Atterberg Piano Concerto, Op 37; Rhapsody, Op 1
Fullblooded Romanticism ably played
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Kurt (Magnus) Atterberg
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: CPO
Magazine Review Date: 4/2002
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 55
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: CPO999 732-2

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra |
Kurt (Magnus) Atterberg, Composer
Ari Rasilainen, Conductor Hannover Radio Philharmonie Kurt (Magnus) Atterberg, Composer Love Derwinger, Piano |
Rhapsody for Piano and Orchestra |
Kurt (Magnus) Atterberg, Composer
Ari Rasilainen, Conductor Hannover Radio Philharmonie Kurt (Magnus) Atterberg, Composer Love Derwinger, Piano |
Ballade and Passacaglia |
Kurt (Magnus) Atterberg, Composer
Ari Rasilainen, Conductor Hannover Radio Philharmonie Kurt (Magnus) Atterberg, Composer |
Author:
For those who like music trivia questions‚ what is the common link between the Op 1s of Béla Bartók and of Swedish composer Kurt Atterberg? Answer: they are both Rhapsodies for piano and orchestra. Bartók’s is – slightly – the earlier‚ but Atterberg’s (190809) is the more accomplished and characteristic piece‚ all the more strikingly so as he had at this time received little formal tuition. That said‚ the work as we have it here is the result of thoroughgoing revisions in 1912 and 1956. Perhaps its most remarkable feature is the fluency of the piano writing and the confident handling of the orchestration.
Atterberg’s Piano Concerto was begun in 1927‚ the year after Bartók had completed his First‚ but not finished until 1935. It is audibly the work of the same composer‚ which cannot be said when comparing Bartók’s concertos with his earlier Rhapsody. Atterberg’s model was Tchaikovsky’s B flat minor Concerto‚ and he produced a fullbloodedly Romantic work of considerable sweep‚ its heart very much on its sleeve. Although it does not sound overtly Russian in character‚ it should appeal to anyone responsive to‚ say‚ Rachmaninov‚ which is precisely how Derwinger and Rasilainen (rightly) take it in what proves an even more persuasive account than Dan Franklin Smith’s on Sterling (coupled with the Violin Concerto)‚ fine though that was. CPO’s sound is also rather fuller and richer‚ with greater depth‚ and for good measure they throw in the orchestral Ballade and Passacaglia‚ Op 38‚ of 1936‚ one of the Swede’s most attractive shorter scores.
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