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Yevgeny Svetlanov - Piano Concerto (1950, rev.1976) 

Bartje Bartmans
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Yevgeny Fyodorovich Svetlanov (Russian: Евгéний Фёдорович Светлáнов; 6 September 1928 - 3 May 2002) was a Russian conductor, composer and a pianist.
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Piano Concerto in C minor (1976)
Reduction for 2 pianos by Theodore Servin
1. Andante sostenuto (0:00)
2. Allegro non troppo (8:53)
Yevgeny Svetlanov, piano and the Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by Maxim Shostakovich.
Svetlanov was born in Moscow and studied conducting with Aleksandr Gauk at the Moscow Conservatory. From 1955 he conducted at the Bolshoi Theatre, being appointed principal conductor there in 1962. From 1965 he was principal conductor of the USSR State Symphony Orchestra (now the Russian State Symphony Orchestra). In 1979 he was appointed principal guest conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra. Svetlanov was also music director of the Residentie Orchestra (The Hague) from 1992 to 2000 and the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra from 1997 to 1999.
In 2000 Svetlanov was fired from his post with the Russian State Symphony Orchestra by the minister of culture of Russia, Mikhail Shvydkoi. The reason given was that Svetlanov was spending too much time conducting abroad and not enough time in Moscow.
Svetlanov was particularly noted for his interpretations of Russian works - he covered the whole range of Russian music, from Mikhail Glinka to the present day. He was also one of the few Russian conductors to conduct the entire symphonic output of Gustav Mahler.
His own compositions included a String Quartet (1948), Daugava, Symphonic Poem (1952), Siberian Fantasy for Orchestra, Op. 9 (1953), Images d'Espagne, Rhapsody for orchestra (1954), Symphony (1956), Festive Poem (1966), Russian Variations for harp and orchestra (1975), Piano Concerto in c minor (1976) and Poem for Violin and Orchestra "To the Memory of David Oistrakh" (1975).
Svetlanov was also an extremely competent pianist, three notable recordings being Sergei Rachmaninoff's Piano Trio No. 2 in D minor and Cello Sonata op. 19, and a disc of Nikolai Medtner's piano music.

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22 май 2024

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Комментарии : 90   
@ALEXEYKLEPTSIN
@ALEXEYKLEPTSIN Месяц назад
Не каждый дирижёр может сочинять такую музыку. Браво, маэстро Светланов!!!!!!
@FueganTV
@FueganTV Год назад
Major 6 chords in the piano's entrance are just ahhhhh so good.
@studentofcounterpoint
@studentofcounterpoint 3 года назад
5:01 that moment is breathtaking the way he builds it up is astonishing
@nickmaestro
@nickmaestro 10 месяцев назад
My heart skipped a beat. It was that good.
@Isaac-ju8lx
@Isaac-ju8lx 3 года назад
Based and Svetlanovpilled
@user-wo8qo4ow1c
@user-wo8qo4ow1c 3 месяца назад
От всей души благодарю канал и лично mesje Bartje Bartmans за эту и другие публикации!!! Вы делаете очень хорошую и значимую работу! Благодарю Вас! Огромное впечатление и полный восторг и радость души от прослушивания этого сочинения Евгения Фёдоровича ... ! Благодарю!
@janhoppezak9731
@janhoppezak9731 2 года назад
words are not enough, just listen with your soul
@nikajinpusno9563
@nikajinpusno9563 3 года назад
This is great. Really original themes and colours for a romantic concerto. Very pleasant discovery. Thanks for sharing.
@TheodoreServin
@TheodoreServin 3 года назад
I still remember discovering this piece for the first time, having already been in awe of Svetlanov's conducting and piano playing (especially from his recording of Rachmaninov's Piano Trio no. 2), and being amazed at the unexpected beauty and sophistication of the piece; I fell in love with it immediately. Considering the time of composition, I wasn't expecting such a lusciously romantic and melodic piece. This has to be one of the most underrated piano concertos in recent memory. Thank you for posting this, and especially for posting with my score!
@emilyhutjes
@emilyhutjes 4 месяца назад
Beautiful Concerto, thank you. I have put it on Face-Book. 🌷🌷🌷 (Netherlands)
@LukeFaulkner
@LukeFaulkner 3 года назад
I didn't realise there were any Romantic Piano Concertos written in the 2nd half of the 20th century... This reminds me a bit of Medtner 3 (written only 7 years earlier, admittedly).
