Beethoven: Piano Concertos Nos. 3 & 4 / Giltburg, Petrenko, RLPO

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Label
Naxos
Release Date
February 10, 2023
Format
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    Featuring
    • COMPOSER
      Ludwig van Beethoven
    • ORCHESTRA / ENSEMBLE
      Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra
    • PERFORMER
      Boris Giltburg, Vasily Petrenko
    Product Details
    • RELEASE DATE
      February 10, 2023
    • UPC
      747313415274
    • CATALOG NUMBER
      8574152
    • LABEL
      Naxos
    • NUMBER OF DISCS
      1
    • GENRE
    Works
    1. Concerto for Piano and Orcheatra No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 37

      Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven

      Ensemble: Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra

      Performer: Boris Giltburg (Piano)

      Conductor: Vasily Petrenko

    2. Concerto for Piano and Orcheatra No. 4 in G Major, Op. 58

      Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven

      Ensemble: Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra

      Performer: Boris Giltburg (Piano)

      Conductor: Vasily Petrenko


Here are two very personal, immediately spontaneous and highly dramatic interpretations of the two concertos, in which so many things sound excitingly new.

For 19th-century audiences Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 3 was the most loved of all his piano concertos, a work in which the balancing of high drama, tenderness, lyricism and humour is most pronounced and in which a coda resolves inner tensions with brilliance and triumphant grandeur. Piano Concerto No. 4 is the most introspective and poetic of the concertos. The simplicity of its opening piano statement gives way to an unprecedented dialogue in the central movement between a heartfelt piano and an austere unison string orchestra, before the infectious energy of the dramatic finale.

REVIEW:

Beethoven’s 3rd Piano Concerto is a departure into a new era. And that’s what Boris Giltburg makes us feel in his interpretation with the Liverpool Orchestra under Vasily Petrenko. His first movement is very agitated and rhetorical, and the Largo is not a beautiful romance, but rather a reflection and lingering, a recharging of the batteries, so to speak, whose energy is used up in the last movement. On the whole, the contrasts are highly dramatic. Orchestra and pianist sometimes seem to want to go in directly opposite directions.

Excitement and contrasts between orchestra and piano also characterize the first movement of the Fourth Concerto in which Giltburg makes the cadenza particularly exciting and expressive. The second movement ends enormously sombre and hopeless, the Passagio experience is fearfully depicted. The last movement is jubilant and fluttering, extremely virtuosic and ravishing in its exalted manner.

So we have here two very personal, immediately spontaneous and highly dramatic interpretations of the two concertos, in which so many things sound excitingly new. And that makes us recommend these pianistically and orchestrally magnificent recordings without hesitation.

-- Pizzicato