Prokofiev:Piano Concertos 1 & 3

On this CD:

1. Piano Concerto No. 1 in D flat major, Op. 10
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by Philharmonia with Mari Kodama
Conducted by Kent Nagano

2. Piano Concerto No. 3 in C major, Op. 26
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by Philharmonia with Mari Kodama
Conducted by Kent Nagano

3. Piano Sonata No. 7 in B flat major ("War Sonata 2/Stalingrad"), Op. 83
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
with Mari Kodama
Conducted by Kent Nagano

Prokofiev:Piano Concertos 1 & 3,Sergey Prokofiev,Kent Nagano,Philharmonia,Philharmonia Orchestra of London,Mari Kodama,Asv Living Era,20th/21st Century Sonata/Sonatina for Keyboard,Classical,Concerto,Keyboard,Piano Concerto
Russian Violin Concertos [Hybrid SACD]
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • The young Fischer has a definite "wow" factor
  • THE FUTURE IS IN GOOD HANDS
  • An Impressive Début Disc
  • Quality Classical Music Listening
  • 3 Russian Violin Ctos - Verve, Lilt, Dash, & Elegance
Russian Violin Concertos [Hybrid SACD]

Manufacturer: Pentatone
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. J.S. Bach: Sonatas and Partitas for Solo Violin, BWV 1001-1006
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  5. Mozart: Flute Concertos; Rondo; Andante [Includes the Bis 2005 Catalog] [Hybrid SACD]

ASIN: B0002TX9FC
Release Date: 2004-12-14

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The young Fischer has a definite "wow" factor.......2007-03-11

Even a jaded listener would blink twice at this recording, which showcases the German violin prodigy Julia Fischer. She's quite a dynamic player, and although lightning-fingered virtuosos aren't that rare nowadays, Fischer also possesses real charisma. She exudes confidence in every bar, and besides her gorgeous tone, she has an uncanny ability to phrase for someone so young. In all three works here she's able to shift effortlessly from Khachaturian's brash, semi-kitschy Soviet fireworks to Prokofiev's lyrico-ironic modernism and finally Glazunov's plush-velvet sentimentality. Only the Prokofiev concerto comes close to being a masterpiece, but you'd never know that from Fischer's complete dedication to each one.

PentaTone's remarkably vivid sonics make a big impression--this company has been in the forefront of SACD sound for a while--bringing Fischer's violin to life quite remarkably. Even better is Yakov Kreizberg's conducting of the exuberant Russian National Orch. His style is extroverted, like Gergiev's, with unihibited Russian vitality. I'm on the verge of gushing, but how can one help it when confronted by such a brilliant all-around production?

5 out of 5 stars THE FUTURE IS IN GOOD HANDS.......2007-01-03

The very young Violinist Julia Fischer demonstrates in this recording that (to me) the future for the performance of masterpieces of so-called classical music is very bright indeed. Julia gives very sensitive, virtuosic, and beautiful in tone performances of these Russian concertos for the violin. She is rhythmically astute in the Khachaturian concerto and very gorgeous in tone in the overtly romantic Galazunov concerto. Likewise, the Prokofiev's First Violin Concerto is given a finally nuanced performance with Yukov Kreizberg leading the Russian National Orchestra splendidly.

I heard Ms. Fischer in Aspen, Colorado in the summer of 2006 and was very impressed with her; this recording certainly confirms that most favorable impression.

If you want to hear some great violin playing, buy this disc.

By the way, the recorded sound is great-- very full and rich!

5 out of 5 stars An Impressive Début Disc.......2006-07-26

Although this is not the young Julia Fischer's first recording, it is the first she has done in SACD format on the PentaTone label with whom she has signed as an exclusive artist. The CD came out in late 2004, if I'm not mistaken, and she has since released the Bach Partitas and Sonatas, and most recently a disc of Mozart Violin Concerti. I gave a rave to the latter here at Amazon. I had not heard this début disc until recently and was, I will admit, a little concerned that she might be too 'classical' a violinist to make the most of these mostly extrovert Russian concerti. I was wrong to have any hesitation; she plays them with verve, wit, style and plenty of extroversion where needed. But she also brings to them an inwardness -- particularly in the Prokofiev First, which certainly has a veil of mystery about it -- that makes them seem fresh.

In recent times the Khachaturian Concerto has to some extent fallen from favor. When I was a youth it was one of the big modern Russian concerti along with Prokofiev 2 and, late in the 1950s, the Shostakovich 1, and one heard it in concert with some regularity. Happily there has been a bit of a revival lately, in spite of the tendency of some critics and programmers to think it is rather lightweight and too much of a populist work. Whatever the drawbacks it might have, it is an extremely effective piece with plenty of Khachaturian's Armenian flavorings, lots of rhythmic interest and virtuosity galore. Fischer brings to it a musicianly concern for dynamic subtlety and nuanced phrasing along with complete mastery of the concerto's technical difficulties. She eschews the Oistrakh edition of the concerto -- he extended the first movement cadenza and cut some measures in the finale -- and uses Khachaturian's original version. This is a first-class performance of a wonderful concerto which is worth one's attention.

One cannot but adore Prokofiev's First Violin Concerto. And one cannot say enough about the masterful orchestration Prokofiev provides, with harp intertwined with violin harmonics and extraordinarily plangent woodwind writing. The Russian National Orchestra, a group formed not long after the breakup of the Soviet Union and the stirrings of a new freedom in Russia, is a marvelous group. Their conductor here is Yakov Kreizberg, incidentally the brother of the probably better-known conductor Semyon Bychkov, who is making a very favorable impression these days. I've heard a number of his recent recordings and am mightily impressed with his formally clear approach that is, ironically, coupled with a really poetic sensibility. Clarity and poetry make wonderful partners in his recordings. Both Kreizberg and Fischer show us the darker side of the Prokofiev and in the process present it as the lyrical yet fierce work it is.

Glazunov's concerto is a late Romantic work in one movement. It is notable for its heartfelt lyricism, gorgeous tunes, and the equality of the orchestral principals with the violin soloists. It is really more like a symphony with violin obbligato, particularly in the long and lovely andante middle section. That aspect of the work is emphasized here and one must give credit to Fischer and the recording engineers for allowing that to shine through. Fischer is more generous, even self-effacing, in this than some soloists in other recordings the concerto has had (Perlman, Heifetz) and this is to the benefit of the work's effect. (A comparable concerto, to give you some idea of what I mean, is Brahms's Second Piano Concerto where the piano is not always the spotlighted star.) This is a genial reading with Fischer's burnished tone riding above and around the contributions by the orchestra. The folksong aspects of the finale are emphasized and one is left with a kind of uplift that makes one want to start the concerto all over again.

This is, make no mistake, a marvelous disc and I cannot recommend it highly enough. In addition, all three concerti are given strikingly lifelike sound.

Scott Morrison

5 out of 5 stars Quality Classical Music Listening.......2006-04-08

I am not an expert in classical music but I do enjoy listening to good classical music. This recording of Russian Violin Concertos is one that I have enjoyed listening too many times. I would not hesitate recommending it to anyone who enjoys classical music that highlights the romantic violin.

