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Free Music Notes for Rachmaninov: Piano Concertos Nos. 2 & 3Free Music Review: The Security and Exuberant Warmth of a Long Relationship Hit: 5 Stars
Yefim Bronfman and Esa-Pekka Salonen are musically related, or so it would seem from their frequent collaborations both in concert and in recordings (see also their Bartok recordings). Though this recording was made in 1990 it remains one of the finest performances of both the Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor and the Concerto No. 3 in D minor. And now with the reissue under the Essential Classics by Sony at the incredibly low bargain price this CD is one that is a 'must own' for any classical music lover.
Bronfman is one of today's most highly regarded musicians and pianists: he is intelligent, sensitive, technically sure, limitlessly powerful in his ability to draw beautiful sounds from the piano while allowing the usual 'impossible difficult' passages to seem like play, and he is a poet. These attributes serve him well in these performances. He is able give expansive verve to the extended melodic lines without dwelling too long to make them indulgent, and he drives through the rapid sections like a man of fire with dexterity and fleetness of passage.
Salonen is completely at home with Bronfman's approach to these concerti. Conducting The Philharmonia he draws orchestral singing that duets with Bronfman's lines, underlining the tenderness and echoing the line inventions in an utterly equal partnership. This is immaculate collaboration and results in two performances of Rachmaninov's most popular works that rank with the very finest in the recorded repertoire. Highly Recommended. Grady Harp, April 06
Free Music Review: It doesn't get much better than this Hit: 5 Stars
Bronfman is one of my absolute favorite contemporary pianists, and this album is the main reason why, the other reason was his visit to Cincinnati Symphony a year ago with an absolutely flawless performance.This recording does every bit of the "Rach three" justice and then some. Bronfman handles the transitions in the first movement between the fortissimo and pianissimo parts with the most natural expressionism I think I've heard. I've heard a lot of criticism from others that his choice to use the alternate cadenzas (written by Rachmaninoff after the fact) sort of cheapens the recording, as the only real "Rach three" is the original composition with the original cadenzas (incidentally, I have a Telarc recording of Rachmaninoff plays Rachmaninoff with him playing the original cadenzas, and I like the alternate). The problem I have with that criticism is that Bronfman unleashes some wicked wrath on the piano when he gets to the cadenzas that you can't help but lose every thought in your head. And then, with seemingly no strain, he goes from "fff" to "ppp" like he was born to do it. He pulls off the same prodigiousness on the 2nd concerto, setting the brooding mood early and typically acting like a genius throughout. I guess I just too many good things to say about Bronfman. He's coming back to Cincy in May, and you'll bet I'll be in the front row.
Free Music Review: Holy Cow! Hit: 5 Stars
I've listened to these concertos for years, and own three recordings of them. I've never heard anything like the Third as performed here, not even under Toscanini, Szell, or Kondrashin.
Bronfman must have hands even bigger than Rachmaninoff's to take this at such speed, especially the last movement of the Third.
Aesthetically, this is a "reach down your throat and pull your heart out" interpretation. Absolutely stunning! Before it was over, I was bouncing around the room conducting an imaginary orchestra and tears were running down my face.
And the pairing of the Second and the Third brings you, on one disk, the apogee of the romantic piano concerto.
January 2005 Update: The most recent issue of "BBC Music Magazine," p. 52, rates recordings of the Second Piano Concerto. Of all modern recordings, this one comes up tops, bettered only by a 1965 recording by Ashkenazy (which I own and find rather lifeless). The reviewer is the British pianist Lucy Parham (who calls this recording a treasure). So all the enthusiasm in these listener reviews is not misplaced. Now if Sony will reissue this in SACD, I will be very happy.
Free Music Review: One of the Best Hit: 5 Stars
When I recently wrote reviews of Stephen Hough's performances of the two concertos contained here, I was asked by a friend if I had ever heard Bronfman's recordings of them. I hadn't, although I had heard him play the Third live and knew that he was a terrific pianist who is also a musician. But now that I have heard these performances, I'm willing to state that these, too, are among the best recordings available. Bronfman is not a pianist who startles with new ideas or unusual gimmicks, but he not only has the technique to play the notes, he has the heart to play the music contained in those notes. Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonia are simpatico accompanists.
So, this means that these recordings go into that highest category of recorded Rachy concerti. And I thank my friend for putting me on to them. What a wonderful age we live in when there are so many fine pianists, conductors and orchestras making recordings such as these! And when you realize that these recordings are offered at super-bargain price, there's no excuse for not owning them.
Strongly recommended.
Scott Morrison
Free Music Review: Superb Full-Price Re-Issue! Hit: 5 Stars
Don't be fooled by the "Essential Classics" and budget price on this disc; as recently as 3 - 4 years ago this was a full-price recording made in the early 1990s. Sony deserves much praise for making this very competitive recording available in a re-issue.I concur with other reviewers. This disc is a compelling issue among the crowded field of these two concertos. The recording of the 2nd, in my view, is the best I have heard (easily standing among those of Ashkenazy, LSO or Andrei Gavrilov, Philadelphia). The recording of the 3rd has the most striking conclusion of any version I have heard. Bronfman has a weighty and powerful approach to the music in both recordings. It was heartening to see in the early 90s, when this recording, was issued, that Bronfman and Salonen forged a pianist-conductor team reminiscent of some of the previous great duos (Previn-Ashkenazy, Horenstein-Wild, etc.) who recorded these pieces over the years. I strongly recommend this disc.
More Free Music Notes: 1 2 3
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