Manhattan Intermezzo / Biegel, Brown University Orchestra
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Listen to the Naxos Podcast to learn more about this release This program brings together four works for piano and orchestra by composers best known...
Listen to the Naxos Podcast to learn more about this release
This program brings together four works for piano and orchestra by composers best known from the fields of jazz, popular song and progressive rock. Neil Sedaka's Manhattan Intermezzo explores the New York of today and yesterday with its melting pot of nationalities. Keith Emerson is best known as a founding member of Emerson Lake & Palmer. His remarkably inventive semi-autobiographical Piano Concerto No. 1 fuses his classical training with jazz. Duke Ellington's sublime New World a-Comin' is a visualization of improved conditions for black people in America, while the rarely heard original version of Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue represents the quintessential style of New York City in the roaring twenties.
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The following article from Newsday gives more background to this recording:
Jeffrey Biegel has always loved George Gershwin’s classic “Rhapsody in Blue.” The pianist-composer remembers it always being played in his parents’ Plainview home. “It was my father’s favorite piece,” Biegel said. “He loved it. . . . I think it took until the ’90s before my father said, ‘I think you finally got it.’ ” Shortly after that, Biegel got the idea for what would become his new album “Manhattan Intermezzo."
Biegel wanted to record his version of “Rhapsody in Blue,” which is different from most interpretations. “I added measures from the Gershwin manuscripts,” he said. “It makes more sense to me that way. It’s only about a minute’s worth of music, but it’s all about putting the connective tissue back into it.” Because of that, he performs it differently from other artists. “I didn’t agree with swinging the rhythm into syncopated triplets,” Biegel said. “I see it with a more gentle bend, not as a swing piece. . . . I felt it was more a culmination of what was happening at the time.”
After selecting “Rhapsody in Blue” as the anchor of his new project, Biegel set out to find other pieces that would match its feel. He had fallen for a piano concerto by Keith Emerson — yes, of Emerson, Lake and Palmer fame — and had been performing it with Duke Ellington’s “New World A-Comin’,” which paired nicely, but there was still a missing link and that came by accident.
“I was at a birthday party for [producer-composer] David Foster,” Biegel recalled. “[Andrea] Bocelli was there. Neil [Sedaka] was there. People were singing and David said to me, ‘Now, you’re going to play.’ ” He performed a Chopin polonaise and was later approached by Sedaka, who had just finished a concerto called “Manhattan Intermezzo” and wanted him to hear it. “It was a look back at what New York meant to him,” Biegel said. “It captured the dances and culture of New York City, with a Russian flavor to it. . . . It was neo-romantic and lush. I loved it.”
Biegel asked Sedaka’s permission to “add some bells and whistles to the piano part,” which Sedaka granted after hearing what he had done. Soon, the piece received its world premiere with Orchestra Kentucky. And Biegel had found the final piece for his “Rhapsody in Blue” project, recording it all with the Brown University Orchestra and conductor Paul Phillips.
Review:
First off comes the Gershwin, which is worth the price of admission by itself: it gets a distinctive performance from pianist Jeffrey Biegel, with plenty of jazz accents, and it is presented in an edition by scholar Alicia Zizzo that probably represents Gershwin's own intentions. The Piano Concerto No. 1 of Keith Emerson, of the progressive rock group ELP, may be the nicest surprise of the four works. It incorporates many other influences besides that of ELP (there are even a few 12-tone passages), and it weaves them all together in an attractive score that is arguably the most sophisticated of any of the four works on the album. Worthy of special notice is the work of the Brown University Symphony Orchestra under Paul Phillips. Recommended.
– All Music Guide
This program brings together four works for piano and orchestra by composers best known from the fields of jazz, popular song and progressive rock. Neil Sedaka's Manhattan Intermezzo explores the New York of today and yesterday with its melting pot of nationalities. Keith Emerson is best known as a founding member of Emerson Lake & Palmer. His remarkably inventive semi-autobiographical Piano Concerto No. 1 fuses his classical training with jazz. Duke Ellington's sublime New World a-Comin' is a visualization of improved conditions for black people in America, while the rarely heard original version of Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue represents the quintessential style of New York City in the roaring twenties.
-----
The following article from Newsday gives more background to this recording:
Jeffrey Biegel has always loved George Gershwin’s classic “Rhapsody in Blue.” The pianist-composer remembers it always being played in his parents’ Plainview home. “It was my father’s favorite piece,” Biegel said. “He loved it. . . . I think it took until the ’90s before my father said, ‘I think you finally got it.’ ” Shortly after that, Biegel got the idea for what would become his new album “Manhattan Intermezzo."
Biegel wanted to record his version of “Rhapsody in Blue,” which is different from most interpretations. “I added measures from the Gershwin manuscripts,” he said. “It makes more sense to me that way. It’s only about a minute’s worth of music, but it’s all about putting the connective tissue back into it.” Because of that, he performs it differently from other artists. “I didn’t agree with swinging the rhythm into syncopated triplets,” Biegel said. “I see it with a more gentle bend, not as a swing piece. . . . I felt it was more a culmination of what was happening at the time.”
After selecting “Rhapsody in Blue” as the anchor of his new project, Biegel set out to find other pieces that would match its feel. He had fallen for a piano concerto by Keith Emerson — yes, of Emerson, Lake and Palmer fame — and had been performing it with Duke Ellington’s “New World A-Comin’,” which paired nicely, but there was still a missing link and that came by accident.
“I was at a birthday party for [producer-composer] David Foster,” Biegel recalled. “[Andrea] Bocelli was there. Neil [Sedaka] was there. People were singing and David said to me, ‘Now, you’re going to play.’ ” He performed a Chopin polonaise and was later approached by Sedaka, who had just finished a concerto called “Manhattan Intermezzo” and wanted him to hear it. “It was a look back at what New York meant to him,” Biegel said. “It captured the dances and culture of New York City, with a Russian flavor to it. . . . It was neo-romantic and lush. I loved it.”
Biegel asked Sedaka’s permission to “add some bells and whistles to the piano part,” which Sedaka granted after hearing what he had done. Soon, the piece received its world premiere with Orchestra Kentucky. And Biegel had found the final piece for his “Rhapsody in Blue” project, recording it all with the Brown University Orchestra and conductor Paul Phillips.
Review:
First off comes the Gershwin, which is worth the price of admission by itself: it gets a distinctive performance from pianist Jeffrey Biegel, with plenty of jazz accents, and it is presented in an edition by scholar Alicia Zizzo that probably represents Gershwin's own intentions. The Piano Concerto No. 1 of Keith Emerson, of the progressive rock group ELP, may be the nicest surprise of the four works. It incorporates many other influences besides that of ELP (there are even a few 12-tone passages), and it weaves them all together in an attractive score that is arguably the most sophisticated of any of the four works on the album. Worthy of special notice is the work of the Brown University Symphony Orchestra under Paul Phillips. Recommended.
– All Music Guide
Product Description:
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Release Date: January 08, 2016
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UPC: 747313349074
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Catalog Number: 8573490
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Label: Naxos
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Number of Discs: 1
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Composer: Sedaka, Emerson, Ellington
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Conductor: Paul Phillips
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Orchestra/Ensemble: Brown University Orchestra
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Performer: Jeffrey Biegel