5 out of 5 stars 3 Russian Violin Ctos - Verve, Lilt, Dash, & Elegance.......2005-07-15

Julia Fischer is a violinist whose name is news to me, but then, What good news she is. Like the young Anne Sophie Mutter, she appears to have sprung whole from the head of Jove. She plays with a simply huge command of her instrument, and she grasps the music in both local nuances and larger paragraphs. Her intonation and fingerwork and bowing are well nigh faultless, so far as I can hear. She has a sort of wicked ease that actually might remind an older listener of the late, great Heifitz. He used to tell his student violinists to warm up by playing fingered octaves, which is rather like telling people to start just where most others are leaving off in happy achievement.

Nowhere are these capabilities put to better use than in her resuscitation of the much hackeneyed Khachaturian concerto, which she has the gruff to play as her opening. She obviously loves playing it, and has such a good time that it is quite easy to forget all the kitsch renderings you may have heard over the years. The RNO under Yakov Kreizberg (who is also a rising star among conductors now active in Europe) keep up with Julia all the way. Somehow all the flash just sounds scintillating, and the orientalisms just sound atmospheric and colorful. You think in some beautiful spots that Khachaturian knew what he was doing, after all.

Then Julia and company move on to the Prokofiev first violin concerto, and make deft, stunning magic of it, too. Again she and the conductor and the orchestra demonstrate remarkable unanimity of musical purpose. And, they have a good time with the Prokofiev, shattering our stuffy stereotypes that genius in classical western music is always tendentious, fat, and dressed in over-starched shirts with very stiff collars.

Thirdly, we get the Glazunov concerto. This, too, benefits from a completely fresh and straightforward reading, rooted in the players love of the music. Julia realizes the more brilliant moments of the Glazunov without forgetting that its heartfelt pusle is mainly lyrical, and her lyrical is so lithe and athletic that you don't feel for once that Glazunov was tempted to outstay the melodic welcomes embodied in his main themes.

The SACD surround sound is equally wonderful. It completely serves the music and the musicians, without calling attention to itself. You simply get a good, multichannel sense of everybody, including Julia, the super RNO as a whole body and as an unnervingly talented nexus of virtuosos, and of course, of conductor Kreizberg. The hall acoustic adds air and resonance, which is quite an accomplishment considering that we are talking about a recording studio and not one of the historic Moscovite venues like Tchaikovsky Hall at the conservatory.

If you like superior violin playing that is above all musical, with an orchestra and conductor that can keep up with such a soloist; then this disc will do fine. Five stars, fading into sunrise pinks and whites and blues. Where did the slow night go? Oh, well, play that SACD again, will you?

PS. Keep your ears and eyes on the lookout. Julia Fischer is now an exclusive Pentatone artist, and Yakov Kreizberg, maybe, too.
Prokofiev: The Five Piano Concertos
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Brilliant sonics and fine, assured playing
  • Monochrome austerity
  • Music fan/July2/2003 and John Coughlin's revviews
  • Idiomatic piano, shrill strings
  • Magnificent achievement!
Prokofiev: The Five Piano Concertos

Manufacturer: Decca
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Saint-Saëns: Piano Concertos 1-5
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  5. Prokofiev: Romeo and Juliet

ASIN: B0000041LA
Release Date: 1997-08-26

Tracks:

  1. Piano Concerto No. 1 In D Flat Major, Op. 10: 1. Allegro brioso
  2. Piano Concerto No. 1 In D Flat Major, Op. 10: 2. Andante assai-
  3. Piano Concerto No. 1 In D Flat Major, Op. 10: 3. Allegro scherzando
  4. Piano Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 1. Vivace
  5. Piano Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 2. Andante
  6. Piano Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 3. Moderato
  7. Piano Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 4. Vivace
  8. Piaon Concerto No. 5 In G Major, Op. 55: 1. Allegro con brio
  9. Piaon Concerto No. 5 In G Major, Op. 55: 2. Moderato ben accentuato
  10. Piaon Concerto No. 5 In G Major, Op. 55: 3. Toccata: Allegro con fuoco
  11. Piaon Concerto No. 5 In G Major, Op. 55: 4. Larghetto
  12. Piaon Concerto No. 5 In G Major, Op. 55: 5. Vivo

Tracks:

  1. Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 16: 1. Andantino
  2. Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 16: 2. Scherzo: Vivace
  3. Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 16: 3. Intermezzo: Allegro moderato
  4. Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 16: 4. Allegro tempestoso
  5. Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: 1. Andante -- Allegro
  6. Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: 2. Terna con variazioni
  7. 3. Allegro, ma non troppo

Amazon.com

During the 1970s, Vladimir Ashkenazy recorded virtually the entire standard piano repertoire, largely successfully. Then he turned to conducting, at which he's steadily become more successful. Although his initial efforts on the podium were not greeted with universal acclaim, you've got to respect the fact that he moved onto something new rather than attempting to revisit the same music again and risk not doing it nearly as well. Among his complete editions was this set of Prokofiev piano concertos, and they are among the best things that he did. At two discs for the price of one, it's a fine way to acquire all of these exciting works. --David Hurwitz

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Brilliant sonics and fine, assured playing.......2006-07-13

By any standard this is very good Prokofiev playing. Ashkenazy strikes me as one of the most Westernized of Russian pianists, and his approach here, seconded by Previn's conducting, avoids rawness and astringency in favor of combined lyricism and strength. Perhaps because Decca's sound is so natural, the piano remains limpid and sparkling throughout--don't expect volcanos and thunder a la Argerich and Richter.

The only real shortcoming is that these works can use a lot of what Ashkenazy leaves out: bite, wit, irony, and brash attack. Concerto #2 is a specialty of this pianist and comes off beautifully--its lyricism suits him. Concerto #1 seems too middle-of-the-road, which can also be said of the left-hand concerto #4, but the most familiar work, Concerto #3, is authoritative and strong throughout. Previn seems more alert in this work, too.

I should mention that although Ashkenazy's approach is much less wild than Argerich and Richter, the Gramophone described these recordings as overflowing with 'panache, swagger and firebrand audacity.' I guess it all depends on where you're coming from.

5 out of 5 stars Monochrome austerity.......2006-06-15

Although the remastering job done by Decca was terrible, Ashkenazy comes through with fine playing. He plays all 5 concerti well, although 1 and 2 stand out as the best for me. As one would expect, Ashkenazy plays his compatriot's piece with generous sympathy. He plays in a Prokofievian style avoiding any sort of color or singing tone. It is nevertheless ravishing playing.

In addition to the fine rubatos here and there, it is played on an even level, without a singing tone. It is by far a monochromatic reading with no color or excessive dynamics. Austerity is paramount also with no voluptuousness.

I love the second concerto most, and Ashkenazy's fine, sensible tempi stand out. It is not hurried or rushed playing with no lethargy either.