@sandryushka
@sandryushka 3 года назад
Luke Faulkner In the USSR the Romantic paradigm persisted significantly longer than in the west. If you even take Shostakovich, who died in 1975, and Khachaturian, who died in 1978 - their music isn’t exactly Romantic, but post-Romantic, surely. A lot of Soviet orchestral movie music was purely romantic in style, and was so until the 1980s.
@TheodoreServin
@TheodoreServin 3 года назад
Also, check out Anatoly Alexandrov's Piano Concerto. It's a wonderful piece comparable to Rachmaninov's later concertos, but was written in 1974! It's true about film music. Most of it (up till ca. 1986) tended to be based on Russian folk music, and the film orchestras tended to have folk instruments like balalaikas and bayans. Beautiful music.
@towardthesea_
@towardthesea_ 3 года назад
Not quite in the second half of the 20th century, but Kurt Atterberg's concerto from 1936 is a real gem.
@justsomeguy7044
@justsomeguy7044 2 года назад
The first movement feels similar to Medtner 3 (opens in e minor, goes to E major), but Medtner 3 is a much better work. The second movement is the first movement of Rach 2 if Medtner had written it. It's a bit all over the place. It's a strange combination of movements, like they were written separately.
@RodrigoElorduy
@RodrigoElorduy 3 года назад
Svetlanov was a genius!
@douglasanderson3573
@douglasanderson3573 3 года назад
Hearing so much Grieg Piano Concerto No. 1 in A minor in here! It's amazing!!
@classicallpvault8251
@classicallpvault8251 Год назад
I once saw him conduct the Russian State Symphony Orchestra in '97 in Duisburg, when I was 11 years old - one of my mum's violin pupils studied with one of their first violinists in Russia, before he and his mother emigrated to the Netherlands, and his old teacher invited us to that concert. Wasn't aware at the time their conductor was a great composer as well, both this and the string quartet you recently posted are breath-taking.
@HodGabriel
@HodGabriel 2 года назад
1:23 - 2:39 This melody is to die for!
@nicholaswheeler8038
@nicholaswheeler8038 24 дня назад
2:14 when he goes to 3/4 time gets me every time. Such simple and beautiful writing.
@MassimoMalavasi
@MassimoMalavasi 3 года назад
Very beautiful!!!
@lexshadow4118
@lexshadow4118 3 года назад
Wow! Thank you very much! I heard some compositions of Svetlanov some years ago and I was pleasantly surprised by them.
@aaocs7042
@aaocs7042 2 года назад
Thank you so much for putting this up ❤️❤️❤️
@jguerramusic
@jguerramusic 3 года назад
Thank you for sharing this jem! 👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼
@fransmeersman2334
@fransmeersman2334 3 года назад
Thank you for giving us this marvelous romantic jewel !
@gabrielhollander8121
@gabrielhollander8121 3 года назад
Absolutely gorgeous, thanks for sharing this!
@RigorMortis76
@RigorMortis76 3 года назад
GREAT!
@davidrehak3539
@davidrehak3539 3 года назад
Jevgenyij Szvetlanov:c-moll Zongoraverseny 1.Andante sostenuto 00:05 2.Allegro non troppo 08:53 3.Tempo di marcia - Alla breve 17:20 Jevgenyij Szvetlanov-zongora Moszkvai Rádió Szimfonikus Zenekara (Csajkovszkij Szimfonikus Zenekar) Vezényel:Makszim Sosztakovics
@user-wo8qo4ow1c
@user-wo8qo4ow1c 3 месяца назад
Благодарю Вас за уточнение!
@thenameisgsarci
@thenameisgsarci 3 года назад
Woohoo!
@fredericchopin7538
@fredericchopin7538 2 года назад
Marvelous!
@journey3451
@journey3451 3 года назад
オーケストラの譜面で聴きたかったです。素晴らしい曲です。 スクリャービンだったり、ラフマニノフだったり、プーランクだったりコープランドだったり これはダイジェスト版なのかと思うところも楽しいですね。
@pteroglosis
@pteroglosis 3 года назад
Amazing
@owengette8089
@owengette8089 Год назад
9:05 17:23 I think the Russian symphonic music anthology did a number on him
@helenestreck9126
@helenestreck9126 2 года назад
Do you know, if this concerto is listed on Spotify or deezer? I didn't find it yet.... You are doing great work!
