Works for Piano and Orchestra

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Edvard Grieg

Label: LaserLight

Media Format: Cassette

Media Runtime: 0

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 79 617

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra Edvard Grieg, Composer
Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra
Edvard Grieg, Composer
Jenö Jandó, Piano
John Sandor, Tenor
Peer Gynt, Movement: SUITE No. 2, Op. 55 Edvard Grieg, Composer
Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra
Edvard Grieg, Composer
John Sandor, Tenor

Composer or Director: Edvard Grieg, César Franck, Robert Schumann

Label: Laser

Media Format: Cassette

Media Runtime: 0

Mastering:

ADD

Catalogue Number: LZ762859-4

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra Edvard Grieg, Composer
Edvard Grieg, Composer
John Ogdon, Piano
New Philharmonia Orchestra
Paavo Berglund, Conductor
Symphonic Variations César Franck, Composer
César Franck, Composer
John Barbirolli, Conductor
John Ogdon, Piano
Philharmonia Orchestra

Composer or Director: Edvard Grieg, César Franck, Robert Schumann

Label: Laser

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 76

Mastering:

ADD

Catalogue Number: 762859-2

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra Edvard Grieg, Composer
Edvard Grieg, Composer
John Ogdon, Piano
New Philharmonia Orchestra
Paavo Berglund, Conductor
Symphonic Variations César Franck, Composer
César Franck, Composer
John Barbirolli, Conductor
John Ogdon, Piano
Philharmonia Orchestra

Composer or Director: Edvard Grieg

Label: LaserLight

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 64

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 15 617

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra Edvard Grieg, Composer
Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra
Edvard Grieg, Composer
Jenö Jandó, Piano
John Sandor, Tenor
Peer Gynt, Movement: SUITE No. 2, Op. 55 Edvard Grieg, Composer
Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra
Edvard Grieg, Composer
John Sandor, Tenor
The generously-filled John Ogdon reissue will be welcomed by his friends—and no doubt by many others too since the Grieg and Schumann Concertos, even if not nowadays the Franck Symphonic Variations, are among the world's favourites. But bad marks to EMI for an all too scanty accompanying leaflet merely advertising other Laser issues. Those too young to have heard the Ogdon story surely deserve a brief biographical appreciation, and at least a few words about the music itself. Of the three performances I enjoyed the Grieg most—for musical commitment no less than the kind of piano-playing that helped to win Ogdon a shared first prize at Moscow's Tchaikovsky Competition in 1962. True, the first movement might here and there be thought a little over-driven, but the Adagio is most affectionately timed and phrased, and so is that nostalgic dream interlude in the course of the highly spirited finale. This work, like the Schumann, was recorded at the end of 1971 with the New Philharmonia Orchestra, who under Paavo Berglund play very eloquently in both, and sound remarkably true to life on this remastered CD. Ogdon himself in the Schumann is commendably un-mannered, though I thought the first two movements could have taken inflexion of a more intimately personal kind. The Franck Variations were recorded nine years earlier, when Ogdon was still only 24. Here the sound of the Philharmonia Orchestra no less than the keyboard itself slightly betrays its age, though I still enjoyed the performance for the way Barbirolli balances and integrates the two so that your ear is always where it should be.
In the rival LaserLight Grieg, Jeno Jando's piano is more forwardly placed—not always to the orchestra's advantage, especially in one or two leading instrumental solos. In climaxes, too, the keyboard tone sounds a bit clangy and shallow. Taking two minutes longer over the first movement than Ogdon, Jando luxuriates in its romanticism with much more elasticity. The Adagio also finds him ardent in emotional response. But for a Hungarian I thought him surprisingly deliberate in the finale (half a minute longer than Ogdon's). Planned as a Grieg anthology, this disc is completed by the two Peer Gynt Suites, both expressively played by the Budapest Philharmonic and the Vienna Symphony under Janos Sandor and Yuri Ahronovitch respectively, though as sound per se I preferred the more luminous reproduction enjoyed by the Viennese contenders.'

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