3 out of 5 stars Music fan/July2/2003 and John Coughlin's revviews.......2006-03-11

I totally agree with these 2 reviews

I believe the fault here lies more with Previn, and thus holds back Ashkenazy "somewhat", as Ashkenazy is not stellar as one would expect.
, There are some high points, but overall I strongly agree with A Music Fans recommend of Krainev, the finest set on record.Yes I've heard all avaliable recordings in comparison.
If you like this set then OBVIOUSLY you will vote on my review as follows:
, no this review was not helpful
But at least I'm truthful, w/o the hype.
Besides I've heard all the avaliable, while others that promote this set has not.


4 out of 5 stars Idiomatic piano, shrill strings.......2006-02-11

Ashkenazys playing has a certain "definite" (slightly clanky and strutting) style to it. For example the last part of cto3 mvt2, it is explicit and playful, other interpreters miss this out. And the beginning of cto3 mvt3, it sounds idiomatic/ folklore to me, (Russian, or Klezmer, or just a song and dance man, I don't know which). I like his playing better than any other's in these works. Sadly enough, the shrill strings deprive the recordings of their beauty, especially unfortunate in cto 3. If the orchestral tone of this recording could be restored, it would make me so happy.

In the meantime, I enjoy the Janis/Kondrashin cto 3. It seems to have similar qualities as Ashkenazy. For cto 2, I enjoy Baloghova/Ancerl/CzechPO on Supraphon.

5 out of 5 stars Magnificent achievement!.......2005-02-02

I have this recording of all five Prokofiev concertos. The rapport between soloist and conductor is first rate. The fact that Andre Previn is an excellent pianist helps mould a great understanding and the fact that both soloist and conductor got on so well helps so much.
Vladimir Ashkenazy played all the concertos very brilliantly.He doesn't overcook the interpretation and it sounds better for it.His recording of the second concerto is amazing. Remember he used that with his New York debut in the fifties with Bernstein. I find this collection to be such an achievement. I thoroughly recommend this CD.
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concertos 1, 2 & 3 - Prokofiev: Piano Concerto 5 - Bartok: Piano Concerto 2 - Emil Gilels, Sviatoslav Richter, Lorin Maazel
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • A classic Tchaikovsky Second Concerto, plus astonishing Richter
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concertos 1, 2 & 3 - Prokofiev: Piano Concerto 5 - Bartok: Piano Concerto 2 - Emil Gilels, Sviatoslav Richter, Lorin Maazel

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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  4. Liszt: Piano Concertos; Totentanz; Hungarian Fantasy
  5. The Sofia Recital 1958

ASIN: B000EMSIBM
Release Date: 2006-05-02

Tracks:

  1. I. Allegro Non Troppo E Molto Maestoso - Allegro Con Spirito - New Philharmonia Orchestra
  2. II. Andantino Semplice - Prestissimo - Tempo I - New Philharmonia Orchestra
  3. III. Allegro Con Fuoco - New Philharmonia Orchestra
  4. I. Allegro Brillante - New Philharmonia Orchestra
  5. II. Andante Non Troppo - New Philharmonia Orchestra
  6. III. Allegro Con Fuoco - New Philharmonia Orchestra

Tracks:

  1. I. Allegro Brillante - New Philharmonia Orchestra
  2. I. Allegro Con Brio - London Symphony Orchestra
  3. II. Moderato Ben Accentuato - London Symphony Orchestra
  4. III. Toccata (Allegro Con Fuoco) - London Symphony Orchestra
  5. IV. Larghetto - London Symphony Orchestra
  6. V. Vivo - London Symphony Orchestra
  7. I. Allegro - Sviatoslav Richter
  8. II. Adagio - Sviatoslav Richter
  9. III. Allegro Molto - Sviatoslav Richter

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A classic Tchaikovsky Second Concerto, plus astonishing Richter.......2006-06-08

The reissue gods are smiling. This bargain Gemini two-fer contains four superlative concerto recordings--the Tchaikovsky Second and Third with Gilels, the Prokofiev Fifth and Bartok Second with Richter. The conductor throughout is Lorin Maazel, definitely on best behavior, and the orchestras vary between the LSO (Prokofiev), New Philharmonia (Tchaikovsky), and the Orchestre de Paris (Bartok). EMI's early Seventies analog sound is bright and forward. The perspective on the piano is natural with Gilels, but as usual, Richter asked to be miked more up close.

Gilels had already made a magisterial Tchaikovsky First with Reiner in 1955 (RCA) when he first stormed West out of Russia, and he would go on to make one just as great in 1980 with Mehta (Sony). This version from 1973 is let down by Maazel's less-than-committed acompaniment, which moves too glibly and quick in the first movement especially. But the Second and Third Concertos are another story. Gilels makes the best case ever for the former work, despite the usual cuts. Maazel livens up, giving us springy rhythms and elegance, while Gilels is polished marble and power. I will be satisfied to own this one version for life, I'm sure.

On CD 2, Richter returns to one of his favorites, the Prokofiev Fifth concdrto, which he had already recorded in 1959 to universal acclaim--this was his time to roar out of Russia and astonish the West. This remake offers somewhat different tempos but the same astonishing solo work. For me, the main distinction is Maazel's razor-sharp, brilliant conducting and the virtuoso playing of the London Sym., wwhich far surpasses the earlier reading on DG. The same holds true for the Bartok Second, where Richter takes a fiendishly difficult, percussive piano part and makes it speak and sing as never before. Pollini is equally riveting in this work but not nearly as approachable. Officially, Richter never recorded the two most popular concertos from these composers, the Prokofiev and Bartok Third. That's a shame, but these great recordings, along with Gilels's' contribution, make this an unmissable bargain.
Prokofiev: Complete Concertos
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Solid performance and great value
  • Great collection and great value
  • No brainer -- buy it!
Prokofiev: Complete Concertos
Sergey Prokofiev , Vladimir Ashkenazy , Joshua Bell , Lynn Harrell , Andre Previn , Charles Dutoit , and London Symphony Orchestra
Manufacturer: Decca
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

GeneralGeneral | Symphonies | Classical | Styles | Music
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Harrell, LynnHarrell, Lynn | ( H ) | Featured Performers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
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  1. Shostakovich: Complete Concertos
  2. Complete Concertos / Overtures
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  4. Prokofiev: The Complete Symphonies
  5. Shostakovich: The Complete Symphonies - Mariss Jansons (10 CD)

ASIN: B000076GYI
Release Date: 2003-01-14

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Solid performance and great value.......2007-02-15

This set contains almost all Prokofiev's concertos. Contrary to what is advertised as "Complete Concertos", it omits Prokofiev's early work "Cello Concerto in E minor, Op. 58". Although a large amount of thematic material is reused in the later piece "Sinfonia Concertante for cello & orchestra in E minor, Op. 125", there are really substantial differences. (Traditionally, when a set is advertised as "complete", it will contains at least all works with Opus numbers.) But really, Op. 58 is not performed in the concert halls these days. (At least, none that I am aware of.) If you are really interested in comparing these 2 works, you may consult, e.g. Chandos recording "The Unknown Prokofiev".

