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An Afternoon of Great Piano Concertos RiverArts 2016 Music Tour Saturday, June 4 Alan Murray, piano at Studio Hollywood 41 Hollywood Drive, Hastings Works by Tchaikovsky, Chopin, Grieg, Saint-Saëns, Bartók, Prokofiev, Franck, Gershwin and Rachmaninoff Program (all performances accompanied by pre-recorded orchestras) Noon Piano Concerto No. 1 in B-flat minor, Op. 23 P. Tchaikovsky Allegro non troppo e molto maestoso - allegro con spirito Andantino semplice - allegro vivace assai - prestissimo Allegro con fuoco 1:00pm Piano Concerto No. 1 in E minor, Op. 11 F. Chopin Allegro maestoso Romanze: Larghetto Rondo: Vivace 2:00pm Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 16 E. Grieg Allegro molto moderato Adagio Allegro moderato molto e marcato - quasi presto - andante maestoso 3:00pm Piano Concerto No. 4 in C minor, Op. 44 Allegro moderato - andante Allegro vivace - andante - allegro C. Saint-Saëns closely connected (apart from the main theme of the Adagio) and material from the first movement is introduced in altered form into the finale, making it the composer’s most integrated work, excepting the Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini. The first movement opens with the subdued statement of a plaintiff, diatonic, folk-like melody. Rachmaninoff denied appropriation of the theme from an outside source: “It is borrowed neither from folk song forms nor from church sources. It simply ‘wrote itself’… I wanted to sing the melody on the piano, as a singer would sing it.” The Intermezzo has a structure akin to a theme and variations interrupted by a brief episode. The theme is first heard incomplete in the strings, and then in its entirely as an oboe solo. The conflicting rhythms and chromaticism of the piano quickly establish a rhapsodic feeling, and the piano subsequently present the melody in several versions, from simple triplets to sumptuous embellishments. There follows a scherzo-like interlude with a syncopated melody (based on the first movement’s initial theme) in the solo clarinet and bassoon over a waltz pattern in the strings and triplet figurations in the piano. The movement ends with a shortened version of the exposition and leads without break into the Finale, which is also highly contrasted in content, alternating march rhythms with lyrical material derived, again, from the concerto’s opening theme. This brilliant movement combines a rich texture with an effervescent sparkle and culminates with a dramatic peroration in which, in the worlds of Abraham Veinus, “Rachmaninoff calls upon every last resources to create the sensation of those broad powerful wings upon which his supremely rhapsodical emotion can soar to a triumphant and terrific conclusion.” Source: liner notes from RCA 6209-2-RC 4:00pm Piano Concerto No. 2 B. Bartók Allegro Adagio - presto - adagio Allegro molto - piú allegro 5:00pm Piano Concerto No. 3 in C major, Op. 26 S. Prokofiev Andante - allegro Tema con variazioni Allegro ma non troppo 6:00pm Symphonic Variations Rhapsody in Blue C. Franck G. Gershwin 7:00pm Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30 S. Rachmaninoff Allegro ma non tanto Intermezzo: Adagio Finale: Alla breve For more information on the studio, events and performer visit: www.studio-hollywood.com Alan Murray has appeared in numerous solo and chamber recitals and as a concerto soloist with orchestra. The 2016 season marks his fourth consecutive year as concerto soloist with orchestras, having recently performed Rachmaninoff’s 3rd (2013), Bartók’s 2nd (2014), Prokofiev’s 3rd and Saint-Saëns’ 4th (2015) and Tchaikovsky’s and Chopin’s 1st concertos (2016). He returns in spring 2017 for the two Brahms’ piano concertos, and in 2018 for Prokofiev’s and Rachmaninoff’s 2 nd piano concertos. In prior seasons, Mr. Murray presented the Masters Series and Sunrise Series Concerts in the New York area, comprising over 100 recitals encompassing the cycles of the solo piano music of Chopin, Schumann, Debussy, Ravel and J.S. Bach, as well as Beethoven’s 32 Sonatas and Diabelli Variations, and major works of Schubert, Brahms, Liszt, Albéniz (Iberia), Granados (Goyescas), Rachmaninoff, as summarized on the following pages In 2014, Mr. Murray initiated Collectanea, a series of performances of art/poetry/dance-inspired classical piano masterpieces involving simultaneous illuminated displays of still art, and live modern dance and poetry readings. Mr. Murray’s repertoire, performance calendar and studio facilities can be found at www.studio-hollywood.com. A member of the Financial Institutions Group management team at Moody’s Investors Service in New York, Mr. Murray directs global quantitative risk analytics for the Insurance sector, and has long overseen operations in the Latin America region. He resides in Westchester County, New York with his family (wife Amada and daughter Celia), where they also own and operate Galápagos Books, a bookstore specializing in world languages and literature, travel and cultural materials and children’s literature. Mr. Murray studied piano with Frances Wazeter (of Hastings), Allen Weiss (one-time host of WQXR’s live radio broadcast “Artists in Concert”), and Robert Preston (winner of the gold medal of the International Busoni Competition