Mily Balakirev - Piano Concerto No. 2 (audio + sheet music)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • This Concerto was started in 1861 and is in E fiat major, the key of Liszt’s first Piano Concerto; Balakirev was also looking at Anton Rubinstein’s second Concerto and Litolff’s fourth at the time. By the end of 1862 he had completed the first movement and extemporised the rest of the Concerto to his circle, including not only Mussorgsky but Rimsky-Korsakov, who was particularly delighted with the result. But Balakirev abandoned the Concerto and could not be prevailed upon to return to it until 1906, and even then he died in 1910 having added in its entirety only the second movement; Sergei Liapunov completed the finale in accordance with the composer’s wishes which, as his closest associate in the later years, he knew well enough.
    The first subject occurs at the beginning of a short orchestral tutti and is clearly destined for a heroic role. It has a certain affinity with the opening of Beethoven’s ‘Eroica’ Symphony (in E flat) and also with Schumann’s E flat Symphony (No 3, ‘The Rhenish’), of which Balakirev was very fond. The principal second subject is introduced by the piano in the far-flung key of G flat major-and is recapitulated not, as one would expect, in E flat but in D major. This type of semitonal relationship was an important facet of Balakirev’s style, and the key scheme demonstrates his refusal to allow himself to be moulded in a conventional fashion. This is also shown in the remote key of the strikingly beautiful slow movement, B minor. The main theme is the Russian Orthodox Requiem chant ‘So sviatymi upokoi’, played at first by the orchestra after six bars of modulatory introduction, and impeccably treated throughout. The second subject, in D major, sheds a ray of hope in distinguished opposition to, or rather co-existence with, its neighbour. After considerable development of the Requiem theme, it is recapitulated on the full orchestra, with sonorous brass and brilliant piano chords; a low E on the bass tuba is particularly magnificent. Gradually, in a coda, the Requiem theme dies and the first theme of the first movement is used to act as a bridge to the finale, Allegro risoluto. The principal key of this ebullient finale is again unorthodox: G flat major. The first subject is full of rhythic vigour; the second consists of alternating chords of the type used by Mussorgsky at the opening of the coronation scene in Boris Godunov-but here in the Concerto the effect is effervescent rather then severe, a perfect antidote to the gravity of the slow movement. Towards the end, the opening subject of the Concerto reappears, and it finishes as it had begun, in E flat major.
    Balakirev’s Concerto does not deserve the neglect into which it has fallen. In spite of the half century or so it took to compose, it holds together well. And the heroic nature of the first movement, the solemn and intense beauty of the second and the scintillation of the third, ensure that the listener is treated to a wide variety of aural experience which adds up, in the end, to a satisfactory whole.
    (Hyperion)
    Please take note that the audio AND sheet music ARE NOT mine. I do recommend changing the video quality to a minimum of 480p.
    Performance by: Michael Ponti, accompanied by the Westphalian Symphony Orchestra conducted by Siegfried Landau
    Original audio: • Video
    Original sheet music: imslp.org/wiki/Piano_Concerto_No.2_(Balakirev%2C_Mily)

Комментарии • 16

  • @TheodoreServin
    @TheodoreServin 3 года назад +8

    Mily Balakirev (completed by Sergei Lyapunov) - Piano Concerto no. 2 in E-flat major
    1. - Allegro non troppo: 0:00
    2. - Adagio (attacca): 13:14
    3. - Allegro risoluto: 22:04

  • @monition5655
    @monition5655 3 года назад +9

    What a beautiful work.

    • @monition5655
      @monition5655 3 года назад +11

      Wow your service sounds astounding and not scammy at all. Take your bullshit elsewhere.

    • @steveegallo3384
      @steveegallo3384 3 года назад

      @@monition5655 -- Were you referring to anything at all? What suddenly 'got yer goat'?

    • @monition5655
      @monition5655 3 года назад

      @@steveegallo3384 He deleted the comment or the comment got removed. It was basically self-advertising to a suspicious website.

    • @thenameisgsarci
      @thenameisgsarci  3 года назад

      Yes, I think I can confirm.

    • @TheodoreServin
      @TheodoreServin 3 года назад +1

      @@monition5655 I've been seeing those comments a lot, including in the replies for my timestamp comments. It's probably a new "Wanna be friends"-like comment scam.

  • @paulescudero9973
    @paulescudero9973 Год назад

    Truly outstanding composer. Some of the best piano exhibits that exhists.

  • @s1earle
    @s1earle 2 года назад +4

    It might be hard to better this performance, same as many other Concertos played by Michael Ponti - he always had the technique to service the music and excite the listener. Also sample his many solo performances of Scriabin, Liszt, Alkan etc. He remains a titan...

  • @SCRIABINIST
    @SCRIABINIST 11 месяцев назад +1

    It's hard to find a Russian concerto of that era that rivals Tchaikvosky's, Balakirev's 2nd (albeit finished by Lyapunov) comes very close if not sits with Tchaikovsky's as one of the best piano concerti written by Russian romanticists.

  • @owengette8089
    @owengette8089 2 года назад +5

    11:44
    19:10-19:21 wow, that’s one heck of a climax
    24:59

  • @loongutes3019
    @loongutes3019 2 года назад

    magnificent

  • @Xyriak
    @Xyriak 8 месяцев назад

    Lyapunov finished it

  • @foxfire7779
    @foxfire7779 Год назад

    30:48