I like the performances here. For each individual piece, there are performances closer to my heart. For example, Richter's Piano Concerto in G and Argerich's Piano Concerto in C., Heifetz's Violin Concerto in g minor, besides those mentioned in other 2 reviews. (By the way, Rostropovich's Sinfonia Concertante is now available in DVD from EMI Classic Archive 15.) However, if you are looking for solid performances at an affordable price, hesitate no more! This set is for you.

Highly recommended.

5 out of 5 stars Great collection and great value.......2006-10-09

This 3-CD set includes all of Prokofiev's concertos in one place. The best part is that it includes Ashkenzy and Previn's perfomances of the piano concertos- generally considered the best on recording.

Bell's perfomance of the violin concertos and quite good, maybe not the best, but Lynn Harell's cello renditions are excellent.

Highly recommended.

5 out of 5 stars No brainer -- buy it!.......2004-08-22

This is a great and inexpensive introduction to the concerti of Sergei Prokofiev. And there's not a boring piece--or performance--in the box. I'm generally not a big Ashkenazy fan these days, but many of his earlier recordings were often very fine, and these are among them. His direct, declamatory way of played works to the advantage of the music here as well. He seizes these works by the horns, and the results are spectacular. Previn and the LSO never sounded better--for those who are familiar mostly with the later Previn, somewhat burned out and sluggishly leading the RPO or LAPO, these recordings will be a revelation. From the mechanical workings of No. 1 to the agitated fury of No. 2 to the quicksilver lithe of No. 3 to the enigma that is No. 5, these are great performances that manage to hit the mark while being very middle-of-the-road. (I don't mean middle-of-the-road in a negative way.) You'll notice I didn't mention No. 4, which has never really worked for me. As far as left-hand concertos go, listen to Ravel's.

The violin concerto is very fine, but it won't displace either Oisktrakh (a tall order, I admit) or, believe it or not, Perlman, with Rozhdestvensky and the BBC Symphony. The two cello concerti are tremendously exciting compositions that deserve to be played a lot more often than they are. Written for Rostrapovich, they are given credible readings by Harrell here, though I wish Rosty's performances were available (other than Op. 132 in an expensive 13-CD box) to show you you're *really* supposed to burn up these works. There aren't a whole lot of other performances of either of them, so you'll have to settle for these.
Prokofiev: The Five Piano Concertos; Overture on Hebrew Themes
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Not only for the performances and the recording quality --
  • Sheesh
  • I guess the score doesn't matter
  • Piano could stand out a little more
  • awesome and terrifying
Prokofiev: The Five Piano Concertos; Overture on Hebrew Themes

Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

ConcertinosConcertinos | Concertos | Forms & Genres | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Concertos | Forms & Genres | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Keyboard | Instruments | Classical | Styles | Music
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  1. Rachmaninoff Piano Concertos Nos. 2 & 3 / Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini / Muti, Gavrilov
  2. Prokofiev Plays Prokofiev
  3. Saint-Saëns: Piano Concertos 1-5; Wedding Cake Caprice-Valse
  4. Mikhail Pletnev - Prokofiev: Piano Sonatas nos. 2 - 7 - 8
  5. Shostakovich: The Complete Symphonies - Mariss Jansons (10 CD)

ASIN: B000002S09
Release Date: 1992-09-29

Tracks:

  1. Piano Concerto No 1 In D Major, Op.10: I. Allegro Brioso
  2. Piano Concerto No 1 In D Major, Op.10: II. Andante assai
  3. Piano Concerto No 1 In D Major, Op.10: III. Allegro scherzando
  4. Piano Concerto No 2 In G Minor, Op.16: I. Andantino - Allegretto
  5. Piano Concerto No 2 In G Minor, Op.16: II. Scherzo (vivace)
  6. Piano Concerto No 2 In G Minor, Op.16: III. Intermezzo (allegro moderato)
  7. Piano Concerto No 2 In G Minor, Op.16: IV. Finale (allegro tempestuoso)
  8. Piano Concerto No.3 In C Major, Op.26: I. Andante - Allegro
  9. Piano Concerto No.3 In C Major, Op.26: II. Theme et variations
  10. Piano Concerto No.3 In C Major, Op.26: III. Allegro ma non troppo

Tracks:

  1. Piano Concerto No.4 In B Flat Major, Op.53,'For The Left Hand': I. Vivace
  2. Piano Concerto No.4 In B Flat Major, Op.53,'For The Left Hand': II. Andante
  3. Piano Concerto No.4 In B Flat Major, Op.53,'For The Left Hand': III. Moderato
  4. Piano Concerto No.4 In B Flat Major, Op.53,'For The Left Hand': IV. Vivace
  5. Piano Concerto No.5 In G Major, Op. 55: I. Allegro con brio
  6. Piano Concerto No.5 In G Major, Op. 55: II. Moderato ben accentuato
  7. Piano Concerto No.5 In G Major, Op. 55: III. Toccata (allegro con fuoco)
  8. Piano Concerto No.5 In G Major, Op. 55: IV. Larghetto
  9. Piano Concerto No.5 In G Major, Op. 55: V. Vivo
  10. Overture on Hebrew Themes, Op. 34
  11. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 1. Lentamente
  12. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 2. Andante
  13. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 3. Allegretto
  14. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 4. Animato
  15. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 5. Molto giocoso
  16. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 6. Con eleganza
  17. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 7. Pittoresco
  18. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 8. Commodo
  19. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 9. Allegretto tranquillo
  20. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 10. Ridicolosamente
  21. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 11. Con vivacita
  22. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 12. Assai moderato
  23. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 13. Allegretto
  24. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 14. Feroce
  25. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 15. Inquieto
  26. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 16. Dolente
  27. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 17. Poetico
  28. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 18. Con una dolce lentezza
  29. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 19. Presto agitatissimo e molto accentuato
  30. Visions fugitives, Op. 22: No 20. Lento irrealmente

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Not only for the performances and the recording quality --.......2005-12-07

-- I even like the cover art!

5 out of 5 stars Sheesh.......2003-11-05

I'm reading the reviews here because I just adore this recording and wonder why it's so rarely the recommended choice in CD guides, etc... Maybe there are individual moments in other recordings that surpass individual moments here, but as a whole I don't think any of the other sets are nearly as effective.

But anyway - the review below really annoyed me so I just wanted to weigh in: Beroff's is a really lovely rendition of the Visions Fugitives, and the "ppp" in question (that prompted my fellow reviewer to impress us all with his lordly inability to tolerate philistinism by hurling his CDs into the trash like the filth they are) - ahem - the "ppp" in question applies WITHOUT ANY DOUBT only to the inner voice - I don't know what edition Mr. Landkamer has, but the two that I just looked at both make special effort to place the "ppp" on the page in a way that communicates this. It also bears mentioning that this "ppp" does not appear in the first edition at all.

In conclusion: this set is an amazing deal and, regardless of what people say about Ashkenazy or Argerich or Richter or whomever else, is utterly satisfying. It's one of the few recordings of Prokofiev I've heard where the performance is GENUINELY CONVINCED of the idea that this music is utterly coherent and human. Even supposedly "sensitive" Prokofiev performances often underestimate the fluidity of his musical expression and decide to let things seem thorny and chaotic rather than doing the work necessary to clarify the enigmatic elements. Beroff and Masur are so in tune with the spirit of Prokofiev's screwball jokes and whimsically meandering emotions that you feel you're hearing the piece direct from the composer. Very rare thing, that. There are no more and no fewer fireworks in these performances than Prokofiev put in the score - which is plenty! - and I don't know about you but that's how I like my classical recordings.