among many others, renowned concert pianist and chamber music collaborator) and holds a degree in physics and languages from Cornell University, where he also received a special University Award for distinguished piano soloist. Gershwin also recalled being inspired with the music while on a train to Boston in December 1923: “It was on the train, with its steely rhythms, its rattley-bang that is often so stimulating to a composer… And there I suddenly heard – and even saw on paper – the complete construction of The Rhapsody from beginning to end.” After Rhapsody in Blue, American music was never to be the same. Nor was Gershwin’s career. Though only 25, he was already an established composer of Broadways shows. But after the Rhapsody’s instant success, he was determined to become a “serious” composer, though without abandoning his very lucrative and enjoyable theatrical career. From then until his early death in 1937, he balanced these two sides of his musical life with remarkable success. Notes by William H. Youngren and Lawrence Boylan Sergei Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No. 3 Sergei Rachmaninoff’s formal musical education began at the St. Petersburg Conservatory in 1882. In 1885, he transferred to the Moscow Conservatory and graduated as a pianist with honors in 1891 and as a composer, also with honors, in 1892. Rachmaninoff wrote four concertos for piano and orchestra, as well as another concerto-like work, the Paganini Rhapsody. Many consider the Third Concerto to be Rachmaninoff’s finest contribution to the literature, and he himself frequently expressed a partiality for it, at one point writing: “I believe in what might be called indigenous music for the piano… Even with my own concertos I much prefer the Third. The concerto is one of his most interesting experiments in construction: the various themes of the three movements are Tovey: “The work is a finely and freely organized fantasia with an important episode in variation form. All the habits of Cesar Franck’s style contribute here to the happiest results. He is before all things a master of the extempore manner.” Source: liner notes for Colombia Records 33072 George Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue Rhapsody in Blue was first performed on 12 February 1924 at New York’s Aeolian Hall, as part of a concert given by Paul Whiteman’s Orchestra and rather pretentiously titled “An Experiment in Modern Music”. The concert attempted to trace the history of jazz, from its raw beginnings to the smoother and more sophisticated dance music of the mid-1920s and even beyond, in part in order to bring to the raucous new music some measure of respectability. There were ‘semi-symphonic’ settings of Irving Berlin tunes and Suite of Serenades by Victor Herbert that had, like Rhapsody in Blue, been composed specially for the occasion. But the Rhapsody, with Gershwin at the piano, was the hit of the afternoon. It set the fashion for ‘crossover’ works that straddle the two worlds of jazz and the concert hall. Wrote Gershwin: “Suddenly an idea occurred to me. There had been so much chatter about the limitation of Jazz, not to speak of the manifest misunderstandings of its function. Jazz, they said, had to be in strict time. It had to cling to dance rhythms. I resolved, if possible, to kill that misconception with one sturdy blow. Inspired by this aim, I set to work composing with unwonted rapidity. No set plan was in my mind, no structure to which my music would conform. The Rhapsody, as you see, began as a purpose, not a plan.” Peter I. Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto No. 1 At every stage in its history, Russian music has been dominated by the interplay of two opposing forces: specifically national elements on one side, and the “western” tendencies represented by Italian, French and German models on the other. On completing the B-flat minor concerto in 1875, Tchaikovsky showed the score to his mentor Nikolai Rubinstein, the direct of the Moscow Conservatory, who pronounced it unplayable, ultimately agreeing to perform it if Tchaikovsky would agree to a thorough revision, which the latter flatly refused. Thereupon the composer sent it to the German pianist Hans von Bulow, who was delighted with it, proclaiming its “original, noble and powerful ideas and mature, ripe and distinguished style”. Through his enthusiastic advocacy, the concerto rapidly became what it remains to this day: one of the best loved and most popular of all concertos and a touchstone for performing pianists. (Tchaikovsky and Rubinstein later reconciled, and Rubinstein likewise became an advocate for the work, with Tchaikovsky ultimately revising the solo part in a later edition.) The rich chordal writing at the very start, the brilliant octave and shimmering figurations cast the spotlight on a whole range of pianistic expression, The solo part’s virtues are compounded by the score’s lyricism and emotional warmth, the wide melodic spans and the almost impressionistic palette. Passages chiseled in stone lie alongside others touched-in with the soft brush in a work that illustrates the entire range of the possibility open to the concerto genre. Notes by Volker Scherliess (trans. by Mary Whittall) Frederic Chopin: Piano Concerto No. 1 Chopin was