Composed by Sergey Rachmaninov
Performed by Malmo Symphony Orchestra with Noriko Ogawa
Conducted by Owain Arwel Hughes
2. Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30
Composed by Sergey Rachmaninov
Performed by Malmo Symphony Orchestra with Noriko Ogawa
Conducted by Owain Arwel Hughes
Piano Cto #2 Op.18 / Piano Cto #3 Op.30,Rachmaninoff,Noriko Ogawa,Hughes Malmo So,Bis,Chamber Music & Recitals,Classical,Classical Composers
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Gershwin: Piano Cto in F/Rhapsody in Blue in C (Hybr)
Manufacturer: Harmonia Mundi Fr. ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000NY164W Release Date: 2007-05-08 |
Tracks:
- I Allegro
- II Adagio
- III Allegro Agitato
- Rhapsody In Blue
- Cuban Overture
Amazon.com
Jon Nakamatsu won the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition in 1997 and has made several fine recordings since then. This all-Gershwin program is probably his finest. He plays the Piano Concerto with great rhythmic sass, the Charleston always underpinning the melodies. Rather than opt for a showy reading of this or the Rhapsody in Blue, he and conductor Jeff Tyzik emphasize the music's sultry quality; the smoke-filled nightclub is there right alongside the concert hall at all times. The clarinet solo that opens the Rhapsody is stunningly evocative. Nakamatsu and the horn player duet with a keen jazz ear, and the solo piano work is songful and elegant. If you're looking for fireworks, there are plenty in the Concerto's finale - it's a thrilling reading. The Cuban Overture, a work so familiar that it's hard to look forward to, is given a terrific reading here by Tyzik and The Rochester Philharmonic, with the Latin percussion sounding wonderfully at home with the "regular" orchestra. This is a splendid release. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
fun, satisfying listening.......2007-06-15
Waited 50 years for this version.......2007-06-01
Blew me away: incredible fluidity.......2007-05-12
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Sym 1-4 / Piano Ctos 1-2 / Violin Cto / Double Cto
Brahms , and Sawallisch Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006HM8Y Release Date: 2002-11-05 |
Tracks:
- I: Un Poco Sostenuto-Allegro
- Allegro
- II Andante Sostenuto
- III Un Poco Allegretto E Grazioso
- IV Adagio-Piu Andante-
- Allegro Non Troppo, Ma Con Brio-Piu Allegro
- Variations On A Theme By Joseph Haydn (St. Anthony), Op. 56a
- Tragic Overture, Op. 81
Tracks:
- I: Allegro Non Troppo
- II: Adagio Non Troppo-L'istesso tempo, ma grazioso
- III: Allegretto Grazioso (Quasi Andantino)-Presto Ma Non Assai- Tempo I
- IV: Allegro Con Spirito
- Symphony No. 3, Op. 90 F Major: I: Allegro Con Brio-Un Poco Sostenuto
- II: Andante
- III: Poco Allegretto
- IV: Allegro- Un Poco Sostenuto
Tracks:
- I: Allegro Non Troppo
- II: Andante Moderato
- III: Allegro Giocoso
- IV:Allegro Energico E Passionato-Piu Allegro-
- Langsam Und Sehnsuchtsvoll-
- Allegro-
- Adagio-
- Academic Festival Overture, Op. 80
Tracks:
- I: Maestoso
- II: Adagio
- III: Rondo: Allegro Non Troppo
- 1. Gestillte Sehnsucht- Longing Assuaged- Nostalgie Apaisee
- 2. Geistliches Wiegenlied- Sacred Cradle Song- Berceuse Mystique
Tracks:
- I: Allegro Non Troppo
- II: Allegro Appassionato
- III: Andante Piu Adagio- Tempo I
- IV: Allegretto Grazioso- Un Poco Piu Presto
- 1. Wie Melodien Zieht Es Mir- Like Melodies Flowing- Comme Des Melodies Cela Passe
- 2. Immer Leiser Wird Mein Schlummer- Ever Softer Grows My Slumber- Mon Sommeil Se Fait Toujours Plus Leger
- 3. Klage- Lament-Plainte
- 4. Auf Dem Kirchhofe- In The Churchyard- Au Cimetiere
- 5. Verrat- Betrayel- Trahison
Tracks:
- I: Allegro - Mozart
- II: Adagio - Mozart
- III: Rondeau: Allegro- Allegretto- Tempo I - Mozart
- I: Allegro Non Troppo
- II: Adagio
- III: Allegro Giocoso, Ma Non Troppo Vivace
Tracks:
- I: Allegro
- II: Andante
- III: Vivace Non Troppo
- I: Andante- Poco Piu Animato
- II: Scherzo: Allegro- Molto meno Allegro
- III: Adagio Mesto
- IV: Finale: Allegro Con Brio
Customer Reviews:
A Brahms collection well worth remembering.......2007-02-14
The title may be slightly misleading. It's not just Brahms' orchestral works - there are also chamber pieces and Lieder with just a little Mozart Violin Concerto thrown in to fill up the space...though I'd have preferred a Brahms clarinet quintet. Ach weh, das Leben ist nie perfekt!
