Composed in 1882/3, Rimsky-Korsakov’s Piano Concerto was the last of a
series of works written in the very happy middle period of his life;
other compositions of this period, rich in charming lyricism, included
the opera The Snow Maiden and the orchestral Szakza (‘Fairy Tale’). The
Concerto was first performed in March 1884 at one of Balakirev’s Free
School concerts in St Petersburg and was the last work of Rimsky to be
wholly approved of by his erstwhile mentor. While the lyricism is still
sincere and deeply felt in the Concerto, the work also foreshadows the
master artificer of the later years. Dedicated to the memory of Liszt,
it is indebted to that composer in its single-movement structure (akin
to Liszt’s Second Concerto in A major) and in its virtuosic decorative
pianism. Unlike the Liszt Concerto, however, Rimsky-Korsakov’s is based
on only one theme—No 18 from Balakirev’s seminal folksong collection
which had been published in 1866.
After four prefatory bars, the
folksong is heard on the solo bassoon and again, not long afterwards, on
the clarinet. This slow introduction is followed by an Allegretto in
the rhythm of a polonaise (‘quasi polacca’), an Andante mosso middle
section and a final Allegro, so the basic three-movement form of the
conventional concerto is adhered to, but telescoped into a single
movement. The metamorphoses of the folksong are always felicitous, and
are very clear to the listener. The widely-spaced left-hand
accompanimental figure in the lovely central Andante is itself based on
the opening of the folksong, while the melodic material is derived from
the second part of the song. After this has reached an impassioned
climax, the final Allegro is ushered in by vigorous piano chords
followed by upward octave semiquaver whole tone scales, and the delight
of Balakirev in the genuine warm-hearted lyricism, the well-written
bravura passages and the thoroughly appropriate use of the folksong,
allows us to place the work still firmly within the Russian nationalist
orbit. Furthermore, it influenced concerted pieces by many later Russian
composers, including Glazunov, Arensky and, most particularly,
Rachmaninov, whose Piano Concerto No 1 was to be written less than a
decade later.
It was towards the end of 1855, while he was still
in his teens, that the brilliant young pianist and composer Balakirev
was brought to St Petersburg from Nizhny-Novgorod by his patron A D
Ulybyshev, and his first, very successful, public appearance was as
soloist in this concerto movement in February, 1856. It is the work of a
young lion who has thoroughly absorbed his sources, especially Chopin
in this case (Chopin’s E minor Concerto was to remain a favourite of
Balakirev’s all his life). Both the main subjects of the movement are
heard in the lengthy opening orchestral tutti, and occur in piano solo
versions after the entry of that instrument, as well as in many other
forms in the course of the movement. The music must have been especially
prepared for the performance, but afterwards Balakirev turned his
attention to his Overture on a Spanish march theme given to him by
Glinka, to whom he had recently been introduced, and to a very important
Overture based on Russian folksongs, and so this delightful first
movement was destined to remain on its own, for, by the time he took up
he took up his pen for more concerto writing, the experience he had
gained in the works already mentioned as well as in the superb overture
and incidental music to Shakespeare’s King Lear meant that it was to a
new concerto that he turned.
This Concerto was started in 1861
and is in E fiat major, the key of Liszt’s first Piano Concerto;
Balakirev was also looking at Anton Rubinstein’s second Concerto and
Litolff’s fourth at the time. By the end of 1862 he had completed the
first movement and extemporised the rest of the Concerto to his circle,
including not only Mussorgsky but Rimsky-Korsakov, who was particularly
delighted with the result. But Balakirev abandoned the Concerto and
could not be prevailed upon to return to it until 1906, and even then he
died in 1910 having added in its entirety only the second movement;
Sergei Liapunov completed the finale in accordance with the composer’s
wishes which, as his closest associate in the later years, he knew well
enough.
The first subject occurs at the beginning of a short
orchestral tutti and is clearly destined for a heroic role. It has a
certain affinity with the opening of Beethoven’s ‘Eroica’ Symphony (in E
flat) and also with Schumann’s E flat Symphony (No 3, ‘The Rhenish’),
of which Balakirev was very fond. The principal second subject is
introduced by the piano in the far-flung key of G flat major—and is
recapitulated not, as one would expect, in E flat but in D major. This
type of semitonal relationship was an important facet of Balakirev’s
style, and the key scheme demonstrates his refusal to allow himself to
be moulded in a conventional fashion. This is also shown in the remote
key of the strikingly beautiful slow movement, B minor. The main theme
is the Russian Orthodox Requiem chant ‘So sviatymi upokoi’, played at
first by the orchestra after six bars of modulatory introduction, and
impeccably treated throughout. The second subject, in D major, sheds a
ray of hope in distinguished opposition to, or rather co-existence with,
its neighbour. After considerable development of the Requiem theme, it
is recapitulated on the full orchestra, with sonorous brass and
brilliant piano chords; a low E on the bass tuba is particularly
magnificent. Gradually, in a coda, the Requiem theme dies and the first
theme of the first movement is used to act as a bridge to the finale,
Allegro risoluto. The principal key of this ebullient finale is again
unorthodox: G flat major. The first subject is full of rhythic vigour;
the second consists of alternating chords of the type used by Mussorgsky
at the opening of the coronation scene in Boris Godunov—but here in the
Concerto the effect is effervescent rather then severe, a perfect
antidote to the gravity of the slow movement. Towards the end, the
opening subject of the Concerto reappears, and it finishes as it had
begun, in E flat major.
Balakirev’s Concerto does not deserve the
neglect into which it has fallen. In spite of the half century or so it
took to compose, it holds together well. And the heroic nature of the
first movement, the solemn and intense beauty of the second and the
scintillation of the third, ensure that the listener is treated to a
wide variety of aural experience which adds up, in the end, to a
satisfactory whole. Hyperion
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844-1908)
Piano Concerto in C sharp minor Op 30 [14'28]
Mili Balakirev (1837-1910)
Piano Concerto No 1 in F sharp minor Op 1 [13'30]
Piano Concerto No 2 in E flat major Op posth.[32'01]
Credits :
Conductor – David Lloyd-Jones
Leader – David Greed
Orchestra – The English Northern Philharmonia
Piano – Malcolm Binns
quarta-feira, 6 de março de 2024
BALAKIREV : Piano Concerto No 1 In F Sharp Minor • Piano Concerto No 2 In E Flat Major ♦ RIMSKY-KORSAKOV : Piano Concerto In C Sharp Minor, Op 30 (Malcolm Binns · The English Northern Philharmonia · David Lloyd-Jones) (1993) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 5 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
Assinar:
Postar comentários (Atom)
https://nitroflare.com/view/6CFB5F87ECA851D/The_Romantic_Piano_Concerto_–_5_♦_Balakirev_·_Rimsky-Korsakov_(1993
ResponderExcluir_Hyperion_–_CDA66640_)_FLAC.rar
https://tbit.to/uqp4ytx4l0cm/The Romantic Piano Concerto – 5 ♦ Balakirev · Rimsky-Korsakov (1993, Hyperion – CDA66640 ) FLAC.rar.html