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Charles Mayer; Piano Concerto in D, Op.89 (1847) 

Darrel Hoffman
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Charles Mayer (1799-1862) was a Prussian composer. IMSLP lists his nationality as Russian, German, and French. He was born in Königsberg (modern-day Kaliningrad), which is today an exclave of Russia, but at the time part of the Prussian Empire which later mostly became modern-day Germany, so that explains those two claims, not sure on the French part, other than he lived there briefly. He studied under John Field, and one of his pieces was misattributed to Frederick Chopin for over a century. This is the second of two piano concertos that I know of. The first is missing the orchestra parts on IMSLP, so I'll need to find another source if I want to do that one.
(Note: The actual title of the piece is "Concerto Symphonique pour Piano et Orchestre". But if I don't call it "Piano Concerto" in the title it seems to not show up in anyone's search results. At least that's my theory, let's see if it pans out.)
Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles...)
IMSLP: imslp.org/wiki/Category:Mayer...
Movements:
0:00 - I. Allegro ma non troppo - attacca:
9:26 - II. Andante quasi allegretto
17:55 - III. Finale. Allegro (vivo)
Much like the Raif concerto ( • Oscar Raif; Piano Conc... ) I posted a few weeks ago, this one also features a number of prominent solo parts for the cello, particularly in the 2nd and 3rd movements. Were it featured more in the 1st, it'd be almost enough to qualify as a double concerto. This transcription is mostly complete with one exception - the timpani part was completely missing from the manuscript. It is referenced in the cues on several of the other parts in two places - notably it's the first thing you hear, and it also has a roll into the "B" section later in the 1st movement. I've taken the liberty of inserting it into a bunch of other places that felt appropriate (in the 1st and 3rd movements - the 2nd has too many harmony changes for the 2 notes on the timpani to keep up), but this is guesswork at best.
I spent a little more time than usual on this one, which is why my last several releases were older, simpler works, to give this one the attention and polish it needed. I hope it shows, this one was a fun piece, and I'd like to do more like it, but these Romantic period pieces take a lot more work to sound good than the older early-Classical and Baroque pieces. (There's also a lot more of the latter to choose from - more recent pieces are more likely to have existing recordings.) I may alternate between them just to give these later works the attention they deserve, but also be able to release something on a weekly basis.
Disclaimer: Yes, it's synthesized. Obviously real musicians with real instruments would be vastly superior, but this simulated performance is better than nothing at all, which is what existed previously. My greatest wish is that these videos will inspire someone with the means to arrange a real performance and hopefully record and publish it so we can hear them in their full glory. If that someone is you, or you know of an existing recording of this, please let me know and I may add a link to this description.

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9 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 6   
@pietrolandri6081
@pietrolandri6081 2 дня назад
God bless you for this one. Mayer piano music is wonderful and so underrated that no one would dare more to execute his concertante. At least we have a midi..... One day someone would make it humanly. With thanks again
@Darrel_Hoffman
@Darrel_Hoffman 2 дня назад
There's actually a fair number of Mayer's works on IMSLP, including another earlier concerto (sadly lacking the orchestral parts, so I can't transcribe it unless I find another source). There's a bit of confusion in that there are two Charles Mayers (I believe father and son? But that's only a guess as one is occasionally referred to as "Jr.") And there's apparently some doubt as to who wrote what.
@pietrolandri6081
@pietrolandri6081 2 дня назад
@@Darrel_Hoffman interesting.... Didn't know about father and son. Who's the author of op 200, the wonderful studies, father or son?
@Darrel_Hoffman
@Darrel_Hoffman 2 дня назад
I am by no means an expert - this concerto is the only work of his that I am familiar with, and only because of my work for this video, though it's enough to make me interested in taking a deeper look. I'm going by comments on the IMSLP and Wikipedia pages (linked in the description). I would suspect that most of them are by the elder, but there's a couple works that have publication dates after his death in 1862 that are more likely the work of the younger (died in 1904), though posthumous publication is not unusual. (And I'm only guessing that the two are related based on the "Jr." sometimes seen in the name. It could be just a coincidence.)
@guto1953
@guto1953 24 дня назад
Concerto muito bonito, pena que a orquestra é fake.
@Darrel_Hoffman
@Darrel_Hoffman 24 дня назад
Obrigado por ouvir. O objetivo deste canal é divulgar obras esquecidas que não foram gravadas por uma orquestra real. Espero que alguém com acesso a uma orquestra se inspire para gravá-la de verdade.
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