3 out of 5 stars I guess the score doesn't matter.......2003-04-26

A few minutes ago, for lack of anything better to do, I put on the Visions Fugitives as played by Michel Beroff on this CD. In bar 14 there is a two-note pickup starting a repeat of the opening melody, here marked "p semplice". Then, on beat 1 of the next bar, the marking is "ppp" implying that the repeat of the theme is to *begin* like a routine restatement but then shift without warning into a new, quieter dreamlike realm. Beroff makes ABSOLUTELY NO CHANGE at the ppp. It might as well not be there. These CD's are about to go into the trash.

There, gone.

Addendum (5/31/03)...I purchased another recording of Visions Fugitives, by Boris Berman, and he played this part the same way. Looking again at the score, I think I can see why...the ppp is being interpreted as applying only to the chromatically winding inner voice. I'm not certain that's right, but it's at least not completely unreasonable. Sorry, Michel, I take it all back.

(11/28/03) in response to my courageously anonymous fellow reviewer ("music fan" above) the edition I have is MCA and the ppp is placed between the upper an lower staves but somewhat above-center. I'm not sure this qualifies as a special effort to communicate the intent.

4 out of 5 stars Piano could stand out a little more.......2002-09-21

I agree with other reviewers this is a very good recording, of very difficult works. But it is especially good for the orchestral part. I am not saying Beroff is not a good pianist dont get me wrong. I am just saying there is better.
For the piano (and those are PIANO concertos my friends :) I have to say that I like the Ashkenazy/Previn recording better especially for #2 and #3 The piano sounds much clearer and less hesitating. The opening of 4th movement of #2 for example is 100 times better as played by Ashkenazy. Those chords are so much more precisely dropped. The orchestra though in many passages is more overwhelming (as it should be in this piece) in the Beroff/Masur recording.
If you want the complete set. Get both this recording and the Ashkenazy/Previn. They complement one another really well.
Now if you want the best recording of #3. You want to get the Argerich/Abbado recording. It ROCKS its is way above any other. Better rythmic precision , better phrasing, faster tempo. It is just amazing.

5 out of 5 stars awesome and terrifying.......2002-09-21

This CD is another example of good price, comprehensiveness, and outstanding quality combining to make a powerhouse recording. I cannot overstate how dazzling Beroff's performance is. To hear pianistic technique at its pinnacle, just listen to the cadenza of the Second Concerto's opening movement--it'll take your breath away (you'll swear that it cannot be played by just a single player--examining the score will compound the disbelief). Beroff's swift hammering, mastery of dynamics, and perfect grasp of both Prokofiev's wit and rage, will have you coming back to this CD set for years. Concerto No. 3, by the way, is the best performance I've heard besides that given by Martha Argerich. With expert performance by Maestro Masur and the Gewandhaus Orchestra, these five neoclassical works have rarely received such musical justice. The second CD also features Prokofiev's delightful ethnographic chamber piece, "Overture on Hebrew Themes," as well as his solo piano work, "Fugitive Visions" (not quite as notable as, say, his late sonatas). I consider this CD set one of the best in my collection, and I recommend it without any reservations.
Prokofiev: Piano Concertos Nos. 1, 3, & 5
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • C'mon, baby light my fire.
  • A Perfect Prokofiev Pairing: Bronfman, Mehta, Israel Philharmonic
  • lackluster but well recorded
  • Brilliant imaginative performances!
Prokofiev: Piano Concertos Nos. 1, 3, & 5

Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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  5. Prokofiev:Piano Sonatas Nos. 7 & 8

ASIN: B0000028MF
Release Date: 1993-08-10

Tracks:

  1. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 1 in D-flat major, Op. 10: Allegro brioso
  2. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 1 in D-flat major, Op. 10: Meno mosso
  3. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 1 in D-flat major, Op. 10: Andante assai
  4. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 1 in D-flat major, Op. 10: Allegro scherzand
  5. Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: Andante - Allegro
  6. Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: Tema. Andantino - Var. 1-5 - Tema. L'istesso tempo
  7. Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: Tema. Andantino - Var. 1-5 - Tema. L'istesso tempo
  8. Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: Tema. Andantino - Var. 1-5 - Tema. L'istesso tempo
  9. Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: Tema. Andantino - Var. 1-5 - Tema. L'istesso tempo
  10. Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: Tema. Andantino - Var. 1-5 - Tema. L'istesso tempo
  11. Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: Tema. Andantino - Var. 1-5 - Tema. L'istesso tempo
  12. Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: Tema. Andantino - Var. 1-5 - Tema. L'istesso tempo
  13. Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: Allegro ma non troppo
  14. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 5 in G major, Op. 55: Allegro con brio
  15. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 5 in G major, Op. 55: Moderato ben accentuat
  16. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 5 in G major, Op. 55: Toccata. Allegro con f
  17. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 5 in G major, Op. 55: Larghetto
  18. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 5 in G major, Op. 55: Vivo

Amazon.com

Bronfman's performance of the popular Third Concerto has an easy songfulness that sits very nicely alongside the many bravura passages, which he dispatches with aplomb. The First Concerto is a zippy little piece that is less than a quarter of an hour long, but is exhaustingly difficult. Prokofiev was himself a stellar pianist, and he wrote these taxing works for his personal use. By the time he came to write the sadly neglected Fifth Concerto, he was at the end of his life (he died on the same day as Stalin), but his melodic inspiration was still potent as ever. Bronfman never loses sight of the melody in the piles of notes, and Zubin Mehta accompanies faithfully. This is the set to own if you want good digital sound. --David Hurwitz

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars C'mon, baby light my fire........2006-10-16

Do you ever feel bored? Feel like you need some excitement in your life? Well, Just listen to the fire that Bronfman's interpretation of these concertos create. Listen to IPO's passion under Mehta's direction. Play this disc in your car if you're beginnning to feel at all tired. This CD is a "perfect package". I award five stars for musicianship, sound engineering, and the overall quality of the recording.

5 out of 5 stars A Perfect Prokofiev Pairing: Bronfman, Mehta, Israel Philharmonic.......2006-04-24

This is one of those recordings that should be placed in the Great Recordings category, not only because of the dazzling performances of these three popular Prokofiev piano concerti, but also because it represents the long respected friendships among the artists employed.

Aptly placed for a recording, Prokofiev's D-flat major concerto (#1) opens with a brief orchestral overture! Once the tone has been set by Mehta and forces, Bronfman enters with the technically brilliant display of the piano portion. This may be a brief work (less than 15 minutes in length) but it is a solid one in Bronfman's and Mehta's hands. There are moments of lyricism that suggest the inimitable melodies that haunt Prokofiev's later slow movements of his other concerti.

