Artist: Artur Pizarro, BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Martyn Brabbins
Album: Romantic Piano Concerto 64 – Oswald & Napoleão dos Santos: Piano Concertos
Genre: Classical
Release Date: 2014
Audio Format: FLAC (tracks) 24bit, 96 kHz
Duration: 01:07:06
Total Tracks: 7
Total Size: 1,13 GB
Tracklist:
Piano Concerto in G minor Op 10
1 Allegro (un poco agitato)[14’21]
2 Adagio –[9’22]
3 Allegro[6’27]
Alfredo Napoleão dos Santos (1852-1917)
Piano Concerto No 2 in E flat minor Op 31
4 Movement 1: Andantino maestoso[19’53]
5 Movement 2: Scherzo: Allegro vivace – Più lento – Tempo I[4’11]
6 Movement 3: Allegro – Più vivo[12’55]
Download Links:
https://xubster.com/sajbrbfkz6kc/0swaldNap0le0Pian0C0ncert0sArturPizarr0BBCNati0nal0rchestra0fWalesMartynBrabbins20149624.part2.rar.html
Oswald’s Piano Concerto in G minor, Op 10, dates from about 1886, the year he met Liszt. Although influences of Fauré can be detected in the second theme, the overall character of the first movement owes more to the late Romantic German style. The orchestration is rich and full, but the Tchaikovskian athleticism and virtuosity of the piano-writing keep the soloist to the fore.
Napoleão’s Piano Concerto No 2 in E flat minor, Op 31, is undated but was probably composed around the same time as Oswald’s Piano Concerto. Although Napoleão performed the concerto in a solo piano version, the first performance with orchestra had to wait until 12 February 1941. This was given by Evaristo de Campos Coelho (1903–1988)—with whom Artur Pizarro, the pianist on the present recording, studied as a young child. He played the work numerous times, and performed it for Portuguese radio. Dinorah Leitão (who was Ivo Cruz’s daughter in law, and also a student of Campos Coelho) then played it, and Artur Pizarro is only the third pianist to champion this work.
Whether Oswald’s Concerto, dating from around 1886, is strong or appealing enough to earn him a higher profile is a moot point. It has a first movement full of fire and brimstone but lacks any memorable themes or a cohesive structure; the lyrical Adagio offers only hints of why Arthur Rubinstein dubbed Oswald ‘the Brazilian Gabriel Fauré’. This leads, attaca, into an arresting tarantella which goes some way to redeeming an otherwise faceless, if richly orchestrated, addtion to Hyperion’s iconic series.
The concerto by Napoleao (or Napoleon) is considerably and consistently more interesting, not least for its key. (I read that young Daniil Trifonov has just premiered his own E flat minor Concerto, but are there any others?) The lengthy (19’53”) first movement, with its atmospheric misterioso opening, makes it clear that he knew his Chopin and Liszt, while the first subject of the brief Scherzo owes much to Litolff (though not its flaccid second subject). Had Gottschalk ever written a piano concerto, the boisterous finale might have been the result. This is a concerto that grows on the listener.
All of which leaves little space to celebrate Artur Pizarro’s playing of both works. One cannot imagine them more convincingly and sincerely executed. What verve and flair he brings to the stamina-sapping solos, and with what graceful lyricism he invests the cantabile writing. He is only the third pianist to champion the Napoleao concerto. Interestingly, as a child he studied with Evaristo de Campos Coelho (1903-88), who gave the work its first performance in 1941, over half a century after its composition. –Jeremy Nicholas, Gramophone