If you think of the great 20th century conductors, Wolfgang Sawallisch is probably not the first name that springs to mind. Yet you would be hard put to it to find anything to fault with any of these performances and some are truly outstanding. The Violin concerto is probably not one of these, because of the final movement, yet Franz Peter Zimmerman as soloist has perfect intonation and the Berlin Philharmonic for the most part plays with him in beautiful balance. It's a fine partnership with some lovely and some very dramatic moments. I just wish the finale had been played with a little more rubato. There's nothing wrong with it, but it's definitely more German than Hungarian. The Berlin Philharmonic also plays in the Mozart. The rest is all with the London.
Let's come to the First Piano Concerto. For me this is a seminal Brahms work. Put together out of the ruins of the "first" symphony this is a youthful but extraordinarily complex piece full of extreme contrasts, with violent and passionate emotions vying with moments of pure lyricism. For the soloist it is less technically than physically and emotionally demanding with its many pages of `doubled' writing but Stephen Kovacevich (Bishop) is the ideal pianist for it, never flagging, even in the monumental finale. This is a performance of immense power, strength, beauty and warmth, encapsulating as it does, and as no other does, both the despair and triumph of youthful passion, and I can honestly say I have never heard it better performed. In it Sawallisch shows himself to be the perfect conductor, holding the orchestra back and giving the soloist free rein and then applying full throttle at exactly the right moments.
Twenty-two years separate the two piano concertos, yet what is most striking is the similarity between the two works, the Second being, if anything even more symphonic than the First with its four movements. The conflict here is not between the piano and the orchestra - each is locked together in the first two movements in a joint and at times arduous battle with the Fates - yet in many ways it's also more like a gigantic piano quintet and Sawallisch and Kovacevich work here in perfect harmony to establish a fantastic rapport. In the third movement the structure is perhaps even songlike with the pianist accompanying the orchestra, particularly the cello, rather than vice versa and the finale is pure delight with both orchestra and piano ending up hopping and skipping round each other in a charming puckish way. Brahms is here at his most winsome and appealing and this is one of the lightest and most attractive endings I have heard to an otherwise at times very intense and demanding piece of music .
Many will buy this selection for the orchestral works - well that is after all what it says on the label - so I imagine there will also be many who are surprised to find the Lieder. Brahms was a wonderful composer of songs and his unerringly full-blooded choice of lyric - to which he always paid the closest attention - puts him right at the forefront of the great romantic song composers of the period, though it is here that his debt to Schumann is probably at its greatest. Ann Murray has a lovely voice and though I would not put her front of Schwarzkopf or Kathleen Ferrier, these are more than respectable performances. Stephen Kovacevich shows a different but very impressive side of his talent as accompanist. My favorite here, however, is his setting for choir and orchestra of Hölderlin's deeply pessimistic Hyperions Schicksalslied, which absolutely transforms the poem and gives us a wonderful glimpse at least of Ein Deutsches Requiem.
