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Nikolai Demidenko, Jerzy Maksymiuk - The Romantic Piano Concerto Vol. 2: Nikolai Medtner: Piano Concertos Nos 2 & 3 (1992)

Posted By: ArlegZ
Nikolai Demidenko, Jerzy Maksymiuk - The Romantic Piano Concerto Vol. 2: Nikolai Medtner: Piano Concertos Nos 2 & 3 (1992)

Nikolai Demidenko, Jerzy Maksymiuk, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra - The Romantic Piano Concerto Vol. 2: Nikolai Medtner: Piano Concertos Nos 2 & 3 (1992)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & no Log) ~ 309 Mb | Total time: 74:14 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Hyperion | # CDA66580 | Recorded: 1991

A younger contemporary of Scriabin and Rachmaninov, Nikolai Medtner, a Russian of distant German descent, studied under Pabst, Sapelnikov and Safonov at the Moscow Conservatoire, graduating in 1900 with the coveted Anton Rubinstein Prize. Admired as a pianist of particularly formidable attainment and inventive imagination, he held important teaching appointments at the Conservatoire (1909/10, 1914/21) before eventually leaving Russia for periods of domicile in Germany, the USA and Paris. In the winter of 1935/36 he settled in England, making his home in the Golders Green area of north London. Befriended by the Royal Philharmonic Society and made an Honorary Member of the Royal Academy of Music, it was here that he died in November 1951, from a heart attack—leaving the world, his devoted wife was to write later, ‘in a serene and grateful spirit’. As a pianist, Medtner was much sought after. He toured Europe in 1901/02 and again in l921, returned to his homeland for a series of historic concerts in 1927 and visited North America twice, in 1924/25 and 1929/30. In l944 ill-health forced him to retire from the platform—but not from the recording studio: in his last years, under the patronage of Sir Jaya Chamaraja Wadiyar, the Maharajah of Mysore, he taped a number of his more important works for HMV.
As a composer, a recluse who shunned publicity and self-promotion, Medtner, a noted Beethovenian no less than an ardent post-Schumannite, in Glazunov’s opinion (Paris, 1934), ‘firm defender of the sacred laws of eternal art’, was a musician steeped in Teutonic Tradition: the critic Sabaneiev estimated him to be ‘the first real, actual Beethoven in Russia—one who did not imitate but continued the master’s work’. Among his own compatriots he was drawn to early Scriabin, but had a higher regard for Tchaikovsky and Borodin. Chopin and Liszt, too, were happy hunting grounds. Like Chopin, Medtner expressed himself almost exclusively through the medium of the piano. Like Chopin, he knew how to invest a miniature with large-scale tension, how to generate a grand design. No salon soufflé journalist, his concern always was with the massive—as three piano concertos, a piano quintet, three sonatas with violin and over a dozen of imposing dimension for piano, plus a fine heritage of songs (recorded in their time by both Slobodskaya and Schwarzkopf) impressively testify. For sheer originality, his famous Skazki or ‘Legends’ (‘Fairy Tales’)—mercurial, fantastical, Russianized narratives of the soul, suggestive yet curiously private—are unlike anything else in the repertoire.

Performer:
Nikolai Demidenko, piano
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Jerzy Maksymiuk, conductor

Track List:
Nikolai Medtner (1880-1951)
Piano Concerto No 2 in C minor Op 50
01. I. Toccata: Allegro risoluto
02. II. Romanza: Andante con moto
03. III. Divertimento: Allegro risoluto e molto vivace
Piano Concerto No 3 in E minor Op 60
04. I. Con moto largamente
05. II. Interludium: Allegro, molto sostenuto, misterioso
06. III. Finale: Allegro molto, Svegliando, eroico

Nikolai Demidenko, Jerzy Maksymiuk - The Romantic Piano Concerto Vol. 2: Nikolai Medtner: Piano Concertos Nos 2 & 3 (1992)

Thanks to the original releaser