Saint-Saëns - Piano Concerto No. 2, Op. 22 [1868]

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • Couldn't find a Full-Score video of the Concerto so I made it. I'll soon do full-score videos of the 1st and 3rd concerti as well.
    As one critic of the time put it, Saint-Saëns’ second piano concerto“begins with Bach and ends with Offenbach”. This pleasing quip sums up the work fairly accurately. Composed in 1868 at the request of Anton Rubinstein, who wanted to conduct a new work in Paris with Saint-Saëns as soloist, it was written in seventeen days and premiered on 13 May at the Salle Pleyel. Saint-Saëns wrote that “except for the Scherzo, which was immediately well-received, [the concerto] was not a great success; everyone agreed that the first part was incoherent and the finale a complete failure”. Perhaps the performance had been lacking in preparation... Because the work was soon so famous that, for a time, it became the most popular concerto in the world along with Grieg’s piano concerto. It is endlessly lyrical with delightful, contrasting themes and a piano part that is virtuoso without being flashy. Although the writing and textures may lack surprise, they create an overall sense of unity with consummate efficiency. The originality of the work is mainly down to its structure, which has no slow movement and follows an upward trend, from moderate to fast and from solemnity to light-heartedness. The “Andante sostenuto” opens and closes with a piano cadenza that feels like an improvisation in the style of Bach; in the middle, the piano writing recalls Chopin and one of the themes is taken from a Tantum ergo by the young Fauré (one of Saint-Saëns’ followers). Short, lively and high-spirited, the “Allegro scherzando” bears the stamp of the staccato Scherzo from Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The final “Presto” is a heady, whirling tarantella, which seems to be more reminiscent of Chopin or Rossini than Offenbach.
    00:00 I. Andante Sostenuto
    11:43 II. Allegro Scherzando
    17:41 III. Presto
    Performed by Grigory Sokolov
    Conducted by Neeme Järvi
    With the USSR Symphony Orchestra
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Komentáře • 12

  • @thenameisgsarci
    @thenameisgsarci Před rokem +6

    Woohoo

  • @user-eq7jc3om1v
    @user-eq7jc3om1v Před rokem +3

    Гениально

  • @ingemarjansen
    @ingemarjansen Před rokem +2

    sweet god thank you demir for this vid
    i love this concerto as much as myself

  • @farazhaiderpiano
    @farazhaiderpiano Před rokem +5

    Whose recording for the Third Concerto? I’d be fascinated to know.
    Both the Second Concerto and the Third Concerto are based off of Saint-Saëns’s impressions of Anton Rubinstein’s pianistic wizardry, according to the Saint-Saëns biographer Brian Rees.
    It’s fascinating to imagine-large dynamic contrasts, quasi-bel canto pianism, virtuosic pianistic flair and intense emphasis on bass notes. Saint-Saëns perfectly assimilates Rubinstein’s style without betraying his own.

    • @DemirSezer
      @DemirSezer  Před rokem +1

      I'll need to research some different recordings, are there some you'd recommend?

    • @farazhaiderpiano
      @farazhaiderpiano Před rokem +2

      @@DemirSezer David Hurwitz would recommend Louis Lortie’s, but I prefer Jeanne Marie Darrè’s recording from the 1950s.
      She studied all 5 of the Saint-Saëns concerti with the composer, and her recording of the Third is a great example of lively and joyful pianism, the kind of tone that the Third needs.

  • @user-ru8vy1uz7c
    @user-ru8vy1uz7c Před rokem +2

    Bravo bravo bravo brilliance fantastic grandiose genial music concerto super super super wow wow wow