Mendelssohn: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 2; Violin Concerto
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Piano Concerto No. 1 in G minor, Op. 25: Molto Allegro con fuoco
- Piano Concerto No. 1 in G minor, Op. 25: Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 1 in G minor, Op. 25: Presto - Molto Allegro vivace
- Piano Concerto No. 2 in D minor, Op. 40: Allegro appasionato
- Piano Concerto No. 2 in D minor, Op. 40: Adagio, Molto sostenuto
- Piano Concerto No. 2 in D minor, Op. 40: Finale, Presto scherzando
- Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64: Allegro molto appassionato
- Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64: Andante
- Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64: Allegro non troppo - Allegro molto vivace
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #96562 in Music
- Brand: Sony
- Released on: 2002-01-29
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .21 pounds
Customer Reviews
RESURRECTIONIST
Mendelssohn's violin concerto has never dropped out of favour, popular or (I hope) critical, but his piano concertos have been palely loitering in a strange limbo for as long as I can remember. Mendelssohn's general reputation took a serious nosedive, ably propelled by Shaw among others, as far back as the 1880's. Tovey made a fainthearted and condescending attempt to right matters, but he too described the piano concertos as 'faded'. They are still not real crowd-pullers in the concert repertory despite their great virtuosic difficulty, but I have noticed in recent years that they have become favourites with the more formidable contestants in various competitions for young musicians, so that is something at least.
Such recovery as the piano concertos have made in popular interest probably happened about 35 years ago. I was listening in a semi-attentive way to a BBC radio record review in which the presenter mentioned that his enthusiasm had been reawakened by a new recording, a sequence from which he played for us. There was some brisk right-hand work followed by a darting downward thrust of the left and I knew in one instant 'Serkin'. He was then the height of fashion, before the Russians hit the scene, and his style was near the top of the consciousness of many classical music enthusiasts at the time.
His approach still seems to be the favoured approach insofar as the pieces can be described as favoured at all. Broadly it can be described as 'take the outer movements as fast as human fingers can traverse a keyboard', and that is the way the youngsters are going at these concertos. Some years later Perahia took a very different approach, less hammer-and-tongs, more as one would expect Perahia to approach anything, all refinement, smoothness and urbanity. It is a beautiful record, I own it, but it has not established a new school. Serkin still rules in this slightly obscure little kingdom. Those who know his work will know that there was a lot more to him than hammer-and-tongs virtuosity, which in fact seems to have been what made Mendelssohn's own performances of the works notable too. That peculiar burning cantabile is here at its most intense, and of course so is his unique and inimitable rhythmic poise.
In fact I am myself ever so slightly lukewarm as regards Mendelssohn's piano concertos, but I am also perfectly convinced that they do not deserve the obscurity that has befallen them when certain productions by Tch**k*vsky, L*szt and the infinitesimal Gr**g still pull the crowds. Record-collectors of refined taste and informed sensibility ought to spend a few bucks on them, this set and Perahia's too.
As for the violin concerto, the number of outstanding performances that I have heard is as the sands of the sea without number. I don't recall a better one than this by Stern, who incidentally has done the best Brahms concerto I know, which is saying a lot. If you already own one, or two, or twenty-five superlative versions you can afford to miss this one. The piano concertos I suggest are nothing so optional.
Magnificent Mendelssohn
In the 1950s and 60s, CBS/Columbia (now Sony Classical) had the great fortune to have three of America's best orchestras and their conductors on its recording roster -- Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic, Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra, and George Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra. Nearly a half-century later, only Leonard Bernstein remains a name that even the non-classical music world knows well. But in the world of the compact disc, this is a wonderful thing, because while Leonard Bernstein analog stereo recordings sell at mid-price, classic performances by Ormandy and Szell are regulated to the budget line. Well, my friends there is justice in the world because the vast majority of these "budget line" recordings are simply amazing. On this CD of Mendelssohn Concertos, not only do you get a world class conductor in Eugene Ormandy, but you also get the legendary Rudolf Serkin in the two Piano Concertos, and the great Isaac Stern on the Violin Concerto. Serkin's performances truly are without peer in the golden age of stereo, and while the catalog is full of excellent recordings of the Violin Concerto (Heifitz/Munch, Francescatti/Szell, Szeryng/Dorati, Mutter/Karajan, and Menuhin/Kurtz all come to mind), Stern's is among the best. Having all three concertos on one disc is where the real bargain lies. Never did something of such high quality come at such a small price. Enjoy!
A must in your collection
The piano concerts are ornamental works , and never reach the peak of the champions . They are deeply lyrical and inmersed in the mood of that age signed by the virtuosistic mood. Think in those forty years , Thalberg , Herz, Czerny , Henselt , Moscheles , Bronsart and Liszt to name the most remarkable. In that generation it was more important the show itself that the music could mean. The romanticism in its peak , with all his effects over the great audiences . Transcriptions for piano , fireworks , eight hours concerts , where the music felt in a show business.
Only Schumann , Chopin , Brahms among others could keep the level in their works. And we had to expect for the second half of the century for that show fever eventually dissapeared.
The violin concerto in this case was the best work in the genre of the concerts. In my opinion , F.M. will be reminded by his string quartets , his last three symphonies and this violin concert.
Stern gives to that work , eloquence , majesty and dignity . And the only version I remember to that level is Szigetti Beecham . Deep musicality and above all elegance , and nuance.
Undoubtly this work itself deserves you to acquire.The Philadelphia strings as always superb and powerful. Ormandy was deeply inspired in that ocassion.