extremely unwilling to perform before larger audiences and usually displayed his keyboard skills in the cultured circles of aristocratic salons in Paris, where leading figures in the French intelligentsia and emigré groups discussed aesthetic questions relating to painting, literature and music and commented on political events. By contrast to the concertos of Mozart and Beethoven, Chopin’s typical virtuoso concertos make no attempt at a varied dialogue between the solo instrument and the orchestra, the latter of which is always subordinate to the solo part, confining itself the function of accompaniment and serving to prepare and provide a modest background to the solo part. Chopin wrote his two piano concertos, both in minor keys, shortly before he left Poland forever. They were subsequently published in the reverse order of their composition, with “No. 1” having been written between April and August of 1830. It was first performed, with the composer as soloist, at the memorable farewell concert in Warsaw on October 11, 1830. In the extended opening movement of the concerto the three principal themes are introduced by the violins before the soloist takes up - in the form of a paraphrase - the elegant, lively second theme with increasing brilliance. In the development, Chopin replaces the customary thematic elaboration with colorful modulation. Since the piano in any case sets the tone, Chopin dispenses with a cadenza. This is what the composer himself said of the slow movement: “The Adagio is a sort of romance, quiet and melancholic; it is intended to create the impression of a loving backward look… at a place that awakens in us a thousand sweet memories. It is like a dream on a beautiful moonlit spring night. It is therefore played on muted fiddles …. with a silvery tone.” While metrical and formal sophistication of the opening of the third movement. This shows Prokofiev’s true mastery at its best: the art of incorporating motivic material whose inspiration lies in Russian folk music in a large-scale architectural structure, in which the tradition of the genre plays as large a part as modern expressiveness. Notes by Volker Scherliess (Trans. By Mary Whittall), in addition of excepts of liner notes from RCA 6209-2-RC Cesar Franck: Symphonic Variations Franck’s Symphonic Variations are but one example of a genre that emerged during the Romantic period – music for solo instrument and orchestra that is not in concerto form. Von Weber’s Konzertstück was perhaps the first such example, but Liszt’s Totentanz, Faure’s Fantaisie and, later, Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini are further examples. But the Symphonic Variations uses the piano to provide contrast of individually nuanced expression against the might of the full orchestra, rather than as a standout virtuoso part. The work is no simple set of variations, but rather comprises three connected parts, which might well have been labelled “Prelude, Variations and Finale”. The long introduction does not use the variation theme, except in fragments and hints. The central section consists of the theme and six variations, which flow smoothly without pauses or cadences. Perhaps this is why Franck labelled his work “symphonic” variations, since they are written in the manner of a continuous symphonic movement. The finale, which is longer than the theme and variations, uses the variation theme only as an accompaniment figure. Wrote musicologist Sir Donald Frances similar fashion as the opening of Rachmaninoff’s Third Concerto – in a spare two-voice texture by the piano. A dialogue between piano and orchestra ensues, leading to a more lyrical, narrative second theme. In the recapitulation, the opening material is considerably modified; the passagework is even more complicated and the second theme acquires more distorted, macabre features. The second movement is a theme and variations with a lengthy coda. The charming theme, first enunciated by the orchestra alone, is in the spirit of some of Prokofiev’s early dance pieces. In the five variations, it is treated with great imagination and often altered so radically that it is almost unrecognizable. Only the first variation preserves the melodic contour; the succeeding ones are characterized by vivid contrasts of spirit, incorporate the grotesque, the virtuoso, the somber and, in the fifth variation, the manner of a broadly burlesqued march. The coda restates the theme in the orchestra in its original form, this time accompanied by light chords on the piano. The Finale is reminiscent of the first movement in its rapid, incessant motion. To some extent, the main theme is developed in the exposition by means of abrupt tonal shifts, with grace notes, leaps and glissandi adding dynamic intensification. The central section, built on a passionate, youthful theme, is interrupted briefly by a droll interlude in the caustic humorous vein of the “Visions fugitives” of 1917. In the recapitulation the rhythmic momentum and the brilliance of the piano writing are intensified up to the very last measures. The composer mentioned Schumann’s Toccata as a precedent, but his older contemporary Stravinsky may have been another godfather. The mixture demonstrates Prokofiev’s desire to forge his own musical language from an amalgam of