It would be beyond the scope of this commentary to review the performances of the four Symphonies in detail, not to mention the ability of the reviewer! Suffice it to say that Sawallisch and the London Philharmonic play these all with strict attention to Brahms' markings and excellent dynamic contrast, though always remaining aware that during the 20th century, like it or not, tempi in most classical pieces did speed up. No-one can play Brahms successfully without, at the right moments, passion, and for me the highlight (one of many) was the swirling attack in the emotionally turbulent opening to the First Symphony. Sawallisch cannot fail to have been aware of the immense presence of Karajan in these symphonies and to his eternal credit he does not attempt to fight with this, by striving to be different, but lets the orchestra "have its head" and as a consequence his performance of the battling First Symphony is very fine indeed. The key moment in this work for me is the entry of the horn in the slow introduction to the finale and I'm pleased to say, in this performance it is absolutely right. The second symphony, composed only a year later in the beautiful surroundings of the Wörther See in Austria's Lake District, is altogether a much more relaxed affair, and a great opportunity for the conductor to allow the orchestra a chance really to show its style, which is precisely what Sawallisch does and this is one of the London Philharmonic's most sumptuous performances. Interestingly for the Third Symphony Sawallisch opts for the slower Klemperer tempi and there is some very grand playing here, especially in the richly contrasted first movement. However, I feel in the third movement he is a tad too slow, with the result that some of the seething and restless undercurrents are allowed to fade. This is a very "classical" rendering of a tragic work in which the finale is seen, and I'm sure Brahms was striving for this, as both resigned and conclusive. I don't really feel, however, that Sawallisch has quite got to the bottom of this profoundly ambiguous piece. As for the Fourth, in this symphony often described as "autumnal" or "resigned" but probably one of the most passionate and perturbed of all Brahms' works, with time and again the resolution of soft legato passages broken into by turbulent outbursts, Sawallisch does not quite get the same precision of playing in the third movement as Karajan and at one point seems to lose the rhythmic impetus altogether, however, he quickly regathers it and the final passacaglia is as bold, dramatic, and tragic, as anyone could wish for.
The best is saved till last. Who else but Brahms could have composed a world class piece for an instrument that can only play about 11 notes, the Waldhorn? Well he does, and this work, the Horn Trio Op.40, is pure joy from beginning to end, the only hint of sadness being in the slow movement, which is an elegy on the death of his father, who was, guess what, a Waldhorn player. The violinist in this piece is Franz Peter Zimmerman, the same as who performed so well in the Violin Concerto and the pianist none other than Wolfgang Sawallisch, one of the very few recordings of him as a performer. Warum, ich frage mich? The final movement simply bounds along, with some perfect staccato playing by Marie Luise Neunecker on such an abominable instrument! No-one could ever have had a better ride into Elysium.
Is this a bargain? Well I'll let you judge for yourself, but this is my only Brahms recording and I won't be buying another, I imagine, for a little while yet. I suppose purely on the strength of the performances it's 4 stars rather than 5, but given the price and the range of the set, it would be churlish not to give it its 5.
A Wonderful Bargain.......2003-04-01
all the music that fits..........2003-01-02
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Rhapsody in Blue / Piano Rhapsody 2 / Cto in F
Gershwin , Levant , Ormandy , and Ny Phil Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000DSFZ Release Date: 1992-07-28 |
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Grieg:Piano Cto.
Ousset/Marriner/Lso Manufacturer: EMI Distribution ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000DO8K Release Date: 1991-04-30 |
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Mozart:Piano Cto. 9
Pires Manufacturer: Bmg Music ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000E6IK Release Date: 1989-05-11 |
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Tchaikovsky:Piano Cto. 1
Devoyon , and Amoyal Manufacturer: Bmg Music ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000E6I5 Release Date: 2000-01-01 |
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Spanish Rhapsody; Piano Cto 1; Todtentanz
Liszt Manufacturer: Vox (Classical) ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000E9JS Release Date: 1992-11-04 |
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Chopin:Piano Cto. 1
Maria Joa Pires Manufacturer: Bmg Music ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000E6IL Release Date: 1989-05-11 |
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Cto Pour Piano 3 Op 26 / Sebastian
Prokofiev , Menotti , Puccini , and Chopin Manufacturer: Dante Records Lys ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000G1J0 Release Date: 1999-12-01 |
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Rachmaninov:Piano Cto. 2
Sergei Tarasov Manufacturer: Universal Music & VI ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000DWCW Release Date: 1991-05-07 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In C Minor, First Movement
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In C Minor, Second Movement
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In C Minor, Third Movement
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In B Flat Minor, 1st Movement
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In B Flat Minor, 2nd Movement
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In B Flat Minor, 3rd Movement
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- Piano Dreams: Folk Song
- Piano Dreams: Love Dream
- Piano Dreams: Melody in F
- Piano Dreams: Rain Drops
- Piano Dreams: Romance
- Piano Dreams: Songs Without Words
- Plácido Domingo Sings Selections from Bizet's Carmen
- Puccini La Boheme
- Puccini: Tosca / Scotto, Domingo, Bruson; Levine
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