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(Z)BartOk Concertos for Piano and Orchestra -No. 1, Sz83; No. 2, Sz95; No. 3, Sz119. Andras Schiff (pf); Budapest Festival Orchestra / Ivan Fischer.
Teldec CD 0630-13158-2 (76 minutes: DDD).
Selected comparisons - coupled as above:
Donohoe, CBSO, Rattle (11/93) (EMI) CDC7 54871-2 Andy, Berlin RSO, Fricsay (5/95) (DG) 447 399-200R Kocsis, Budapest Fest Orch, I. Fischer (12/95) (PHIL) 446 366-2PH Concerto No. 3 - selected comparison:
Bernathova, Czech PO, AnCerl (SUPR) 111957-2 "When we are taught that in classical music four semiquavers must be played absolutely equally, then we are far removed from the truth." The words are those of Andras Schiff, written in the context of his booklet-essay "Bart& in Performance". And it's certainly true that although Schifrs free-flowing renditions of the Bart& piano concertos are never too far from the written page, they rarely stick rigidly to the letter. The first solo statement in the Second Concerto, for example (007" into track 4) is lilting and capricious, quite unlike the earnest pronouncements of Anda, Donohoe or Kocsis. Likewise in the 'night music' slow movement, where Schiff follows BartOk's own example in rushing towards the crest of a phrase (as heard in an incomplete broadcast performance on Hungaroton). True, his Presto isn't quite as nimble as Anda's (these particular insects sound as if they'd rather have been left to slumber), but I can imagine some readers rejoicing in the many subtle shifts in pace and dynamics that colour Schiff's performances. Ivan Fischer's Budapest Festival Orchestra are on great form; woodwind solos are more characterful than on their last excursion into this repertoire (accompanying Kocsis between 1984 and 1987), brass choirs have immense force and the juggernaut big drums thrash thunder into the last movement of the Second Concerto.
The First Concerto suggests a sense of play that rivals Donohoe and Rattle, especially in the first movement - although I continue to prefer Donohoe's mesmerizing account of the Andante. The Third Concerto suits Schiff best of all: his tone is nicely rounded, his chords perfectly weighted and there's some nifty fingerwork (try from 506" into the finale). Again, one enjoys a mass of wellobserved instrumental detail - for example, the little clarinet counter-melody at 220" into the first movement and the evenly held bassoon pedal at 333".
Schiff habitually avoids any hint of percussiveness. He virtually sings these concertos, which makes for a near-ideal Third but, in the case of the Second, prompts something of an uneven confrontation. Schifrs contribution to the Second is consistently bright, nimble, even a little coquettish, while Fischer's response is brazen and athletic. The same might be said of the First Concerto, except that there the sound is so astonishingly lifelike that it virtually amounts to an aural drama on its own terms. As to rivals, my own personal favourites are Anda (elegant and muscular) and Kocsis (forceful and spontaneous), then Donohoe's propulsive First, Bernathova's airy Third and now Schiff's colourful account of the Third as compelling backups. RC Andras Schiff talks to Michael Quinn about his Hungarian heritage, and the influence that Bartak's playing has had on his own interpretations on page 14
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