rec. 3-5 September 2013, Ulster Hall, Belfast, Northern Ireland
Hyperion’s long-standing Romantic Piano Concerto
series launched in 1991. At present it has well over sixty issues to its
name and has unearthed treasure from more familiar composers but also from
those whose names have hitherto been of greater interest to academics. This
site has charted Hyperion's progress in a long sequence of reviews
many of which are indexed
here.
Others have been reviewed by us but are not as yet in these indexed pages.
Mike Spring – whose brainchild the epic project is – has recently
decided to stand down from this London-based company after some twenty-five
years in the job. Whether this will have any effect on the future appearance
of new issues in the series only time will tell. After all the genre isn’t
quite a bottomless pit in terms of quality works with something distinctive
or at least different to say.
The timing seems just right for the introduction of a new series from Hyperion
which will, according to the first release, ‘this time focus on the
lesser-known concertos from the dawn of the ‘Classical Piano Concerto’
genre, between about 1770 and 1820’. Hyperion’s proposed dates
roughly correspond to Beethoven’s life-span (1770-1827), and would
seem to be able to accommodate the works of Clementi, Cramer, Czerny, Ries,
and Steibelt, and others working at the time. This ‘high classical
period’ is still effectively dominated by Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven,
all of whom were also prolific in the piano concerto field.
The Classical Piano Concerto’s executive producers – currently
the familiar and highly-experienced pairing of Simon Perry and Mike Spring
from the ‘Romantic’ series – have made a wise choice in
choosing three concertos from Bohemian virtuoso Jan Ladislav Dussek’s
eighteen surviving examples of the genre for their debut CD.
Dussek’s early works are certainly Classical in style, while those
dating from after the turn of the century reveal definite Romantic characteristics,
in terms of expression marks, non-harmonic notes, wider chordal variety
and greater use of chromaticism. To be fair, much of Dussek’s music
resembles that of some of his contemporaries, but the crucial point is that
Dussek’s ideas predate these contemporaries, thus showing him to have
been very much ahead of his time in reality. This isn’t made easier
by the fact that the exact chronology of his approximately eighteen piano
concertos isn’t overly straightforward, especially as he didn’t
number them successively – hence the use of Howard Craw’s (C)
Dussek cataloguing system. To this end the three examples on this CD have
been well selected to point out this sense of progression.
The
Piano Concerto in G major, Op. 1 No. 3 is an early
work, written uncharacteristically in just two movements – without
a central slow movement. The opening ‘Allegro’ holds no surprises,
and is cast in Mozart’s well-tried ‘double-exposition’
form – an opening orchestral tutti, followed by a solo exposition,
second tutti, development, recapitulation and closing tutti, which includes
an improvised cadenza. The finale is a brisk and effective Rondo.
Contrary to Mozart’s thinking, as Dussek’s style matured he
tended to dispense with the almost obligatory cadenza later in the opening
movement. According to Weber-scholar John Warrack, Dussek actually is often
credited with the increasing omission of this device in many nineteenth-century
concertos, given that he was among the first to abandon it.
The second work on the CD – the
Piano Concerto in C major,
Op. 29 – appropriately comes from around the midpoint in
the composer’s career (1795), at a time when the piano concerto was
gaining popularity, and some four years after Mozart’s death. From
the listener’s point of view, one of the interesting things here is
that, instead of starting with the almost obligatory presentation of an
energetic and up-beat first subject, Dussek’s opening gambit is a
twenty-bar ‘Larghetto’ slow introduction in triple metre, which
recurs twice in the ensuing ‘Allegro maestoso’. Beethoven introduced
a short solo-piano introduction of some five bars at the start of his fourth
Piano Concerto, but again this appeared in 1805-6, and Dussek’s is
somewhat more substantial, and a truly original touch. There is a slow movement
in the dominant key of G, and the concerto is again rounded off by a rondo
finale.
Between this concerto and the last one on the CD – the
Piano
Concerto in E flat, Op. 70 of 1810, Dussek continued evolving his
own take on concerto-form, particularly in giving the soloist new themes
in the solo exposition, and turning the second subject more into a second-subject
‘group’. Additionally he would now include lyrical passages,
mainly allotted to the soloist, and these could appear in any section of
the movement. Similar passages also were to appear in the concertos of younger
contemporaries of Dussek – Weber, Field, Hummel, Chopin and Schumann
– and to become a structural innovation in the early Romantic concerto.
This final concerto, not unsurprisingly, is perhaps the most Beethovenian
of the three, especially since it is roughly contemporary with Beethoven’s
Emperor Concerto in the same key. It's a charming work that deserves
to be heard more often.
The first thing the listener notices is the greatly extended first movement
here – roughly a third longer than his previous contribution –
as well as the absence of a conventional recapitulation, something which
Dussek perhaps felt necessary to avoid an otherwise overlong opening ‘Allegro’.
The first movement is, in fact, a perfect example of the evolving Classical
Piano Concerto, and it’s definitely worth fast-forwarding to roughly
7:50 to hear the start of one of these new lyrical passages referred to
above, and which here opens the development. It lasts around two minutes,
before the movement’s overall faster tempo returns, before a second
such interlude occurs around 10:42, this time leading into the recapitulation.
An attractive second movement ensues, where Dussek shows not only his not-insignificant
skills in orchestration, as well as some further harmonic side-stepping,
such as is heard towards the end of the opening ‘Allegro’. A
catchy and good-humoured rondo concludes the concerto, which again attests
to the composer’s orchestral prowess. The now familiar excursion into
some distant key – particular that of E major – adds not only
to the ever-increase richness of his harmonic palette, but also points towards
Schubert’s usage.
When volume 1 of Hyperion’s
Romantic Piano Concerto series
first appeared back in June 1991, with a release of concertos by Moszkowski
and Paderewski, little did they perhaps realise they’d ever get well
past sixty CDs – and still seemingly going strong. While the immediate
appeal of a Classical piano concerto, versus a larger-scale Romantic one,
might not make quite the same initial impact, if future releases in this
new series are anything to go by, then the
Classical Piano Concerto
series looks like providing an equally successful parallel product, with
the same propensity for longevity.
There could be no finer exponents of works in this new repertoire than Howard
Shelley – already a stalwart of the Romantic Concerto series –
both as soloist and director, and with the equally-talented Ulster Orchestra
in tow. Factor in Hyperion’s customary first-rate recording and highly-informative
sleeve-notes, here by Stephan D Lindeman, and it would be invidious not
to praise this superb debut CD highly.
Beware though, if you enjoy this one, you could easily end up becoming hopelessly
addicted again, and perhaps for the next twenty-five years or so.
Philip
R Buttall