| Violin Concerto in D Op. 35 | |||
| 1 | Allegro moderato | 16.50 |
|
| 2 | Canzonetta (Andante) | 5.42 |
|
| 3 | Finale (Allegro vivacissimo) | 9.11 |
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| Piano Concerto No. 1 in B flat minor Op. 23 |
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| 4 | Allegro non troppo e molto maestoso Allegro con spirito |
21.37 |
|
| 5 | Andantino simplice – Prestissimo – Tempo | I7.07 |
|
| 6 | Allegro con fuoco | 7.06 |
|
| total playingtime: | 67.52 |
||

PETER ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY Download mp3 from |
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Virtuoso "heavyweights"
Only a few works from Peter Ilich Tchaikovsky’s huge oeuvre have gained
general acceptance; however, these are of such an enduring nature that the
Russian is ranked among the great composers in the history of music. The way
the world of music highlights especially his last three symphonies, his Piano
Concerto No. 1, his opera Eugen Onegin and his Rococo Variations is nothing
less than extraordinary.
Tchaikovsky’s life alternated between tragedy and happiness. He was born
on May 7, 1840 in Kamsko-Votkinsk, and received his first piano lessons from
his mother at the tender age of five. Even as a child, he was prone to psychosomatic
attacks and depressions, which he attempted to combat by composing brilliant
pieces on the piano. His parents established the family home in St. Petersburg
in 1852, after moving house a number of times. During the following 10 years,
Tchaikovsky read law, found employment as a civil servant, travelled throughout
Europe as an interpreter and, on the whole, led a carefree and joyous life.
He was only sporadically interested in music: his sole artistic activities
consisted of evenings spent at the opera or at concerts, and irregular piano
lessons.
In 1862 came the radical turnabout: Tchaikovsky resigned from his position
as a civil servant and enrolled at the St. Petersburg Conservatoire to study
composition under Anton Rubinstein and Nikolai Zaremba. In 1866 he began teaching
composition at the Moscow Conservatoire, where he remained for 12 years. It
was during this intensive and especially productive period of composition that
he wrote his first great works. However, his productivity was overshadowed
by major problems: in order to counterbalance rumours concerning his homosexuality,
Tchaikovsky rushed into marriage with one of his students. This resulted in
chaos, inner despair and, finally, a suicide attempt.
Only after he came into contact with the well-to-do Nadezhda von Meck, did
Tchaikovsky begin to find some peace in his troubled life. The generous annual
income she fixed on him made it possible for him to give up his position at
the Conservatoire and to work independently as a composer from 1878 onwards.
Their relationship continued for 13 years, without the composer and his patroness
ever actually meeting. More than 1200 letters bear witness to what was probably
the most unusual relationship in the history of music. This ended abruptly
in 1890, when Madame von Meck discontinued the correspondence. Tchaikovsky
was deeply hurt by this and his inner loneliness gained the upper hand, never
more to relinquish its hold. Not even his triumphant successes as a conductor
were able to diminish his melancholy. Tchaikovsky died in 1893 – supposedly
from cholera. However, rumours concerning suicide or even murder by poison
still abound to this day.
The compositions recorded on this CD - his Piano Concerto No. 1, in B-flat
minor, Op. 23 and Violin Concerto in D, Op. 35 – are ranked unreservedly
among his "masterpieces", and could perhaps even be respectfully
considered "virtuoso heavyweights". Following its completion, Tchaikovsky
presented his Piano Concerto to the Principal of the St. Petersburg Conservatoire
on Christmas Eve in 1874. Nikolai Rubinstein‘s opinion of the work was
crushing: the concerto was no good, was unplayable, the themes were corny and
inappropriate, the material he had come up with was weak, and some of it he
had even plagiarized. Hurt and upset, Tchaikovsky crossed out the dedication,
and rededicated the work to the German conductor Hans von Bülow, who gave
the highly successful première of the work in Boston on October 25,
1875. The alternation of vital impetuousness and expressive melancholy, the
sensitive dialogue between soloist and orchestra, the intensified, emphatic
expression of the first movement are equally impressive as the middle movement.
The almost violent, hymnal display of strength with the repetitive, rondo-like
main theme, which is played "con fuoco", brings the work to a triumphant
conclusion.
The creation of the Violin Concerto (March 17 – April 11, 1877) is closely
connected to violinist Josef Kotek, who helped Tchaikovsky out with suggestions
during the composition of the work – an artistic association, from which
was born a violin solo part which at first gave the impression that the work
was "unplayable", due to its accumulation of technical difficulties
and showpieces. The concerto ingeniously links symphonic structure to the principles
of the concerto form, while leaving the indisputable role of the leader to
the soloist. The first movement owes its fascination to the emotional, freely
flowing main theme. After a cadenza full of bravura, a Coda and Stretta define
the unfettered ending, completely in the sense of the symphonic climax. The
second movement, a profound Canzonetta (at Kotek‘s suggestion, Tchaikovsky
had written this to replace the original movement, which was in the form of
a mazurka), sounds modest and melancholy in its lyricism and expression: this
is the complete opposite of the Finale, which begins attaca subito, and pushes
its way forward with great speed and a marked rhythm. The "Russian" themes
display effervescent joie de vivre, and the technical demands made on the soloist
are extraordinarily high.
