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Bartok - Piano Concertos Nos 1, 2 and 3 | Chandos CHAN10610

Bartok - Piano Concertos Nos 1, 2 and 3

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Label: Chandos

Cat No: CHAN10610

Barcode: 0095115161029

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Orchestral

Release Date: 31st August 2010

Gramophone Editor's Choice

Contents

Artists

Jean-Efflam Bavouzet (piano)
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra

Conductor

Gianandrea Noseda

Works

Bartok, Bela

Piano Concerto no.1, BB91, Sz83
Piano Concerto no.2, BB101, Sz95
Piano Concerto no.3, BB127, Sz119

Artists

Jean-Efflam Bavouzet (piano)
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra

Conductor

Gianandrea Noseda

About

This is the first concerto recording by Jean-Efflam Bavouzet for Chandos. The pianist turns his attention to some of the mightiest concertos of the twentieth century. The three Bartók Piano Concertos on a single CD represents superb value for money.

Bartók wrote his First Concerto, one of his most challenging works, in 1926. The percussive piano writing ads much bite to the textures. The first movement is striking in its rhythmic vigour and dramatic character. The central Andante is essentially a dialogue between the soloist and four percussion players and features much atmospheric ‘Night Music’. In the finale, following without a break, the brilliant motoric rhythms of the first movement return, as does the dramatic use of percussion in a thrilling męlée of sound.

The Second Concerto was first performed in 1933. The music is more melodically appealing and in the first movement, which is notably contrapuntal, the strings are silent throughout. The hushed slow movement on strings is interrupted half way through by a brilliant and startling scherzo, with a striking sequence of tremolos and note-clusters, before the haunting quiet mood of the opening returns. The finale, again with brilliant use of percussion (as well as brass), ends the work in virtuoso fashion.

The Third Concerto was written at the end of the composer’s life, in 1945, and is much more restrained than the previous piano concertos. The work is lighter, airy and almost neo-classical compared to much of his earlier music. Unlike much of Bartók’s output, the piece was not composed on commission, but was rather created as a surprise birthday gift for Bartók’s second wife, Ditta Pásztory, who was, like Bartók, a skilled concert pianist. The two lively outer movements, full of the composer’s distinctive rhythmic drive, are separated by a slow movement of great beauty and serenity, with, again, a striking, contrasting middle section. The final seventeen bars were orchestrated by the composer’s pupil, Tibor Serly, after the composer’s death, based on Bartók’s notes.

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