SHOSTAKOVICH Piano Concertos. Piano Trio No 2 (Simon Trpčeski)
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Linn
Magazine Review Date: 07/2021
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 70
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CKD659

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto for Piano, Trumpet and Strings |
Dmitri Shostakovich, Composer
Andrei Kavalinski, Trumpet Cristian Măcelaru, Conductor Janácek Philharmonic Orchestra Simon Trpceski, Piano |
Piano Trio No. 2 |
Dmitri Shostakovich, Composer
Aleksandar Krapovski, Violin Alexander Somov, Cello Simon Trpceski, Piano |
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 2 |
Dmitri Shostakovich, Composer
Cristian Măcelaru, Conductor Janácek Philharmonic Orchestra Simon Trpceski, Piano |
Author: Patrick Rucker
Nearly a quarter of a century separates Dmitry Shostakovich’s two piano concertos. The First dates from 1933, three years prior to the infamous Pravda article officially condemning his opera Lady Macbeth, when Shostakovich was still considered the pre-eminent young Soviet composer. By the time Maxim Shostakovich premiered his father’s Second Piano Concerto in 1957, the composer had survived the Stalinist purges of the Great Terror and endured a second, more sweeping government censure and arduous rehabilitation. What seems remarkable is the similarity of style and spirit of the two works, despite the chasm of traumatic life experience that separates them.
As this new Linn release demonstrates, these two Soviet-era concertos are well suited to Simon Trpčeski’s straightforward brand of pianism. The choice of Andrei Kavalinski, principal of the Orchestre National de France, as trumpet soloist in the First Concerto was felicitous. In the atmospheric second movement, Ma˘celaru and the Ostrava strings set the stage for the soloists with uncommon care and delicacy. Even though some of the more mordant humour of the finale is lost, Trpčeski nevertheless imbues the movement with an almost Mozartian grace. In the midst of the prevalent bouncy high spirits of the more richly scored Second Concerto, the Andante achieves something akin to genuine pathos.
If the album has a flaw, it is the inclusion of one of Shostakovich’s tragic masterpieces, the Second Piano Trio, between the two concertos. Written after the death of Ivan Sollertinsky, one of Shostakovich’s close friends, its elegiac content swamps the general light-heartedness of the piano concertos. And while the performance is committed, the instruments do not always seem ideally matched as an ensemble, seldom achieving the emotional traction required to convey the full intensity of the work.
The concertos face some strong headwinds among the competition, with well over a hundred recordings of the first and 65 or so of the second currently available. They include those of Melnikov and the Mahler CO under Currentzis (Harmonia Mundi, 5/12), Giltburg and the Royal Liverpool under Petrenko (Naxos, 1/17) and Hamelin with the BBC Scottish under Litton (Hyperion, 1/04). Of Argerich’s several recordings of the First, that with Sinfonia Varsovia under Rabinovitch-Barakovsky (Fryderyk Chopin Institute, 2/18) is particularly fine.
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