@fyrexianoff
@fyrexianoff 3 года назад
unexpected, but way to go =)
@feneb6497
@feneb6497 2 года назад
Funnily enough, the first movement seems to quote the second movement of Tchai 1, which Svetlanov himself conducted.
@baghirovali2361
@baghirovali2361 3 года назад
Its second movement reminds me of an introduction to Rachmaninoff's 4th Concerto...
@ThomasJagusch
@ThomasJagusch 3 года назад
Indeed, very similar to Rach 4.1
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 2 года назад
This would better suite as a piano trio, very very beautiful
@nikajinpusno9563
@nikajinpusno9563 2 года назад
Would be quite a challenge! But I personally think it sounds great with orchestra, it’s a nice contrast.
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 2 года назад
@@nikajinpusno9563 I agree, especially with the climax in the first movement. I think I spoke too soon, just wish it was in 3 movements like a traditional concerto :(
@nikajinpusno9563
@nikajinpusno9563 2 года назад
@@donnytello1544 I suppose he tried to make it shorter. Coz music has gotten so short that people's attention span with music seems to be quite low in general. I think even two movements is stretching it, given the time it was composed in. Unfortunately, the splendid grandeur and passion of romanticism doesn't really fit in today's daily-changing and ever-rushing world. Quite sad. People tend to just listen to 3-minute hype-beat songs, never wanting to sit down with a piano concerto to really think and listen, appreciate the craft and wonder, the richness and passion.
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 2 года назад
@@nikajinpusno9563 what a shame it is. I fell in love with big works because done well, they really do bring out the best and most grand qualities of a good melody
@nikajinpusno9563
@nikajinpusno9563 2 года назад
@@donnytello1544 I love everything about classical works - romanticism in particular. The colours, the wonder, the fantasy, the grandeur, the emotion and the richness. Each piece is like a universe in itself.
@ferdinandstaufer1394
@ferdinandstaufer1394 9 дней назад
I have been searching for this exact piano concerto for over a year now but I can't find any sheet music for it. Even in the best music store in Germany "Bauer Hieber" they unfortunately told me that this piece is not available in Germany and they don't know where to get it. So I really want to buy either the two piano original version or the orchestra version and ideally both. Does anyone know where I can find it?
@HodGabriel
@HodGabriel 2 года назад
Where to get the sheet music for this concerto?
@benana_3
@benana_3 2 года назад
13:55-14:25 gives off strong Rach 3 vibes (even quoted the timpani roll at the end)
@heron6462
@heron6462 Год назад
I hear a lot of Poulenc.
@arkazoo4769
@arkazoo4769 Год назад
What year was this performed?
@tfpp1
@tfpp1 3 года назад
0:00 - Haha, concerto in "C minor". Clearly starts in E minor.
@frantisekvobecky1142
@frantisekvobecky1142 3 года назад
Are your recordings royalty free?
@bartjebartmans
@bartjebartmans 3 года назад
If you see ads on or especially copyright track listings in the info of a musical RU-vid video you know the answer.
@pietkraan1429
@pietkraan1429 3 года назад
Rachmaninov 5th piano concerto?
@nikajinpusno9563
@nikajinpusno9563 2 года назад
That’s what I was thinking, haha! But I’d say it lingers more between Rachmaninov’s 3rd and 4th concerto.
@thomaskendall452
@thomaskendall452 Год назад
@@nikajinpusno9563 . . . as blue-penciled by Glazunov and Myaskovsky.
@duqueadriano0081
@duqueadriano0081 7 месяцев назад
3:43 4:00
@Aaronservant0
@Aaronservant0 3 года назад
Who is this man? I must find and marry him.
@stalkerstomper3304
@stalkerstomper3304 3 года назад
He's dead unfortunately. I'm a composer too, though will you not want to marry me either until I die as well?
@VianoMusicAcademy
@VianoMusicAcademy 3 года назад
I studied with his former wife.
@faustianliszt
@faustianliszt 3 года назад
@@VianoMusicAcademy Me too! Hi Glen, small world!
@VianoMusicAcademy
@VianoMusicAcademy 3 года назад
@@faustianliszt glad to see you’re still kicking, Sean!
@daniellu8282
@daniellu8282 3 года назад
Reminiscent of old masters such as Richard Addinsell but with a stronger Russian flavor.
@thomaskendall452
@thomaskendall452 Год назад
It is reminiscent of the "Warsaw Concerto."
