MOZART Piano Concertos Nos 20 & 25 (Jeremy Denk)

Record and Artist Details

Genre:

Orchestral

Label: Nonesuch

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 71

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 7559 79168-7

7559 79168-7. MOZART Piano Concertos Nos 20 & 25 (Jeremy Denk)

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 25 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
Jeremy Denk, Conductor, Piano
Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra
Rondo Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
Jeremy Denk, Conductor, Piano
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 20 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
Jeremy Denk, Conductor, Piano
Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra

The first thing you notice at the outset of the C major Concerto (K503) – in fact at the opening of each movement – is the exquisite shaping of the orchestral introduction. This is Jeremy Denk’s first Mozart recording (aside from a single sonata movement on his collection ‘c1300‑c2000’ – 3/19), although he has been performing the concertos for some time. The rapport with his accomplices in the St Paul Chamber Orchestra is accordingly a close one, and their sterling support frees Denk to embellish his lines with sometimes startling freedom.

Unlike Olga Pashchenko (albeit in a different concerto coupling – Alpha, 9/21), however, his liberties don’t pull the tempo around to the extent that the music is twisted out of shape. And while the recording balance may focus to a certain extent upon the piano, enough light is reflected on to the woodwinds that their characterful contributions are not obscured. It’s a rather different case in the D minor Concerto (K466), where the winds come across more subdued alongside a piano that is spotlit to a greater degree, so that even rumbling passagework in tuttis is brought to the fore. (There is also some audible pedal ‘thump’ in both concertos; rather more seriously, what I can only assume is an editing error excises a bar shortly before the cadenza of K466’s first movement at around 10'23".)

Nevertheless, Denk’s identification with this music is evident throughout. Perhaps the palate-cleansing A minor Rondo at the halfway point of the disc best encapsulates the finest points of these performances: a reading of conspicuous inwardness and intensity that distils an almost Schubertian poignancy. His cadenzas, too (presumably his own – they are not identified in the documentation as received), reflect his deeply personal response to each work. Denk is clearly a pianist with much to say in Mozart.

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