The very popular C major concerto (#3) is given a wholly Romantic approach here. Bronfman knows how to make the beautiful lines sing as well as making the finger-beating passages seem airborne. And much the same can be said of the G major (#5) concerto. Undoubtedly the most challenging of the five concerti, Bronfman and Mehta offer a solid and in control performance that is probably the most exciting one on records.

Together with the other CD that presents concertos #2 and #4 this union of Mehta and Bronfman and the Israel Philharmonic is one to be treasured. Here is Prokofiev with ?lan, style, and dexterity - and heart! Grady Harp, April 06

3 out of 5 stars lackluster but well recorded.......2004-04-17

i've admired bronfman's playing primarily through the beautiful series of chamber discs he recorded with mintz; against that standard these prokofiev concertos are a disappointment. the overall approach is surprisingly literal and metronomic, with a lack of lyrical fire or virtuosic ice, and tempos (especially in the outer movements) that are slower than usual. soloist and conductor seem to play in parallel rather than in close partnership. (it's as if bronfman and mehta were thrown into the studio without enough rehearsal time.) all the keyboard notes are perfectly in place, and the orchestral detail is exceptionally clear, but these are recordings better suited for studying the performance score than for encountering the full range of prokofiev's unique poetry.

5 out of 5 stars Brilliant imaginative performances!.......1999-08-05

I had the good fortune to see the pianist Yefim Bronfman twice in concert. When he played Prokofiev we could immediately sense his affection for this music, judging not only from colorful, lightning-fast passages and superb virtuosity he displayed on them, but also from his facial expression and body language. For him Prokofiev's music seems to go beyond its astonishing difficulty and into the surrealistic atmosphere and kaleidoscope of imagery. This album would have been worth its price for the Concerto No. 3 alone, yet Bronfman and Mehta treat us to "an evolution" of the composer, so to speak, by adding Nos. 1 & 5. No. 5 is something we don't hear often on record, yet it's truly amazing in terms of the dialogue between the orchestra and the piano. Indeed, the No. 5 was the deciding factor for purchasing this album because there's also a wonderful Kissin/Abbado collaboration on DG without it. Both CDs boast the greatest pianists and conductors of our time, so the decision was a tough one to make, but after listening to the superb moderato ben accentuato in No. 5, I was glad I got this album. You will be too.
Prokofiev: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 3
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • An all-time great recording
  • Hard to avoid using the expression "The Best"
  • Great Performances, Indeed
  • Powerful Prokofieff!
Prokofiev: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 3

Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B000F6YW1W
Release Date: 2006-06-06

Tracks:

  1. Concerto No. 3 in C Major for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 26; I. Andante - Allegro
  2. Concerto No. 3 in C Major for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 26; II. Andantino (Tema con variazioni)
  3. Concerto No. 3 in C Major for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 26; III. Allegro ma non troppo
  4. Concerto No. 1 in D-flat Major for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 10; Allegro brioso - Poco piso - Tempo primo
  5. Concerto No. 1 in D-flat Major for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 10; Meno mosso
  6. Concerto No. 1 in D-flat Major for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 10; Andante assai
  7. Concerto No. 1 in D-flat Major for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 10; Allegro scherzando - Poco pitenuto
  8. Sonata No. 2 in D Minor for Piano, Op. 14; I. Allegro, ma non troppo
  9. Sonata No. 2 in D Minor for Piano, Op. 14; II. Scherzo. Allegro marcato
  10. Sonata No. 2 in D Minor for Piano, Op. 14; III. Andante
  11. Sonata No. 2 in D Minor for Piano, Op. 14; IV. Vivace
  12. Sonata No. 3 in A minor for Piano, Op. 28 "From Old Notebooks"

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars An all-time great recording.......2007-02-26

I'm sometimes saddened by how quickly something good, sometimes even the very best, gets lost or is forgotten in this fast moving world. Have all those people who put Argerich first in this repertoire (mind you, her recording's a pretty fine choice!) even HEARD the to me (and many other Prokofiev lovers) obvious top three choices of his 3rd Piano Concerto, I usually wonder when I read reviews by Amazon customers and professional critics alike? They are and have been for a long time Byron Janis/Kyrill Kondrashin (1962) on Mercury, William Kapell/Leopold Stokowski (live in New York 1949) on Music & Arts, and this one. One might go into details over this and that, but then, I listen to all of these equally as often and wouldn't want to miss any (whereas I could do without that Argerich recording). Actually, there's a fourth recording I find deserves attention and which on the whole I even prefer to Kapell's RCA studio version with Dorati, the one by Julius Katchen/Istvan Kertesz (1968) on Decca. All of these recordings are so well-known to insiders and apparently so unknown to the public at large that I'm afraid I'm wasting my time typing these lines. I certainly wouldn't be without any of them, as they're the ones that have made my life richer.

As to the 1st Piano Concerto, there's no avoiding Sviatoslav Richter, tubby sound quality notwithstanding, but again, why not have this fine, better-sounding version in addition?

In short, get a copy before this again disappears in the vaults for decades. You won't regret it!

Greetings from Switzerland, David.

5 out of 5 stars Hard to avoid using the expression "The Best".......2006-08-13

Argerich's recording of the Third is touted as the one to own but for my money no one has ever come close to this pairing of Szell and Graffman. This is electric on every level and the recording of the First is no less a thing. What makes this release an absolute joy is the sound--now better than ever--and the reappearance of the original album cover art, which, for anyone who ever loved the original LP release, is just icing on a dang fine cake. The cherry on top is the inclusion of the two piano sonatas which are played magnificently.

This new series by Sony--already with the sensational Ormandy Mahler Tenth (at long last!) and Craft's recordings of Schoenberg (ditto!)--is shaping up to be a classical music-lovers big event!

5 out of 5 stars Great Performances, Indeed.......2006-07-08

These performances first appeared on LP during the 1960s. The Concertos and 3rd Sonata were reissued, first on LP and cassette, and later on CD, during the 1980s, as part of CBS's Great Performances reissue series. (Those of us past a certain age will remember our local record store bins filled with LPs that resembled newspaper front pages.) Sony has recently revamped its Great Performances series, and thrown in a few features from the Masterworks Heritage series that was begun in the 1990s - - original cover art and liner notes, and greater care with remastering.

Gary Graffman was one of the few aknowledged pupils of Vladimir Horowitz, and doubtless he worked on these pieces with the master. His First and Third Piano Concertos are authoritative and technically immaculate enough to make one regret he didn't record all five Concertos. One of the hallmarks of Graffman's playing is its clarity, so that Prokofiev's more dense configurations emerge with scintillating detail instead of mushiness. Szell, who touched Prokofiev only rarely (his Prokofiev Fifth Symphony is a must have) provides a dedicated accompaniment which serves as an object lesson in the difference between drive and haste.

The sound quality, particularly n the Concertos, is far superior to the earlier CD issue, and, of course, light years ahead of my old cassette tape. Going back to the original master tapes (the previous CD issue used the LP submasters, which were compressed and poorly mixed), the orchestral mix has been markedly improved and the dynamics have been opened up. The result is that you can hear many of the piano/orchestral interactions which were previously masked, and many of Prokofiev's harmonies are clarified. The improvement in the Sonatas is less obvious, and the sound remains dry, if a bit warmer.

