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Paul Pabst - Piano Concerto, Op. 82 (1882) 

Bartje Bartmans
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Paul Pabst (Russian: Pavel Pabst) (15 May 1854 - 9 June 1897) was a pianist, composer, and Professor of Piano at Moscow Conservatory. He studied piano with his father and then in Vienna with Anton Door and in Weimar with Franz Liszt. The young Pabst had a fortuitous meeting with Anton Rubinstein when he travelled to Königsberg as overseer of cultural programmes there.
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Piano Concerto in E-flat major, Op. 82 (1882)
Dedication: Anton Door (1833-1919)
1. Allegro maestoso (0:00)
2. Andante cantabile (12:28)
3. Allegro assai (21:28)
Oleg Marshev, piano and the South Jutland Symphony Orchestra conducted by Vladimir Zima
Pabst moved to Riga, then in the Russian Empire, as an accomplished pianist in 1875. In the autumn of 1878 he accepted an invitation from Nikolai Rubinstein to teach at the Moscow Imperial Conservatory. In Russia he was known as Pavel Augustovich Pabst. He was appointed Professor of Piano at the Conservatory in 1881 after Rubinstein's death, and taught there for the rest of his life. Amongst his pupils were Sergei Lyapunov, Nikolai Medtner and Alexander Goldenweiser.
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky frequently attended concerts given by Pabst, and used to refer to Pavel, as he was then known, as "a pianist of divine elegance", and "a pianist from God". In 1884, Tchaikovsky appointed Pabst to edit his piano works for publication.
Pabst's students carried the great tradition of Russian romanticism into the 20th century. Pabst was considered one of the greatest pianists of his day, admired even by the great Franz Liszt. He and the young Sergei Rachmaninoff performed many concerts together. Until 2005 Pabst was known as a composer only for his piano transcriptions of the music for the ballet and opera by Tchaikovsky. He also played the piano concerto by Anton Arensky, and was the soloist at its premiere. Pabst's piano transcriptions were admired by the most outstanding pianists of the time, and were considered to be on a par with those by Liszt himself.
Paul Pabst died suddenly in 1897 in Moscow and was buried at Vvedenskoye Cemetery. His funeral wreath from the Russian Musical Society contained the epitaph: "To Honored Artist - Indefatigable Professor - Hardly simply a man".

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19 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 50   
@jovi1715
@jovi1715 Месяц назад
This channel is an endless serie of hidden treasures!! Thanks for uploading
@gregorypalmer5403
@gregorypalmer5403 2 года назад
Wow this isn't Moskowski under a pseudonym? What fun. Fine performance; fine music. Classical music doesn't always have to be super-serious. Listen to the Hans Pfitzner Concerto for an example of somebody trying too hard. But this " Pabst" lets it all hang out. A nice discovery, for me !
@mr-wx3lv
@mr-wx3lv 3 года назад
Never heard of the composer, but it's great music. I'm so sad that these lesser composers hardly ever get a look in. There is something Tschaikovsky-ess about it, hardly surprising. But it, very much it's own identity...
@thenameisgsarci
@thenameisgsarci 3 года назад
Yes, thanks once again for doing this one! :)
@Reuben_95
@Reuben_95 3 года назад
You keep churning out these unreal forgotten masterpieces! 😍 thanks!
@stephenjablonsky1941
@stephenjablonsky1941 3 года назад
If you are a good composer like Pabst music history allows you to quickly fade into oblivion. All that remains are the magicians who produced the perfect music we recognizes as masterpieces. Don't get me wrong; this is a nice piece. It just is great and the musical stage only has room for great.
@MrInterestingthings
@MrInterestingthings 3 года назад
This is wonderful music ! The StraussBurleske is getting played more now . Tchaikovsky 2 and 3 aren't much but this Pabst delivers a solid , huge orchestration grandeur we love the 19th century for and it's definetly a Romantic virtuoso concerto ! The 2nd movement is wonderful . This is the concerto we would want from a Tchaikovsky ! Oleg Marshev again is always wonderful . Didn't he record all the Ustvolskaya sonatas - such very different music . I had that cd .
@fulviopolce9785
@fulviopolce9785 3 года назад
Gran bel concerto,tipico del tardo Ottocento. Tecnicamente virtuoso,soprattutto e con momenti di notevole lirismo.Bravo.
@dustinlaferney3160
@dustinlaferney3160 2 года назад
Same feeling when I discovered Busoni's piano concerto. This is AMAZING!
@classicallpvault8251
@classicallpvault8251 9 месяцев назад
This is a lot easier to digest for the listener than Busoni's piano concerto though. Very accessible and slightly sentimental lyrical melodies interchanged with breath-taking keyboard acrobatics - am actually surprised this didn't make it to the standard repertoire.
@dustinlaferney3160
@dustinlaferney3160 9 месяцев назад
@@classicallpvault8251 agree with everything you said. I just re-listened and it is just a stunning example of everything a great romantic piano concerto should be.
@jonaskatona7136
@jonaskatona7136 8 месяцев назад
@@classicallpvault8251 Two reasons why it didn't make the standard repertoire is because 1) Paul Pabst hasn't developed quite the name to carry his music forward like Rachmaninoff, Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, etc. in terms of piano works and 2) the score to this piece was actually lost but discovered quite recently (I believe in the last few decades), and so it could not be heard, let alone performed, until then.
@byronsutherland1380
@byronsutherland1380 3 года назад
Love it! Joyful opening to the first movement and just a joy to listen to. Must be a lot of fun to play too
@johncarpenter624
@johncarpenter624 2 года назад
Bartmans. I like your record of Dohnanyi Nursery Rhyme Variations
@basilecortale8076
@basilecortale8076 3 года назад
the third mvt is so fun
@ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks
@ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks 5 месяцев назад
Yes, one of the nicest movements that I've heard in a piano concerto till now!
@ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks
@ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks 5 месяцев назад
Excellent concerto! How do you create chapters? They don't work in my channel. I read that if you use copyrighted material they don't work, but since I'm sure that you also upload copyrighted material I wonder why the chapters work in your channel.
@bartjebartmans
@bartjebartmans 5 месяцев назад
If you put in time stamps in the correct format it should work.
@Queeen7q
@Queeen7q 3 года назад
Konstantin Igumnov was a pupil of Paul Pabst also.
@RigorMortis76
@RigorMortis76 3 года назад
meraviglioso!
@robert-skibelo
@robert-skibelo Год назад
Was the score incomplete? The pages from about 11:54 to end of the first movement are missing. Anyway, thanks for posting. I had never heard of this composer and am grateful to have been enlightened.
@SCRIABINIST
@SCRIABINIST 2 года назад
The same guy who recorded the first ever recording of Chopin
@jmbechtel
@jmbechtel Год назад
If this is indeed true, then it is an absolutely astounding musical fact!
@SCRIABINIST
@SCRIABINIST Год назад
@@jmbechtel It is true, search up Pabst’s 1895 recording of a Chopin Nocturne.
@hsohn4901
@hsohn4901 3 года назад
a slight problem at the end of the first movement.
@damiangonzalez_esp
@damiangonzalez_esp 3 года назад
4th measure of this page: 02:13, that's something I've never seen before. C flat major on right hand and B major (enharmonic chord) on left hand. As a pianist/conductor, I get it, I understand why. As a composer, I also think it's extremely confusing and unnecessary 😁
@bartjebartmans
@bartjebartmans 3 года назад
Well, between you and me, this is a typical example of a virtuoso who knew how to write a concerto to showcase his own pianistic abilities, but his compositional gifts were not in sync with his pianistic gifts.
@danlemwil6816
@danlemwil6816 3 года назад
@@bartjebartmans Made sense to me, I liked it. Find your judgement a bit harsh. Sure, he's cutting it too literally - normally you'd synchronize the enharmonic change over both hands (so for instance not introduce the B major until the fourth quarter note).
@bartjebartmans
@bartjebartmans 3 года назад
I was more talking about the composition technique. Incomplete themes, themes not developed, no organic growth from material, everything loosely put together. What is so harsh with this simple observation? I uploaded it didn't I?
