Geza Anda, Ferenc Fricsay, Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – Bartok – The 3 Piano Concertos (2013) [FLAC 24bit, 48 kHz]

Geza Anda, Ferenc Fricsay, Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra - Bartok - The 3 Piano Concertos (2013) [FLAC 24bit, 48 kHz] Download

Artist: Geza Anda, Ferenc Fricsay, Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra
Album: Bartok – The 3 Piano Concertos
Genre: Classical
Label: Pristine Classical
Release Date: 2013
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24bit, 48 kHz
Duration: 01:18:47
Total Tracks: 9
Total Size: 806 MB

Tracklist:

1. Geza Anda; Ferenc Fricsay; Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – PC #1 Sz. 83 – I. Allegro moderato – Allegro – Allegro moderato (09:14)
2. Geza Anda; Ferenc Fricsay; Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – II. Andante (08:36)
3. Geza Anda; Ferenc Fricsay; Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – III. Allegro molto (07:29)
4. Geza Anda; Ferenc Fricsay; Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – PC #2 Sz. 95 – I. Allegro (09:57)
5. Geza Anda; Ferenc Fricsay; Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – II Adagio – Presto – Adagio (12:25)
6. Geza Anda; Ferenc Fricsay; Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – III. Allegro molto (06:33)
7. Geza Anda; Ferenc Fricsay; Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – PC #3 Sz. 119 – I. Allegretto (07:17)
8. Geza Anda; Ferenc Fricsay; Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – II. Adagio religioso – Poco più mosso – Tempo 1 (10:22)
9. Geza Anda; Ferenc Fricsay; Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra – III. Allegro vivace (06:50)

At very long last we have a worthy recording of the Bartok Second Concerto, a work whose previous interpreters (including the admirable Andor Foldes, whose performance received Bartok’s own blessing) have all suffered from recording qualities ranging from indifferent to abysmal. This will be valuable in helping to spread a knowledge of an important work in Bartok’s output which is rarely heard in the concert hall, probably because of the ferocious difficulty of the solo part – Bartok seems to have had in mind huge hands with permanent built-in octave and thirds mechanisms. The music does not deserve this neglect, and though it is “tougher” in idiom than the more mellow Third Concerto it has in fact had a consistently successful reception ever since its first performance (by the composer) in 1933. A bravura, lithe work, it abounds in motor energy and in contrapuntal vigour and resource (much of the material of the first movement – which is played entirely without the strings – reappears in inversion, or even in retrograde inversion, in the finale): the central part of the Adagio is a brilliantly fantastic delicate scherzo which looks forward to the Sonata for two pianos and percussion. Soloist and orchestra co-operate in exemplary fashion in a performance remarkable for its precision of ensemble, clarity and exactness of detail: Gcxa Anda in pardcular is to be congratulated for the way he romps through all the difficulties. The recording is excellent, the stereo even better than the mono.
— L. S. The Gramophone, May 1961 – excerpt, review of DGG UP issue of Concertos 2 & 3

Download:

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *