Тёмный

Jorge Bolet plays Marx - Romantic Piano Concerto in E major [Audio + Score] 

The Piano Experience
Подписаться 9 тыс.
Просмотров 8 тыс.
50% 1

🎹🎶 LIKE and SUBSCRIBE for more videos ! / @thepianoexperience
🎹🎶 SUBSCRIBE to my PATREON ! → / thepianoexperience
Jorge bolet plays Marx - Romantic Piano Concerto in E major [Audio + Score]
This recording is from performance ofJorge Bolet and the New York Philharmonic under Zubin Metha. 29-May 4, 1982.
A live recording with Jorge Bolet and the New York Philharmonic under Zubin Metha. 29-May 4, 1982.
The Romantisches Klavierkonzert (which, as with all his works, bears no opus number) was composed in 1918/9 and first performed by Marx himself in a version for two pianos in the summer of 1919 with the Trieste- born pianist Angelo Kessissoglu, who also performed the orchestral premiere in Vienna in January 1921, conducted by Ferdinand Löwe.
The concerto is in E major and laid out in three movements. It is scored for a normal-sized orchestra, but the piano part is of immense stature (Marx must have been a formidable pianist) and dominates throughout. As with Korngold’s later Concerto in C sharp (1922/3), this work resembles a symphony for piano and orchestra, for at no time is the piano solo reduced to mere display. The integration of melody and countermelody, the interplay between soloist and orchestra, and the truly orchestral characteristics of the piano part make for a symphonic whole. Marx was not a brilliant orchestrator, generally opting to allow the string section to support the piano with occasional flashes of colour coming from the wind and brass.
In matters of form Marx was content to remain within Classical ideals: a traditional sonata structure in the opening movement, the slow movement in simple ternary form, while the finale is a lively rondo. In this respect, the concerto is more attuned to the nineteenth century than the twentieth. Its ‘Romantic’ characteristics are therefore suggested by its musical content.
The opening movement, Lebhaft (Allegro moderato) (track 1), is in the tonic E major and, beginning with a discreet drum roll, immediately the heroic upswing of the main theme is announced, a fulsome and radiant melodic idea that is already being treated polyphonically in the inner voices. After this rapturous statement, the piano enters in the manner of a cadenza-a vigorous flourish, leading to a richly chordal repeat of the theme which immediately broadens and develops rapidly. A subsidiary theme, heavily accented with powerful octaves, darkens the optimistic tone before the second subject proper enters in the woodwinds. This slower theme is highly expressive and the Marxian harmony here is ravishing. The form is then broadened to include a sort of scherzo section in brisk time, heard in the orchestra alone, which replaces a more traditional development although references to the earlier material abound. A series of powerful climaxes leads to the recapitulation where the piano takes up the opening theme with great virtuosity as the orchestra fills out the second subject in response. After a terrific climax, the movement ends rapidly in the tonic major.
The slow movement 2 is in F sharp minor and opens with a soulful pastorale for woodwinds, reminiscent of Bach and based on a plaintive melody. The piano enters and proceeds to embellish and almost improvise on this theme, building to a huge crescendo of spread chords and increasingly chromatic arpeggios, before the pastoral mood returns. The piano is frequently alone, musing to itself, and as the movement ends it is the piano which draws this highly individual elegy to a close, with the full orchestra only returning for the final chord.
We return to E major for the finale 3-a glittering rondo which restores the exultant upswing of the first movement, replete with dance rhythms and many playful themes that are woven together in an extraordinary manner. At times, the harmony and wayward, ever- moving melodic material remind one of Delius. A subsidiary theme heard in the bassoon leads to an episode which is Russian in character but this is soon replaced by a heartfelt, lyrical, upward-leaping melody of considerable beauty. This reappears in full orchestra before the hectic coda, in which the piano hurtles through some incredibly difficult variations on the main idea (replete with double, consecutive, chromatic-and split-octaves, coupled with syncopated spread chords!) as the concerto ends triumphantly.
The Romantisches Klavierkonzert was played in Austria and Germany throughout the 1920s, but (perhaps because of the phenomenal difficulty of the solo part) it had disappeared from the repertoire by the mid 1930s.

Опубликовано:

 

4 окт 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 31   
@mikeatthepiano6067
@mikeatthepiano6067 2 года назад
I. Allegro moderato II. Andante affettuoso - 17:40 III. Finale (Allegro molto) - 27:32
@ThePianoExperience
@ThePianoExperience 2 года назад
Thanks 🙏 !
@salt_cots
@salt_cots 2 года назад
''In the piano part, [the composer] uses four- and five-note chords in each hand, and he's all over the keyboard. So memorization has been a tremendous problem. Unfortunately, my first performances of it are the ones I'm doing with Mr. [Zubin] Mehta and the Philharmonic, and I can tell you, I'm going to be nervous. Normally, I would prefer to try out works this complicated with three or four smaller orchestras before coming to New York, but that wasn't possible. And from here, I'm taking it straight to Vienna, Berlin, Hamburg, Linz, Zagreb and Munich. But I'm a sucker for this kind of music, and the opportunity to play it was something I couldn't resist.'' (Jorge Bolet, interview, New York Times, April 1982) 'Asked to elaborate on the character of the work, Mr. Bolet hid a faint smile under his thick mustache and asked, ''Do you know 'Death and Transfiguration,' 'Till Eulenspiegel' and 'Don Juan'? Well, that's the character. It's very Straussian.'' Then, sitting at a slightly out-of-tune piano piled high with scores, he opened his two-piano reduction of the work and read long sections from each movement. With its often dense piano textures, its stretches of lugubrious melody, and its stream of Romantic gestures, the work easily lives up to its title. It seems, in fact, an entirely fitting vehicle for Mr. Bolet, whose reputation rests on his ability to render such splashy scores in a manner that has struck many reviewers as entirely coherent and aristocratic, preserving what Harold C. Schonberg called ''virtuosity on the most supreme level'' without allowing the music to lapse into superficial displays of technique.' In actual fact it was in 1976 that Joseph Marx's Romantic Piano Concerto was finally resurrected - and by Bolet who reported that he had discovered the score in a private music collection in the mid-seventies. He found it difficult to read from the orchestral score but then a friend found a two piano edition in Patelsons Music House, 57th Street New York City.
@steveegallo3384
@steveegallo3384 Год назад
Salt Cots -- OMyGod....What a Trip.....BRAVO from Acapulco!
@LazlosPlane
@LazlosPlane Год назад
Wonderful info! Thanks. But Patelson's was on 56th Street just behind Carnegie Hall!
@salt_cots
@salt_cots Год назад
@@LazlosPlane Thanks! It's years since I visited. I gather the store no longer exists.
@vass86
@vass86 11 месяцев назад
Loved that store......... and it no longer exists@@salt_cots
@pauljackson1029
@pauljackson1029 11 месяцев назад
Extraordinary for a live perfromance
@iltromboncini32
@iltromboncini32 11 месяцев назад
What an utterly glorious piece!!!
@pgrade1356
@pgrade1356 2 года назад
8:46 jesus christ thats incredible
@jefftarpinian4430
@jefftarpinian4430 8 месяцев назад
24:01 My favorite bit
@calebkinman5302
@calebkinman5302 2 месяца назад
Please consider uploading a score video of the Efrem Zimbalist concerto. It has an intresting history.
@Toffeethegoldfish
@Toffeethegoldfish 2 месяца назад
10:10
@KerbalHub
@KerbalHub 2 года назад
We're seizing the means of production to this music. Support us!
@unnamed_boi
@unnamed_boi Год назад
wha
@KerbalHub
@KerbalHub Год назад
@@unnamed_boi joke. The composers name is marx (no relation to karl)
@unnamed_boi
@unnamed_boi Год назад
@@KerbalHub oh i see xd i didn't get the communist joke
@slowbrosrus8163
@slowbrosrus8163 Год назад
it's not a communist joke unless everyone gets it
@wilhelmberger9925
@wilhelmberger9925 Год назад
@@KerbalHubheres actually also a composer Karl Marx (1897-1985)
@LazlosPlane
@LazlosPlane Год назад
Is it me or is this concerto an absolute mess?
@iltromboncini32
@iltromboncini32 Год назад
It's you
@LazlosPlane
@LazlosPlane Год назад
@@iltromboncini32 I'm sorry but that ENTIRE first movement in one long Development Section. If it weren't so noisy ,.... it has some nice themes -- but really.....
@iltromboncini32
@iltromboncini32 Год назад
​@@LazlosPlanecalm down, dear... Or go and play with the Lego
@LazlosPlane
@LazlosPlane Год назад
@@iltromboncini32 Ok. The "Lego" crack was a good one... damn....
@owengette8089
@owengette8089 11 месяцев назад
@@LazlosPlane I think it’s just about personal taste. I personally love this work for its dense Wagnerian chromaticism but with more color than Wagner tended to muster-it feels, like most of Marx’s music, like a giant movie score. However, if you approach this concerto hoping for form, you’re gonna be disappointed.
Далее
Adolf Wiklund Piano Concerto No. 1
35:02
Просмотров 33 тыс.
V16 из БЕНЗОПИЛ - ПЕРВЫЙ ЗАПУСК
13:57
Китайка стучится Домой😂😆
00:18
Henselt - Piano Concerto Op. 16 (Lewenthal)
27:52
Просмотров 43 тыс.
Jorge Bolet & David Dubal, 4/30/82
51:51
Просмотров 5 тыс.
Joseph Marx  - Eine Herbstsymphonie FULL VERSION
1:12:12
Jorge Bolet plays Chopin-Godowsky-a commentary
17:39
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.
John Ireland - Piano Concerto in E-flat major
24:48
Просмотров 11 тыс.
Joseph Marx - Symphonische Nachtmusik
26:10
Просмотров 3,8 тыс.
Piano Concerto in E Major "Romantic": III. Sehr lebhaft
13:32
V16 из БЕНЗОПИЛ - ПЕРВЫЙ ЗАПУСК
13:57