@janhoppezak9731
@janhoppezak9731 2 года назад
that' the difference between a director/pianist and a composer!!! And for everything there is a first time in life, life is by the way very confusing
@jerry_moo
@jerry_moo 4 месяца назад
@@bartjebartmans​​⁠​​⁠​​⁠Agreed and honestly, how unfortunate. The virtuoso writing often becomes intrusive and overbearing to many passages that illustrate beauty lying on the leading orchestra (example is the potential development of the theme introduced at 3:32, seemingly killed by whatever happened at 4:17 onwards), new gorgeous themes and tunes sporadically appear and are also sparsely strewn together without any real direction and structure thought out behind it. If only this was ever reworked, it could've had a Rach 1 treatment if he wanted to-or if he was even capable of doing so.
@carmenperalesgarrido3695
@carmenperalesgarrido3695 2 года назад
Maravilla de concierto!! Y también el poder leer algunos comentarios en mi idioma Gracias Google
@joeboyle5864
@joeboyle5864 3 года назад
Dead at 43..why ? Who knows what he might have done ? Crazy...
@scruffysean3640
@scruffysean3640 3 года назад
Wha... I thought he only made beer.
@davidyoung6331
@davidyoung6331 3 года назад
A little amusing that the piano concerto starts as if it were an overture.
@fyrexianoff
@fyrexianoff 3 года назад
overture means opening in french
@davidyoung6331
@davidyoung6331 3 года назад
@@fyrexianoff I just don't recall ever hearing a piano concerto opening with this much "drama" if you want to call it that. Any of Beethovens? no. Tchiakovsky? no. Dvorak, certainly not. Now it does sound like the opening to some overtures, from what I recall and other more dramatic works. Most piano concertos highlight the solo instrument and have the orchestra set the stage, Well, just my opinion and observation.
@Wosudhehqaxb9169
@Wosudhehqaxb9169 3 года назад
@@davidyoung6331 Grieg's opens with quite a bit of drama imo. As well as Kurt Atterburgers piano concerto. Tchaikovskys first opens sounding like a fanfair
@FreakieFan
@FreakieFan 3 года назад
@@davidyoung6331 Are you kidding me? None of Tchaikovsky's or Beethoven's have a dramatic start? Plenty of piano concertos have dramatic openings like this, including some of Beethoven's and tchaikovsky's
@davidyoung6331
@davidyoung6331 3 года назад
@@FreakieFan It's an entirely subjection opinion or observation. I don't disagree with you. It's just an initial reaction on my part. Take or leave it. Don't make a big deal about it.
@damienprince3633
@damienprince3633 3 года назад
Lovely 😍💋 💝💖❤️
@steveegallo3384
@steveegallo3384 3 года назад
Lovely 😍💋 💝💖❤️ [I agree with Damien Prince]
@davidthomson4610
@davidthomson4610 3 года назад
31:00 - 31:10 💝💖❤️
@stefanstern7851
@stefanstern7851 3 года назад
Bad form
@ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks
@ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks 5 месяцев назад
Why?
@hyperaticism
@hyperaticism 2 месяца назад
@@ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracksThe first movement has a quite free and unconventional use of sonata form. I think it is actually monothematic, with the main theme presented at the beginning, clearly. Then it seems to give an exposition with two themes derived from the main theme, and after a reinstatement of the main theme two derived themes were developed, but never heard again later. The cadenza and the recapitulation contains only the main theme, and it was developed again into the final big tune. I think it resembles a kind of modified rondo-sonata with a sort of “pseudo” exposition and development
@jackhogan1280
@jackhogan1280 11 месяцев назад
I like a lot of Pabst's transcriptions, but I'm finding this concerto bombastic and unmemorable. Maybe it needs another hearing - except I'm very disinclined to give it one.
@bartjebartmans
@bartjebartmans 11 месяцев назад
Sometimes I upload works of historical interest, this is one of them. Musically it is indeed a bit of a messy affair. But it gives an idea what Pabst technique was, what he could pull off. More of a show of technique than contents.
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