This disc is a must for all Prokofiev enthusiasts.

5 out of 5 stars Powerful Prokofieff!.......2006-06-15

Gary Graffman recorded the two piano concertos included on this disk when he was 38 years of age - Szell was 69. With over a hundred years' experience between the two, these performances sound incredibly youthful, full of exuberance and energy.

Sony Classical has done a remarkable job remastering this recording - its age doesn't show at all. The smoothly executed (an oxymoron for these pieces?) orchestral performance is so amazing - the ensemble playing could not be bettered, as usual with the Szell/Cleveland combination.

If you don't have these concertos already in your collection, get this recording at once! If you do have these concertos...well, get this recording anyway...you won't be sorry!

The perfect match to this disk? Lorin Maazel's complete recording of Prokofieff's Romeo and Juliet, made with the same Cleveland forces. The Szell influence on the orchestra was still there, with the added bonus of Maazel's youthful enthusiasm! Enjoy!
Prokofiev: The Piano Concertos; Violin Concerto No. 1
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Indispensable Recordings from Leinsdorf's Masterful Prokofiev Series
Prokofiev: The Piano Concertos; Violin Concerto No. 1

Manufacturer: Testament UK
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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  5. Mahler: Symphony 3 & 1

ASIN: B0007VXZE0
Release Date: 2005-07-12

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Indispensable Recordings from Leinsdorf's Masterful Prokofiev Series.......2005-08-31

John Browning and Erich Leinsdorf first recorded a Prokofiev piano concerto (the Third) in 1960 for Capitol records. When Leinsdorf became music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra two years later, he brought Browning to RCA and they recorded all five, the very first integral set anywhere. Some forty years later, it's still impressive as remastered by Testament. These are sharply projected, athletic performances that nevertheless do not scant Prokofiev's characteristically mordant lyricism. Analog sound quality is first-rate, in fact superior to what RCA managed to transfer to its original Lps. Neither Browning nor Leinsdorf are with us anymore and this set is a fine tribute to their memory. But it isn't just nostalgia that persuades me to recommend this set: even given its steep price and competition from the likes of Ashkenazy/Previn, Beroff/Masur and others, Browning and Leinsdorf's unique projection of machine-like power and lyric whimsy is essential to a full understanding of these wonderful compositions. As a bonus, Testament throws in a fine performance of the first Violin Concerto recorded by Leinsdorf, the BSO and Heifetz-protege Erick Friedman. Friedman's performance isn't in the Browning league, but it's splendidly assured and goes far to explain why Heifetz placed such high hopes in his future. Note: Leinsdorf recorded the second Violin Concerto at about the same time with a young Itzhak Perlman and that recording is also available on a BMG/RCA CD. In fact, Leinsdorf recorded quite a bit of Prokofiev in Boston for RCA and Testament apparently intends to release much of that series on CD over the next year or so. Good news for those of us who have been praying for a release of symphonies 2, 3, 5 and (especially) 6! One can only wonder why BMG/RCA have been so derelict in reissuing these fabulous (and fabulously well-recorded) recordings, while applauding Testament for its initiative. Leinsdorf's Boston tenure produced nothing more memorable than the stunning performances RCA captured in its Prokofiev series, and they're all 'must-buy' priorities for anyone who loves Prokofiev's music.
Prokofiev/Bartok: Pf Concertos Nos. 1 & 3/ Pf Concerto No. 3
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Unsurpassed Emotional Shading
  • Martha Argerich...
  • argerich is amazing
  • Whoowhee.
  • A Marriage of Wizardry and Mysticism
Prokofiev/Bartok: Pf Concertos Nos. 1 & 3/ Pf Concerto No. 3
Sergey Prokofiev , Bela Bartok , Charles Dutoit , Martha Argerich , and Orchestre symphonique de Montréal
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B00000C2J8
Release Date: 1998-10-06

Tracks:

  1. Piano Concerto No.1 In D Flat, Op. 10: Allegro Brioso
  2. Piano Concerto No.1 In D Flat, Op. 10: Andante Assai
  3. Piano Concerto No.1 In D Flat, Op. 10: Allegro Scherzando
  4. Piano Concerto No.3, Sz. 119: Allegretto
  5. Piano Concerto No.3, Sz. 119: Allegro Religioso - (Poco Piso) - Tempo I
  6. Piano Concerto No.3, Sz. 119: Allegro Vivace - (Presto)
  7. Piano Concerto No.3 In C, Op.26: Andante - Allegro
  8. Piano Concerto No.3 In C, Op.26: Tema (Andantino) And Variations
  9. Piano Concerto No.3 In C, Op.26: Allegro Ma Non Troppo - Meno Messo - Allegro

Amazon.com

Martha Argerich first recorded the Prokofiev Third Concerto in the late '60s. Her fiery, hair-trigger playing, abetted by Claudio Abbado's incisive support with the Berlin Philharmonic in top form, set new standards for this warhorse. No one's come close to topping her extraordinary achievement, not even Argerich herself in this remake with Charles Dutoit and the Montreal Symphony Orchestra. The recording quality, for one, is less well defined. Dutoit imparts less character to the orchestral tuttis than Abbado, and Argerich's fingerwork, remarkable by anyone else's standard, is a shade more casual (compare the extensive unison octave runs: stupefyingly perfect in the early version, brilliantly competent here.). By contrast, the pianist's scintillating, witty traversal of Prokofiev's brash First Concerto shines with youthful ardor. While one can easily admire the lyric fire she brings to Bartók's third Concerto, some of her agogic fussings pull focus from, rather than strengthen, the music's inherent classicism. Zoltán Koscis, András Schiff, and Annie Fischer (all Hungarian pianists, not uncoincidentally) imbue their phrasings with a more internalized, speech-like expression. --Jed Distler

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Unsurpassed Emotional Shading.......2006-06-16

Why is it that on long drives Piano Concerto No.1 is the piece that wins out among the CDs? Answer: Argerich's sublime shadings. This tightly-composed, wonderfully colored concerto gives Argerich the platform to alternate rapidly among boldness (her fingerwork needn't be defiant to be compelling), extraordinarily deft runs, episodes of darkness and reverie in turn and a well-paced close. For his part, Prokofiev deserves enormous credit for striking just the right balance between piano and orchestra, injecting appropriate touches of coloration without going overboard. And, in my opinion, Dutroit handles the balance between his soloist and his orchestra just fine. Truth be told, I haven't gotten around to listening to Concerto No.3 yet, so riveting is No.1.

Finally, thanks to the producers of NBC's late, lamented Sunday evening news program "First Camera", who had the audacity to use the opening of No.1 as their theme and made me want to hear more. "Sixty Minutes" ultimately buried the program but music lovers with no prior exposure to this wonderful work are the richer for it.