different historical legacies. But the past did not totally absorb him: that he was moving in a new direction entirely is clearly illustrated by, for example, the the forms of the outer movements, in traditional garb, appear convention, the Larghetto constitutes the central emotional axis of the work. A gentle piano melody with expressive suspensions, embellishments and delicately doubled thirds and sixths sings blissfully, and finally ends high up in the descant. This gem of romantic lyricism is immediately followed by the Finale. Its exultantly dance-like Krakowiak theme in triple time links the image of the great prestigious virtuoso to the Polish idiom and present the pianist not only as a serious and lyrical musician, but also as a patriot striking up for the dance and giving internal currency to the sounds of his homeland. Notes by Uwe Kraemer (transl. by Gery Brantall) Edvard Grieg: Piano Concerto Grieg’s piano concerto is among his earliest important works, written by the 24-year-old composer in 1868 in Sollerod, Denmark, during one of his visits there to benefit from the climate. Grieg's concerto is often compared to the piano concerto of Robert Schumann - it is in the same key (A minor), the opening descending flourish on the piano is similar, and the overall style is considered to be closer to Schumann than any other single composer. Incidentally, both wrote only one concerto for piano. Grieg had heard Schumann's concerto played by Clara Schumann in Leipzig in 1858 (1859 is given by alternative sources), and was greatly influenced by Schumann's style generally, having been taught the piano by Schumann's friend, Ernst Ferdinand Wenzel. Additionally, Grieg's work provides evidence of his interest in Norwegian folk music; the opening flourish is based on the motif of a falling minor second interval, followed by a falling major third, which is typical of the folk music of Grieg's native country. This specific motif occurs in other works by Grieg, including his String Quartet No. 1. In the last movement of the concerto, similarities to the halling (a Norwegian folk dance) and imitations of the Hardanger fiddle (the Norwegian folk fiddle) are detected. The work was premiered on April 3, 1869 in Copenhagen. Some sources say that Grieg himself, an excellent pianist, was the intended soloist, but he was unable to attend the premiere owing to commitments with an orchestra in Christiania (now Oslo). Among those who did attend the premiere were the Danish composer Niels Gade and the Russian pianist Anton Rubinstein, who provided his own piano for the occasion. At Grieg's visit to Franz Liszt in Rome in 1870, Liszt sight-read the score before an audience of musicians and gave very good comments on the work, which influenced Grieg later. The concerto is the first piano concerto ever recorded, by pianist Wilhelm Backhaus in 1909. Due to the technology of the time, it was heavily abridged at only six minutes. Grieg revised the work at least seven times, usually in subtle ways, but amounting to over 300 differences from the original orchestration. In one of these revisions, he undid Liszt’s suggestion to give the second theme of the first movement (as well as the first theme of the second) to the trumpet rather than to the cello. The final version of the concerto was completed only a few weeks before Grieg's death, and it is this version that has achieved worldwide popularity. Source: wikipedia Sergei Prokofiev: Piano Concerto No. 3 Prokofiev’s Third Piano Concerto could be described in similar terms as Tchaikovsky’s First: it, too, places the element of pianistic flair in the foreground. The composer, who wrote the score for himself, was also after all an outstanding concert performer – but at the same time it contains delicate nuances of timbre and texture. The variety of stylistic poses the work strikes during its course are a reflection of the ten-year period (1911-21) over which it was composed. The playful, neo-classicist elements, for example, are reminders that the composer’s original plan was to write a ‘concertino’ in 18th century style (in a similar vein as the Classical Symphony, a product of the same period). Eventually, however, the work grew into something more substantial – in dimensions, instrumental forces and musical content. Prokofiev himself enumerated five fundamental characteristics of his music: 1) strict formal construction; 2) piquant harmonic writing (done for sake of color, rather than as a gesture towards atonality); 3) lyrical, meditative atmosphere; 4) deliberate grotesquery (notably in the variations of the second movement); and 5) motoric rhythms. The Third Concerto was rapidly recognized worldwide. The stark contrasts of style, mood and texture, so typical of the young Prokofiev, are vividly apparent in the third concerto. It is a bold achievement incorporating soulful lyricism, grotesque fantasy and a Russian national flavor, yet always catering especially to Prokofiev’s own style of pianistic virtuosity. The opening measures of the first movement evoke a late-Russian Romantic grandiosity, commencing with a deceptive understatement by a solo clarinet. Indeed, the orchestral textures of the work in general tend to be more astringent than lush, The initial serenity gives way to string figurations