PIANO MASTERS IN BERLIN
GREAT CONCERTOS
Deutsche Grammophon 4835057 (8 CDs)
****1/2
This edition of eight discs follows in
the series of box-sets highlighting great recordings and symphonies by the
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra through the decades. Instead of obviously popular
piano concerto recordings, it opts for variety and several surprises.
The
earliest recording dates from 1953 and 1954, with almost-forgotten Hungarian
pianist Andor Foldes performing both of Liszt’s concertos and Rachmaninov’s Second
Piano Concerto (Leopold Ludwig conducting). Despite monaural sound, these
are commanding and memorable readings.
Also unexpected but enjoyable are
Mozart’s Concertos for Two and Three Pianos with the
Labeque sisters and conductor Semyon Bychkov, who doubles as the third pianist.
Great pianist-conductor Daniel Barenboim appears in both Chopin concertos with
Staatskapelle Berlin
(directed by Andris Nelsons) in somewhat stolid live performances from the 2010
Ruhr Piano Festival, which does not exactly qualify as being “in Berlin ”.
The truly great classic disc here is
Emil Gilels’ towering and majestic take on Brahms’ Second Piano Concerto
(with Eugen Jochum), with Brahms’ Seven Fantasias Op.116 as a generous
bonus. Geza Anda and Herbert von Karajan contribute the popular tandem of
Schumann and Grieg, while Maurizio Pollini and Claudio Abbado account for
Beethoven’s Third and Fourth Piano Concertos (the latter with
Beethoven’s rarely-heard alternative cadenza).
Li Yundi’s finest DG recording is also
here, coupling Prokofiev’s Second Piano Concerto and Ravel’s Piano
Concerto in G major, led by Seiji Ozawa in 2007. Not to be left out, Martha
Argerich is imperious in Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto, her 1994
account with favourite partner Abbado. The filler is Tchaikovky’s Nutcracker
Suite in a slick two-piano arrangement by the late Cypriot pianist Nicolas
Economou, also the second pianist. For piano-fanciers, this classy compilation
is manna from heaven.
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