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    Busoni: Piano Concerto/Ogdon

    Posted By: Berthold_80
    Busoni: Piano Concerto/Ogdon

    Busoni: Piano Concerto / John Ogdon
    EMI Classics | Encore | February 6, 2007
    EAC rip | ape (img + cue) | no log | 321 MB

    No other account quite rivals the grandeur or the thrill of discovery of Ogdon's.
    The Gramophone

    Made 40 years ago, this first recorded performance of Busoni’s Piano Concerto has since been keenly rivaled—by David Lively, with Michael Gielen and the SWR Orchestra (long-gone Koch 311 160, Fanfare 15:1) and Garrick Ohlsson, with Christoph Dohnányi leading the Cleveland Orchestra (still available Telarc 80207, Fanfare 13:4). But not yet overtopped. Turning to the inheritor of Ogdon’s mantle, Marc-André Hamelin, one hears a performance even more stunningly, fluently virtuosic, but couched in clueless orchestral work—Mark Elder’s loose grasp on the CBSO—in which the uneasy mix seems brummagem, too long, and pointlessly involved (Hyperion 67143, Fanfare 23:4—yes, I’ve been disappointed in the long term). Elder, by the way, performed the same disservice for Peter Donohoe with the BBC Symphony in a previous tilt at the Concerto (EMI/Angel 49996, Fanfare 14:4), mischief compounded by similarly maundering helmsmanship in a 1986 London revival of Doktor Faust. A dull routineer’s shapeless, faute de mieux time-beating through a couple of works makes one a Busoni “specialist.” With performances like these littering the landscape it’s little wonder that Busoni’s work still provokes misunderstanding and ambivalence. A long glimpse into the opportunity Elder muffed is afforded by Hamelin’s account of the Concerto’s fourth Tarantella movement, hand-in-glove with Osmo Vänska and the Lahti Symphony (“It’s all about the music,” Hyperion DVD 68000)—a coruscating, blindingly brilliant performance veering from the fantastically vivacious to the audaciously demonic. A recently released 1956 live performance of the Concerto by Gunnar Johansen, with Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt and the NDR Orchestra, Hamburg (Music & Arts 1163, Fanfare 29:2), is the mercurial antithesis of Ogdon’s granitic manner but also the preeminent runner-up. Certainly, it requires a pianistic Übermensch to bring the Concerto off, and this is what most critics emphasize, but a viable performance depends equally upon cohesive orchestral partnership. The piano, after all, often takes a secondary stance, accompanying the orchestra, commenting and musing upon its gambits, seconding its blazons, and generally playing a role analogous to the viola soloist in Harold en Italie. Busoni’s pace is leisurely—tumult within a generous aura of serenity—but it is not formless, and conductors who trust him and trouble themselves to get inside the work (as they would, say, contemporary symphonies by Mahler, Elgar, or Nielsen) demonstrate what Busoni’s friend, Bernard van Dieren, had in mind when he described the Concerto as “really a ‘dramatic symphony’ in the Berliozian sense.” Elder and his ilk provoke impatience where Revenaugh shines as the orchestra engages in a dialogue with Ogdon leading to a progressively swelling aura of revelation, heard with such refulgence in no other performance. In and out of print, this performance is one of the pillars of the Busoni discography and should be kept permanently available—but won’t. Beside the crisp immediacy of today’s digital, the sound shows its age, though in its day it was exemplary—detailed, well balanced, yet sufficiently panoramic not to clot in Vesuvian moments. (...) You’re best advised to grab this now.
    FANFARE: Adrian Corleonis

    Ferruccio Busoni:

    Concerto for piano, orchestra and male chorus, Op. 39
    1. Prologo e introito
    2. Pezzo giocoso
    3. Pezzo serioso (Introductio - Prima pars - Altera pars - Ultima pars)
    4. All'italiana (Tarantella)
    5. Cantico

    John Ogdon, piano
    Men's Voices of the John Alldis Choir
    Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
    Daniell Revenaugh

    Recorded: 20-22, 26 & 28.VI.1967, No.1 Studio, Abbey Road, London.

    Download:
    http://rapidshare.com/files/299482192/ogdon.part1.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/299518349/ogdon.part2.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/299539609/ogdon.part3.rar
    http://rapidshare.com/files/299553644/ogdon.part4.rar

    p/w: gv80