from which emerge the lively first theme, stated – in any event, Bartok turns to advantage in a most personal way the “Stravinsky” theme in the Second Concerto. In the sonata-form construction of the first movement – where the recapitulation presents the inversion of the themes in the exposition, essentially a modernized version of Bach-like counterpoint – there is a lavish variety of invention and modes of expression. The Adagio is another specimen of ‘night-music’ based on a unique range of timbres. In a kind of tense and mysterious dialogue, we hear by turns a slow-paced chorale rendered by the pallid sonorities of the strings and the meditative comments of the piano with arabesques of intense evocative force. After the first Adagio, a real Scherzo (Presto) leaps into action, light and pungent, with extreme and fantastic mobility; then, the opening episode returns and the Adagio fades away in an atmosphere of uncertainty. In the third movement, the first theme – with its incisive energy, its hammering, barbaric force – seems to lead back to the mood of the First Concerto. It is the only really new thematic element in this sections, and acts as a refrain whose appearances frame the other episodes, all based on variations and transformations of the Stravinskian thematic material in the first movement. The movement takes shape as a fantastic, animated and richly colored sequence of changing inventions articulated in an incisive, synthetic and energetic fashion. The non-stop wave of controlled violence finally dissipates into a dream-like sequence that resolves into a nature-inspired reflection, finally giving way ultimately to a joyful, triumphant conclusion. Notes by Paolo Petazzi (transl. by Gwyn Morris) Camille Saint-Saëns: Piano Concerto No. 4 Saint-Saens Fourth Piano Concerto was completed in 1877, written in the somber key of C minor, and dedicated to Franz Liszt. The concerto is highly idiosyncratic and, at the same time, significant. Superficially, it is a two-movement work but as in the composer’s “Organ Symphony” (also written in C minor), each of the two movements can itself be subdivided into two individual segments. The result is akin to a symphony in structure, although musicologists have never been able to agree on the number of movements involved, the conclusion being either 4 (which is within classical concerto structure) or 5 (which is suggestive more of a Lisztian thematic metamorphosis). But why count? At the beginning of the opening movement, Saint-Saens harks back to the principles of the Baroque chaconne, thereby revealing his classical credentials, while the strictness and characters of the solo writing emerges from even the briefest glance at the score. The profound seriousness of so highly atmospheric a piece is a stark contrast to the Second Concerto, which is unquestionably the composer’s wittiest work in the genre. But the Fourth sets a standard in Gallic elegance, panache and refinement. Notes by Knut Franke (Transl. by Stewart Spencer) Béla Bartók: Piano Concerto No. 2 Bela Bartok’s first two piano concertos, dated 1926 and 1930/31, belong to two different stages of the period when he was formulating the musical language of his advanced maturity – a synthesis in which an original reassessment of certain aspects of the European cultural traditions, combined with stimuli and influences resulting from the study of Hungarian and Balkan folk music; in assimilating rhythmic and melodic elements foreign to Western classical music, Bartok did not use them in an ornamental ‘exotic’ way, but rather as an integral part of an new language. In an article that appeared in 1939, Bartok wrote: “My first concerto… I consider it a successful work, although its style is up to a point difficult, perhaps even very difficult for the orchestra and the public. And so I decided, a few years later, to compose my Second Concerto, with fewer difficulties for the orchestra and more pleasant themes. This aim of mine explains the more popular and easier character of the greater part of the themes…”. The statement should not be taken too literally, but it points out the different style of the two concertos. In the Second, there are certainly no compromising concessions to ‘easy music’, but it is true that the thematic materials presents a more clearly recognizable profile, and the quality of expression is more fluid in comparison with the harsh tension of the First. Similarly, the orchestra writing provides a greater variety of more lively and vivid colors. In the first movement, strings are silent, and in the Adagio of the second movement the woodwinds are excluded from the first and third sections; only in the third movement does the entire orchestra come together. In the opening movement, the first theme is directly inspired by Stravinsky, the melodic shape of the first notes corresponds to the beginning of the horn them at the start of the finale of The Firebird. Other analogies can be drawn with Petrushka. Such occasional affinities can also indicate how differently Bartok and Stravinsky – in his Russian period – used popular themes. In Bartok, we note an underlying sense of moral conviction, of familiarity bred of a long and intense study of folk music… results far removed from Stravinsky’s dry stylization. In