now known as the ‘First’). It was dedicated to Liszt and the title page of the score indicates the work to be in einem Satz (in one movement). It still betrays an excessive desire to display the pianistic virtuosity of which d’Albert was so justly proud, but this becomes fused with considerable imaginative and creative ability. Despite being slightly over-indulgent on occasions, especially in the piano writing, the melodic content is sufficiently strong to sustain the listener’s interest and attention over a span longer in duration than that of many a concerto with the usual three movements.

Although broadly working around an extended A-B-A form, d’Albert adds a substantial and innovative fugal cadenza before moving on to a short scherzo section where he reworks the main opening theme of the Concerto in 6/8 time. The work concludes in typically grandiose style. The B minor Concerto is a young composer’s tour de force and a reminder that at heart d’Albert remained a pianist rather than a composer.

Concerto No 2 in E major, Op 12, lasting for just under half the duration of the ‘First’ Concerto, provides something of a contrast. It dates from 1893, by which time time d’Albert had reached maturity as a composer. This Concerto is also in one movement and cyclic in form, but consists of four basic contrasting sections flowing into each other. D’Albert uses his thematic material quite sparingly, but it is well developed in its various guises throughout the Concerto’s more coherent structure. In the same year d’Albert staged Der Rubin, the first of his twenty or so operas. He met with little success in this venture, but never returned to serious composition for the instrument he so loved.

Ebenezer Prout, that venerable arch-conservative representative of the Victorian English musical establishment, Sir Arthur Sullivan and Sir John Stainer had all worked to coach the reluctant composer in his early life, but d’Albert’s musical language and roots hardly shifted from the romanticism of mid-nineteenth-century Germany. His inspiration came from Brahms, Schumann, Liszt, and even Wagner. Nonetheless, d’Albert’s compositional achievements stand and, as these two Concertos show, he certainly could produce music to command the attention: music which deserves treatment far less dismissive than the oblivion in which it has languished. Revival is long overdue, and the melodic appeal and skilful craftsmanship of these works deserve to win many devotees in the modern world of over-standardized and unadventurous concert-programming. Hyperion

Eugen d'Albert (1864-1932)

Piano Concerto No 1 in B minor Op 2[44'12]
    
Piano Concerto No 2 in E major Op 12[21'06]

Credits :
Conductor – Alun Francis
Leader – Bernard Docherty
Orchestra – BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Piano – Piers Lane

PARRY : Piano Concerto In F Sharp Major (First Recording) ♦ STANFORD : Piano Concerto No 1 In G Major (First Recording) (Piers Lane · BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra · Martyn Brabbins) (1995) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 12 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Parry was indebted to the grand Romantic tradition of the late nineteenth century, and his colourful and exuberant concerto probably lays claim to be the first British piece written in such a style worthy of comparison with contemporary continental models. It is a virtuoso work, extrovertly conceived for piano and undoubtedly written for the technical proficiency of Edward Dannreuther, one of the most important exponents of the grand concerto style in London during the 1870s and 1880s.

Stanford deliberately set out for his concerto to be ‘of a bright and butterfly nature’ to contrast with the usual epic tradition of the late nineteenth century. Much to the composer’s regret, the concerto was never published even though, as this recording bears out, it testifies to all that is distinctive, eloquent and craftsmanly in Stanford’s instrumental work. Having languished unperformed for a hundred years, these two concertos are here recorded for the first time. Hyperion

Sir Hubert Parry (1848-1918)
    
Piano Concerto in F sharp major [34'44]
        
Sir Charles Villiers Stanford (1852-1924)    
    
Piano Concerto No 1 in G major Op 59 [38'05]

Credits :
Conductor – Martyn Brabbins
Leader [BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra] – Bernard Docherty
Orchestra – BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Piano – Piers Lane

15.1.22

KULLAK : Piano Concerto In C Minor, Op 55 (First Recording) ♦ DREYSCHOCK : Piano Concerto In D Minor, Op 137 (First Recording) (Piers Lane · BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra · Niklas Willén) (1999) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 21 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

Dreyschock and Kullak are today only footnotes in the biographies of those who emerged from the nineteenth century as giants of the musical world, but in their time both artists were very significant indeed.

Both were pianists (and born in the same year) but had very different careers. Dreyschock seems to have been a bit of a showman and played loud and fast, he made a speciality of his left hand work and was one of the first to compose for this esoteric medium. His large output of compositions seem never to have made much impression and it is now purely as a performer that he is remembered. His only concerto (not to be confused with his Concertstück once recorded on LP) is rather Mendelssohnian and has a particularly energetic finale.

Although by all accounts also a superb virtuoso Kullak gravitated towards teaching and became perhaps the most prolific teacher of the nineteenth century century; he eventually founded his own Academy in Berlin which had a roll of around 1000 piano students at its peak.

His only concerto was published in 1855 and is quite conservative for its time, though it may have been written earlier. It clearly derives from the tradition of Hummel and contains much brilliant finger work interspersed with a lyricism very reminiscent of Chopin. It may not be profound, but it is both beautiful and entertaining and must surely be one of the most enjoyable 'lost' concertos around. Hyperion

Theodor Kullak (1818-1882)
                    
Piano Concerto in C minor Op 55 [34'47]

Alexander Dreyschock (1818-1869)     

Piano Concerto in D minor Op 137 [24'19]

Credits :
Conductor – Niklas Willén
Leader – Elizabeth Layton
Orchestra – BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Piano – Piers Lane

14.1.22

DELIUS : Piano Concerto In C Minor Op 17 (Original Version) IRELAND : Piano Concerto In E Flat Major • Legend ( Piers Lane · Ulster Orchestra · David Lloyd-Jones) (2006) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 39 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

By some stretch of the imagination, the piano concertos of Delius and Ireland could be considered Romantic piano concertos and thus merit inclusion in Hyperion's 39th volume of the The Romantic Concerto series. Delius' concerto from 1904 is the more obviously Romantic, with its chromatic melodies, hazy harmonies, and languid forms. Ireland's concerto from 1930 along with his Legend from 1932 are, on the other hand, more of a reach chronologically but not at all emotionally: Ireland was in love with the pianist for whom he wrote both works and their romance is in full bloom in the central Lento espressivo. Piers Lane is a persuasive advocate in both works, with an agile technique and a full, rich tone. David Lloyd-Jones, one of the best non-London based British conductors, leads the Ulster Orchestra in strong and sympathetic performances. Listeners who know Delius' other orchestral works may be disappointed by his overtly Romantic but more weakly imagined piano concerto, but listeners who don't already know the powerful and passionate music of John Ireland will be pleasantly surprised by the high quality of his art. Hyperion's sound is a bit less present than usual, but still nicely deep and round. James Leonard  

Frederick Delius (1862-1934)

Piano Concerto In C Minor (Original Version 1904) [28:41]

John Ireland (1879-1962)

Legend (1933) [11:38]

Piano Concerto In E Flat Major (1930) [23:52]

Credits :
Conductor – David Lloyd-Jones
Leader – David Adams
Orchestra – Ulster Orchestra
Piano – Piers Lane

Alnæs : Piano Concerto In D Major, Op 27 (First Recording) ♦ Sinding : Piano Concerto In D Flat Major, Op 6 (Piers Lane · Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra · Andrew Litton) (2006) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 42 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless

For the 42nd entry in its The Romantic Piano Concerto series (is it already really that many?!), Hyperion travels to the chilly land of Norway. The one and only piano concerto from this region of the world -- and it is a very famous one -- that automatically comes to mind is Edvard Grieg's Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 16, a youthful, formally sprawling work that stands as a landmark among romantic piano concertos. The concerti by Norwegians Eyvind Alnaes and Christian Sinding postdate the Grieg by at least two decades and are both more concise and assured by comparison, not to mention lush and strongly melodic with big tunes and showy virtuosic stuff for the soloist. For Alnaes, his D major concerto from 1914 is the exception rather than the rule; he was an organist and the most prominent Norwegian art song composer of his day. Alnaes' Piano Concerto in D major is the last large-scale work among only a few that he completed. While it superficially evokes the manner of Rachmaninoff, it is pleasant without being particularly engaging. One does not regret Alnaes' investment in song; this concerto confirms that he put the best of himself into his shorter vocal works, though it has its moments and is worth listening to at least one time.

Christian Sinding was once viewed as being direct heir to Grieg, although this is wrong -- he was German trained, lived in Germany for nearly four decades, and it shows in his music; if anything he was a lesser heir to Robert Schumann. Sinding's concerto is full of the flashy sprays of virtuosic filigree encountered in his once popular salon piece Rustle of Spring, and yet that will take far less of one's time than this concerto, dating to 1889 but revised in 1901. It belongs to its era and is an inferior effort in comparison even to the Alnaes in that it's rather dull. Pianist Piers Lane makes the best case imaginable for both concerti; his playing is both sensitive and keen, bringing out the lyric side of the writing while making more ostentatious sections impressive sounding by the mere effortlessness of his handling of them. The Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, under Andrew Litton, makes a somewhat less than precise impression and is a little loose in spots. These are not essential romantic piano concerti; they both sound nice, but fail to stick with the listener, not a quality one can attribute to the piano concerto of Grieg, despite its flaws in formal construction. Uncle Dave Lewis  

Eyvind Alnæs (1872-1932)
Piano Concerto in D major, Op. 27

Christian Sinding (1856-1941)
Piano Concerto in D flat major, Op. 6

Credits :
Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra
Andrew Litton
Piers Lane (piano)

11.1.22

HILL : Piano Concerto In A Major • Piano Sonata In A Major ♦ BOYLE : Piano Concerto In D Minor (Piers Lane · Adelaide Symphony Orchestra · Johannes Fritzsch) (2016) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 69 | FLAC (tracks), lossless

Hyperion's survey of the Romantic piano concerto charges on with this, its 69th volume, devoted to a pair of Australian composers. Two of the three works here are receiving their first recordings, which may tell you that they fell out of the repertory quickly. The Piano Concerto in D minor of George Frederick Boyle was apparently the first such work by an Australian composer. It was written not in Oz, but America, where Boyle went on to teach at several top conservatories and numbered Aaron Copland and Samuel Barber among his students. Boyle studied with Busoni in Germany, but little of that composer's style is audible in this attractively textured, but conventional, three-movement concerto. More interesting is the sonata-concerto pair by Alfred Hill (1869-1960); the Piano Concerto in A major, of 1941, is a substantial reworking of the Piano Sonata in A major from the 1910s (which is interesting in itself). This work, too, is built on Romantic forms, but they're treated freely enough to hold your attention. Sample the opening movement of either work, where the slow introduction gives rise to the title "The Question" (it actually seems to contain questions and answers). Neither one of these works seems to be truly of the early 20th century, but the performances by Piers Lane and the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra under Johannes Fritzsch are vivacious, and the album is both enjoyable and of interest to those intrigued by the history of Australian music. James Manheim  
Tracklist :
Piano Concerto in A major (26:02)
Composed By – Alfred Hill

Piano Concerto in D minor (28:47)
Composed By – George Frederick Boyle

Piano Sonata in A major (24:47)
Composed By – Alfred Hill

Credits :
Conductor – Johannes Fritzsch
Orchestra – Adelaide Symphony Orchestra
Piano – Piers Lane

RIES : Piano Concertos Nos 8 & 9 (Piers Lanee • The Orchestra Now • Leon Botstein) (2018) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 75 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Beethoven reputedly said of his pupil Ferdinand Ries that he was talented but that he "imitates me too much," and the few earlier recordings of Ries' piano concertos, naturally enough taken from the first part of his career when he was a star virtuoso, did nothing to challenge that evaluation. This album, however, contains Ries' last two concertos and is an entirely different story. By the early 1830s, Ries was not such a renowned figure, but he was clearly keeping up with new trends in the piano music of Hummel, Field, and even perhaps Chopin, of whom the middle Introduction and Polonaise is strongly reminiscent. The two concertos are spacious works with ornamented figuration, chromatic modulations, and, yes, a bit of Beethoven, but Beethoven is present in little quotations or strong allusions, indicating perhaps that the student by this time was confident enough of his own identity. Sample perhaps one of the slow movements, where Ries' skill as an orchestrator is on full display. Pianist Piers Lane and New York state's little-known Orchestra Now give the music its appropriate weight under scholar-conductor Leon Botstein, and Hyperion's engineers do very well in the unfamiliar surroundings of an auditorium at New York's Bard College. An above-average entry in Hyperion's Romantic Piano Concerto series, and one that has contributions to make to the music history books. James Manheim  
Tracklist :
Piano Concerto No 8 In A Flat Major 'Gruss An Den Rhein'    (29:56)
Piano Concerto No 9 In G Minor    (28:38)
Credits :
Conductor – Leon Botstein
Orchestra – The Orchestra Now

Piano – Piers Lane 

10.1.22

RUBBRA ♦ BAX ♦ BLISS : Piano Concertos (Piers Lane • The Orchestra Now • Leon Botstein) (2020) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 81 | FLAC (tracks), lossless

The Hyperion label's Romantic Piano Concerto series here reaches its 81st volume. If there's any sign of a diminution, it's that one of the present works was written in 1938 and the other in 1955, neither date conventionally placed in the Romantic era. Yet the two main attractions here can indubitably be described as Romantic, and both are entirely distinctive pieces well worth a revival; neither is commonly heard, even in Britain. The Piano Concerto No. 1 in G, Op. 85 (the lack of designation of major or minor is perhaps intentional), of Edmund Rubbra, is the later of the two works. The work was dedicated to Indian sarod player Ali Akbar Khan, an influence audible from the beginning of the work (beautifully handled here by pianist Piers Lane and the Orchestra Now under Leon Botstein) and elegantly integrated into concerto form. It's also very much the work of a symphonist, which was Rubbra's primary métier; the piano is sometimes a soloist, sometimes an element of orchestral color. The slow movement is a lovely nocturne. The Piano Concerto in B flat major, Op. 58, of Arthur Bliss, was composed for the 1939 New York World's Fair and dedicated to the American people. Perhaps this circumstance brought forth an unusually broad musical language from the once-modernist Bliss, who remarked, "Surely the Americans are at heart the most romantic in the world." The finale is an energetic and technically challenging romp that lives up to Bliss's stated ambition to produce a British "Emperor" Concerto. All of the musicians approach the music with freshness and commitment, and the whole project is of interest far beyond the usual circles of Romantic music specialists and enthusiasts. James Manheim  
Tracklist :
Piano Concerto In G, Op. 85 (29:54)
Composed By – Edmund Rubbra
Morning Song 'Maytime In Sussex' 7:38
Composed By – Arnold Bax
Piano Concerto In B Flat Major (39:54)
Composed By – Arthur Bliss
Credits :
Conductor – Leon Botstein
Piano – Piers Lane

ESBJÖRN SVENSSON TRIO — Winter In Venice (1997) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Esbjörn Svensson has stood not only once on stage in Montreux. He was already a guest in the summer of 1998 at the jazz festival on Lake Gen...