More information on Nikolai Lugansky's website
Nikolai
Lugansky, pianist
Prize-winner of the 1994 Tchaikovsky Competition
The exceptionally gifted Russian pianist Nikolai Lugansky was born in 1972
and studied with the well-known pianist and pedago-gue, Tatiana Nikolaeva.
He is one of the most remarkable talents to have appeared among the new generation
of pianists from the former Soviet-Union. At the age of 14, Nikolai Lugansky
won first prize in Tiblisi during a competi-tion for young musicians. In
the Netherlands, Nikolai Lugansky made a sensational début performance in
May 1990, at the age of 17, as a last-minute replacement for Maria Joao Pires
in the large hall of Muziekcentrum Vreden-burg in Utrecht. A few months later,
Lugan-sky gave a recital in the large hall of the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam
in the series "Vijf Jonge Russi-sche Top-talenten" (= five of the
most talented young Russians). This performance was described unanimously as
extraordinarily impressive, and resulted in many further invitations. In Februa-ry
1994, he performed in the series "Meesterpi-anisten" (= master
pianists) in the Amster-dam- Concertge-bouw and the Doelen in Rotter-dam.
In April 1999,
he gave a Chopin recital in the large hall of the Concertgebouw.
Nikolai Lugansky regularly performs with Dutch and Belgian orchestras: during
the 2002/2003 season, Nikolai Lugansky toured Japan with the Royal Concertgebouw
Orchestra, Amsterdam and its chief conductor Riccardo Chailly, performing
Beethoven’s
Piano Concerto No. 5. Furthermore, he performed Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto
No. 2 in May 2003 in Brussels with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra of Flanders.
Nikolai Lugansky made his orchestral début in the United States with
Valery Gergiev and the Kirov Orchestra at the Holly-wood Bowl in August 1996.
During the past seasons, he has played with the Hous-ton Symphony Orchestra,
Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra. In
2003, he is scheduled to tour Germany with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra. Further
important orchestral engagements include concerts with the Oslo Philharmonic
and Mikhail Pletnev, the Toulouse Orchestra and Michel Plasson, the London
Philharmonia and Richard Hickox, the Hallé Orches-tra and Kent Nagano,
and the Royal Scottish Orchestra and Eri Klas. During the 2002/2003 season,
he made his début with Orchestre de la Suisse Romande with Rachmaninov’s
Piano Concerto No. 1 under conductor Alexander Lazarev. He also made his début
at the Saarbrücken Festival in Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No.2 with
the Monte Carlo National Orchestra and Marek Janowsky. Furthermore, he gave
performances of Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 1 with the Dresden Philharmonic
and Marek Janowsky in Dresden, Turin and Verona.
In Russia, Nikolai Lugansky regularly performs with the Moscow Radio Symphony
Orchestra and the famous Russian State Orchestra (both under the former chief
conductor, Yevgeny Svetlanov and the present chief conductor, Vassily Sinaisky).
In August 2001, he went on tour with the Russian National Orchestra and chief
conductor Vladimir Spivakov, performing among other in Amsterdam (the Concertgebouw)
and Copenhagen. Nikolai Lugansky is in great demand as a recitalist. During
the past years, he has been a regular guest artist at the international piano
festival at Roque d’Antheron, and last season he performed at the festivals
of Nantes, Biarritz, Perigord, Grange de Meslay, Baden-Baden and Festival Internacional
de Musica da Povoa de Varzim in Portugal. This season he is giving recitals
in London’s Wigmore Hall, the Théâtre du Champs-Elysées
in Paris, Brussels, Toulouse, Avignon and Moscow.
More information on Nikolai Lugansky's website
*****MULTICHANNEL DISC OF THE MONTH*****
“A rendition of singular focus and poised dynamics”
--Gary Lemc, Audiophile Audition
“The orchestral playing is typically East European with pungent winds
and earthy passionate string playing, but very heavily tempered and disciplined
by a more Western sensibility. Best of both worlds?! The violin and piano
soloists are truly fabulous, playing these two well known works with undoubted
Romanticism that is not cloying but very persuasive and refreshing! I loved
the readings the first time round, which is rare as I usually need time to
get used to a new point of view. The violin concerto is played with fantastic
melodic structural flow - rivetting!!! The piano concerto, which I have had
jaded of hearing, sounds fresh and beautiful again to me with this reading”
Hi-Rez Highway, (November 2003)
Editor’s choice Gramophone
(February 2004)
“Two of the finest soloists from the younger generation team uo with
Mikhail Pletnev’s Russian National Orchestra for a pair of very fine
performances of these favourite concertos. If you are investigating SACD,
or even contemplating it (this disc is quite as effective heard on a CD player),
then here’s a disc for your collection…”
---James Jolly, Gramophone
“Notable virtuoso skills rouse these warhorses
for a lively canter”
---Ivan March, Gramophone (February 2004)
“Neither Tetzlaff nor Lugansky seems to have
the least difficulty to overcome these notiously difficult scores.”
---Jerome Bastianelli, Diapason (January 2004)
“In Multi Channel you can feel the sound
waves reverberating through the hall!”
---SA-CD.net