@robertwalker2052
@robertwalker2052 3 года назад
Not in c minor
@TheodoreServin
@TheodoreServin 3 года назад
The piece originally had only one movement, the second movement, which is in C minor. Later, in 1976, Svetlanov wrote an introductory movement, in E major, but apparently decided not to change the title. Some recording don't list a key, while others list it as C minor. 🤷‍♂️
@vanchin_vladimir
@vanchin_vladimir 3 года назад
@@TheodoreServin , I very like this piano concert. I was want his playing. How I can buy/have this scores??
@TheSlowPianist
@TheSlowPianist 3 года назад
I think for me there was a little too much of Rach 2 in there, but lovely writing nonetheless.
@stephenjablonsky1941
@stephenjablonsky1941 3 года назад
Are you sure this isn't the concerto Rachmaninoff wrote when he was a teenager?
@wilh3lmmusic
@wilh3lmmusic Год назад
Sounds exactly like Rachmaninoff
@predrag-peterilich900
@predrag-peterilich900 3 года назад
Hardly a "discovery". Just a pleasant, easy to listen music without much else: just a pianisation/orchestralisation of Russian folk songs, with lavish borrowing from P. I. Tschaikovsky and S. Rachmaninov. He would do good in Holliywood.
@LordFloofTM
@LordFloofTM 2 месяца назад
Maybe, but this makes it clear what kind of music he likes, and it is still quite soulful in its own regard
@chadweirick67
@chadweirick67 3 года назад
I guess I'm the only one that hated this a lot of empty gestures
@bartjebartmans
@bartjebartmans 3 года назад
What is your complaint exactly?
@tomski_w
@tomski_w 3 года назад
no, you're not. it is a completely graphomaniac piece with zero 'composition'.
@AskewMusicProductions
@AskewMusicProductions 3 года назад
Neither of you are wrong. It's very stereotypical in its neo-romantic attitude and borrowing from before circa 1900. But, as a pianist and teacher, this piece fits perfectly on a concert stage, especially if the orchestra is pressed for time as they increasingly often are. And, the patterns themselves aren't outlandish and aren't meant to be by any means. Not to say this piece is easy, but it's not meant to be excruciating and that's what makes it legendary. For pianists that compose, myself included, it's often difficult to find the balance of being playable by others, so Rachmaninoff for instance wrote his music with "cheat codes", if you will, for those massive chords since we're not all endowed with hands that span a 13th. Liszt revised many of his pieces 3+ times for accessibility. It's about the concept and principle for the players, and ear candy for the average listener.
@bartjebartmans
@bartjebartmans 3 года назад
@Charles Askew. Yes right on! What some people seem to forget is that works like these by pianist/conductor composers give an excellent idea of their own personal skills. You can tell Svetlanov was a formidable pianist. Seen from that angle he fits the Mozart, Beethoven, Ries, Hummel, Mendelssohn, Liszt, d'Albert, Bartok, Rachmaninov, Scriabin, John Ogdon, etc. etc. mold. Composers who were fantastic pianists and wrote concertos they performed themselves or performed in private with ease. Often musical works have a functionality eluding the casual critical listener.
@vanchin_vladimir
@vanchin_vladimir 3 года назад
@@bartjebartmans , do you have scores this piano concert?
@dadshomeagain8996
@dadshomeagain8996 2 года назад
Not one single original idea. Fun to listen though. It´s like Svetlanov found Rach´s trash bin.
@thomaskendall452
@thomaskendall452 Год назад
So true, Dadshome! I'm trying to figure out why it's so familiar, especially the last movement. I don't have a CD of it, neither do I have an LP, and my other main source of tunes is an FM classical station which has always made a point of not playing second-tier Socialist Realism. Head-scratcher . . .
@dadshomeagain8996
@dadshomeagain8996 Год назад
@@thomaskendall452 Ok, this might help: compare the beginning of the 2nd movement with the beginning of this: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ts3Q4VIkLv0.html
@thomaskendall452
@thomaskendall452 Год назад
@@dadshomeagain8996 For sure, Svetlanov was stomping the grapes in Rachmaninov's vat. But I meant the whole concerto, both movements, not just Svetlanov's channeling Rachmaninov.
@chystokletov
@chystokletov Год назад
@@dadshomeagain8996 You have wild imagination
@LordFloofTM
@LordFloofTM 2 месяца назад
It’s a prime example of “one man’s trash is another’s treasure”
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