'Delightful concertos. Kullak's in particular strikes me as a gem. Piers Lane plays both with dexterity and wit. A winner' (The Sunday Times)
'I can't stop playing the disk: the anticipation of a number of ear-tickling passages, notably in the Kullak, is too delicious for words. Effervescent, lightweight music transformed into entertaining and compelling minor masterpieces' (Classic CD)
'Performed with the kind of zestful spirit and communicative flair that his rightly won this series so many plaudits' (Gramophone)
'This is opne of the very finest of Hyperion's 'Romantic Piano Concertos' series (The Penguin Guide to Compact Discs)
Piano Concerto in C minor, Op 55
Theodor Kullak (1818-1882)
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Movement 1: Allegro
[16:19]
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Movement 2: Adagio
[8:22]
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Piano Concerto in D minor, Op 137
Alexander Dreyschock (1818-1869)
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Movement 2: Andante con moto
[6:10]
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Movement 3: Allegro vivace
[8:06]
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Both were pianists (and born in the same year) but had very different careers. Dreyschock seems to have been a bit of a showman and played loud and fast, he made a speciality of his left hand work and was one of the first to compose for this esoteric medium. His large output of compositions seem never to have made much impression and it is now purely as a performer that he is remembered. His only concerto (not to be confused with his Concertstück once recorded on LP) is rather Mendelssohnian and has a particularly energetic finale.
Although by all accounts also a superb virtuoso Kullak gravitated towards teaching and became perhaps the most prolific teacher of the nineteenth century century; he eventually founded his own Academy in Berlin which had a roll of around 1000 piano students at it's peak.
His only concerto was published in 1855 and is quite conservative for its time, though it may have been written earlier. It clearly derives from the tradition of Hummel and contains much brilliant finger work interspersed with a lyricism very reminiscent of Chopin. It may not be profound, but it is both beautiful and entertaining and must surely be one of the most enjoyable 'lost' concertos around.
Other albums in this series |
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Buy? £16.99
Super-Audio CD
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