Tchaikovsky's Second Piano Concerto & Concert Fantasy
Amy | 08/21/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"It was after the seperation from his wife that Tchaikovsky started work on his Piano Concerto No. 2 taking his mind off the severe depression he suffered from. He dedicated the concerto to his friend Nikolay Rubinstein, who initially criticized his Piano Concerto No. 1, although that concerto was now a part of Rubinstein's concert repertoire. He now hoped that Nikolay Rubinstein would give the first performance, but of course Runinstein criticized his second concerto as well saying it was too drawn out and boring. Tchaikovsky composed 3 piano concertos in his lifetime. I have to say the second is my favorite. It is long, but there is non stop passionate music through the whole piece. It is a shame his second concerto is literally never performed. Tchaikovsky's Concert Fantasy for piano and orchestra was first performed in Moscow in 1885 with Taneyev as soloist and was heard in St Petersburg the following spring with the same pianist. It had been inspired by the playing of the pianist and composer Eugen d Albert, who had given concerts in Moscow the previous winter. It has a very russian melancholy sound throughout the whole piece. This is a wonderful cd of two of Tchaikovsky's best works that are rarely recorded or heard.
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Rarely Heard Piano & Orchestra Works by Tchaikovsky
J Scott Morrison | Middlebury VT, USA | 04/16/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
"[Caveat: I was only vaguely familiar with the Second Concerto and not at all with the Concert Fantasy before obtaining this CD. And I have not heard the recordings of these works by Mikhail Pletnev, Peter Donohoe and Bernd Glemser.]
Like many, I had been under the impression that Tchaikovsky's Second Piano Concerto could not stand comparison with his extremely popular First. But I was wrong. It is a mystery to me, after having now listened to this recording several times, why it is not played more often . Some have criticized its lack of memorable melodies, but that strikes me as hogwash. There are some gorgeous melodies here -- consider the main melody of the second movement, or the catchy first theme of the finale. As far as that goes, in fact, the opening melody of the first movement is one of Tchaikovsky's most memorable. Some have criticized the concerto's construction. I actually find it to be the equal of (no, superior to) that of the First.
I suspect part of the reason for the concerto's lack of popularity is that it was published in an edition that Tchaikovsky pupil Alexander Siloti prepared after the composer's death. In that edition he did grievous harm to the construction of both the first and second movements. Most damaging, he removed the concertante portions of the second movement featuring solo violin and cello, one of the concerto's most original and striking features. That edition was the one usually used until a new edition made from Tchaikovsky's manuscript was made available some fifty years later. On this recording we get Tchaikovsky's original.
The 'Concert Fantasy' is even less often heard. It is a truncated concerto of two movements, the second of which was made from remnants of a discarded movement for Tchaikovsky's Third Orchestral Suite. It was very popular after its premiere but within perhaps twenty years practically disappeared from concert programs . It is virtuosic and beautifully orchestrated but, according to Tchaikovsky biographer David Brown, its 'crippling weakness is that it contains not one really strong idea, yet its very original structure suffices to show that Tchaikovsky was concerned to fashion something more than a mere showpiece.' The second movement, 'Contrastes', is structurally interesting but otherwise only fitfully memorable.
The performances here are quite good. Tempi in the Second Concerto tend to be somewhat faster than I might have expected but exciting for all that. Konstantin Scherbakov, who has become one of Naxos's most frequently used piano soloists, is a very fine performer -- his recordings of the First and Third Concertos of Tchaikovsky are outstanding -- and he does not let us down here. The soulful violin and cello soloists in the concerto's second movement are Andrey Kudryavtsev and Dmitry Yablonsky. The latter is the conductor as well; he, too, makes frequent appearances on Naxos recordings and is particularly fine, with his Russian Philharmonic Orchestra, in Russian literature.
Scott Morrison
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