4 out of 5 stars Martha Argerich..........2005-07-26

After reading the other interview, I've decided to "chime-in" with my own, simple review. Ms. Argerich's playing is simply top-rate! The recording, well, it could have used a little work. That's why the four-stars. I paid for this disc. I'd pay (good money) to see Ms. Argerich "do her thing" even at this stage of her life/career.

4 out of 5 stars argerich is amazing.......2005-07-10

dutiot and argerich make a great team they blend very well together espesily in the 3rd concerto, very well played probeley the best 3rd iv every heard though i havent heard them all,though i still like argerich more when she was young but she still is a yellava pianist though her sound is more modern where as dutiot/montreal sound is more romantic but they still blend well together.decide for your self.i give it 4 stars mostly because of the sound,im glad they got john ducursly from london/label to do the engerniering for emi but the sound is kinda dark and a little blurry but wuy carp buy it for the preformence you wont regret it

5 out of 5 stars Whoowhee........2004-06-09

Ms. Argerich has always given a smashing Prokofiev and on this CD you get that, twice. I owned her recording of Prokofiev's Toccata in C Major, Opus 11, before I bought this CD. Stunning. She has turned me on to Prokofiev an unbelievable amount. She plays his music with ease, complete comprehension, complete technique. There is absolutely nothing lacking in these two concertos.
The Bartok concerto, however, is definitely deserved of my highest acclaim. This performance takes absolutely nothing away from the CD. In fact, it has become one of my favorite concertos, and given Argerich a spot as one of my favorite pianists. (She wasn't previously on the list for her distasteful recording of Brahms' G Minor Rhapsody).

5 out of 5. This was a very easy decision, and it should be the same for you to buy it.

5 out of 5 stars A Marriage of Wizardry and Mysticism.......2003-08-25

Martha Argerich has sustained a brilliant career and just seems to become more eloquent with the passing years, adding a rich mysticism to her volcanic energy. And what better concerti to demonstrate these approaches than those on this stunning CD: Prokofiev #1,3 and Bartok #3. Technical perfection would seem an unexplainable bedfellow with a pianist who has always stressed passion and comunication in her idiomatic performances both on the concert stage and on the recorded realm. But that is one of the reasons Argerich has reigned the keyboard for so long. Her ability to dash off the Prokofiev 3rd with such apparent ease allows her to serve the composer's brittle, biting cynicism while retaining the eloquence of the langorous second movement. Charles Dutoit and the Montreal Orchestra are fine companions, if not the sonic splendor source of other better orchestras. It simply works here. This is most definitely a "Desert Isle" must for the CD collection.
Kun Woo Paik ~ Prokofiev - Piano Concertos, No. 1, Op. 10 · No. 3, Op. 26 · No. 4, Op. 53 / Polish NRSO · Wit
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Passionate intelligent playing.
  • wonderful performances and an unknown gem at budget price!
  • Great
  • Strikingly good
  • A surprise among budget CD's
Kun Woo Paik ~ Prokofiev - Piano Concertos, No. 1, Op. 10 · No. 3, Op. 26 · No. 4, Op. 53 / Polish NRSO · Wit
Sergey Prokofiev , Antoni Wit , Kun Woo Paik , and Polish Nathiona Radio Symphony Orchestra
Manufacturer: Naxos
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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ASIN: B0000013U1
Release Date: 1994-02-15

Tracks:

  1. Concerto No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: 1: Andante-allegro
  2. Concerto No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: 2: Tema con variazioni
  3. Concerto No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: 3: Allegro ma non troppo
  4. Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 1: Vivace
  5. Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 2: Andante
  6. Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 3: Moderato
  7. Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 4: Vivace
  8. Concerto No. 1 In D Flat Major, Op. 10

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Passionate intelligent playing. .......2005-06-20

I went to Barnes & Noble anticipating that I'd purchase the Previn/Ashkenazy recordings of the 5 Prokofiev Piano Concertos. After all, those 5 are packaged as a single set, and everyone speaks highly of the performances. I'm so very glad that I did NOT settle for those recording!! There was a certain clinical, dispassionate quality to the Previn/Ashkenazy recordings. In contrast, Kun Woo Paik truly feels this music, and has a dazzling technique. For me, these recordings of the 5 Prokofiev Piano Concertos are the recordings to own!

5 out of 5 stars wonderful performances and an unknown gem at budget price!.......2002-03-04

This CD has really excellent performances of some of the most exhilarating and most consoling music written by one of the master composers of the twentieth century. The price would be worth it alone to discover the virtually forgotten and seldom performed masterwork of the Fourth concerto. Anyone who enjoys the jazz influences, and especially the slow movement,of Ravel's G major concerto will love this concerto with its beautiful nocturne andante movement. (The concerto was rejected by its intended original performer Paul Wittgenstein.)
Prokofiev's scintillating first concerto student work is given a bright and bold reading by Kun Woo Paik and the third concerto is given a performance which is as satisfying and assured as Argerich. This CD is one I listen to almost every day and never tire of. I'd recommend it to anyone as at bargain price it gives three of the finest 20th Century piano concertos in an excellent recording with a fine orchestral contribution and a brilliant soloist! And the music is therapeutic! What more could you want!?

5 out of 5 stars Great.......2001-11-14

The concerto no. 3 is probably one of the most overplayed 20th century concertos, and, although it is a very effective concert piece and deserving of the attention, I find it hard to believe that these others have been neglected. Especially the 4th, with the tightly fitting orchestral and soloist parts, and the tension that is preserved even in the slow movements, without losing lyricism. Written when he was finishing up as a music student, the 1st concerto shows Prokofiev's talent and originality for such a young age. These performances are great, and at the Naxos price, there is little reason to consider any other recording.

5 out of 5 stars Strikingly good.......2000-12-11

These recordings of the Prokofiev 1st, 2nd and 3rd piano concertos, along with the other Naxos recording of the 2nd and 5th concertos, are remarkably high quality, not just for a budget label but in absolute terms. The sound quality is excellent and has a rich, high-fidelity 3-D quailty to it. The interpretations of all five concertos across the two CDs give full justification to the works. To my ears the interpretations are slightly different and unorthorthodox, making me look at the recordings in a slightly different, but refreshing way. They bring out details that I didn't notice in the 2-3 other recordings that I have of these concertos. Both the pianism and the orchestra are excellent, and they smoothly compliment each other. It's good, it's a little different, it's refreshing, it's cheap...I like it.

4 out of 5 stars A surprise among budget CD's.......2000-08-11

This recording, though not quite as well known as the other Prokofiev piano concerto sets out there, is equally as successful as any other out there. Kun woo Paik gives a very sharp, energetic, and insightful performance to each of these concertos and is backed up well by Paik and the Polish RSO. Concerto no. 3 is IMHO the best in the set and ranks above any other I've heard. There is lots of energy and excitement in all 3 movements and the slow sections are wonderfully played. Although the playing is not exactly polished and smoothed over, I feel the rough sound adds an extra ounce of excitement to it. Concerto no. 1 is a bit slower than I am used to and doesn't exactly do much for me, but the middle slow section of the concerto is wonderfully played. Concerto no. 4 also has lots of energy, but it is not one of my favorite concertos. All in all, this CD is worth it just for the 3rd concerto.

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