Brahms: Piano Concerto No. 1 / Variations on a Theme by Paganini / Rhapsodies, Op. 79 (recorded 1929-32)

Brahms: Piano Concerto No. 1 / Variations on a Theme by Paganini / Rhapsodies, Op. 79 (recorded 1929-32) cover $25.00 Out of Stock
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JOHANNES BRAHMS
Brahms: Piano Concerto No. 1 / Variations on a Theme by Paganini / Rhapsodies, Op. 79 (recorded 1929-32)
Wilhelm Backhaus (piano) / BBC Symphony Orchstra / Adrian Boult, conductor

[ Naxos Historical Great Pianists / CD ]

Release Date: Thursday 7 August 2003

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Wilhelm Backhaus was born in Leipzig in 1884. A major pianist of the twentieth century, Backhaus was not a pupil of any of the major teachers of his time, and the only pianist of note who had any bearing on his development was Eugen d'Albert

, with whom Backhaus had some lessons in 1898 and 1899. Before going to d'Albert, Backhaus had studied the piano, from the age of ten, at the Leipzig Conservatory with Alois Reckendorf. Immediately after his time with d'Albert, Backhaus toured England as a substitute for an indisposed Alexander Siloti, the following year making his début at the Proms. In 1905 he won the prestigious Anton Rubinstein prize of 5000 Francs in Paris. He first visited America in 1912 but spent most of his time in Europe, taking Swiss citizenship in 1931. When he returned to America in 1954 it was with a successful series of Beethoven sonatas at Carnegie Hall. Backhaus was a recording pioneer, making the first ever recording of a piano concerto in 1909 (an abridged version of the Grieg), and the first complete recording of Chopin's Etudes Opp. 10 and 25. He recorded throughout his life remaking on LP many recordings he had made on 78rpm discs. At the time of his death he was recording, for the second time, the complete Beethoven sonatas. He continued to appear before the public into his eighties and died in 1969.

As a young man Backhaus was a firebrand virtuoso with an incredible technique, yet early in his performing career he programmed works such as Beethoven's Piano Sonata Op.111, and later played Bach's Goldberg Variations, but it was with Beethoven and Brahms that he became most associated. After his initial recordings for HMV before the First World War, Backhaus recorded for Polydor in Berlin in 1916, a highlight from these sessions being a truncated version of one of his specialities, the Variations on a Theme of Paganini by Brahms, a work he had played at his London début in 1901. After resuming his association with HMV after the First World War, Backhaus recorded a complete version of the Variations in 1925. This was right at the end of the acoustic era, and after the introduction of the sonically superior electrical recording process, Backhaus again recorded the work in November 1929. It still remains one of the classic performances of this technically challenging work, and it should be remembered that it was recorded in the days before tape editing became the norm. The authority and conviction Backhaus brings to this score, one he had been playing all his life and an obvious favourite, is evident in the security of his technique and interpretation. Although the technical feats are breath-taking in their facility, Backhaus never plays for effect and makes musical sense of everything, even though he had to contend with a Bechstein 'baby grand' piano for the recording session. Backhaus was very busy in the recording studio in September and October 1929 attempting to record Beethoven's Fourth Piano Concerto (which was not completed until the following March), and the Waldstein and Pathétique Sonatas. Another title he attempted to record at this time was his own arrangement for solo piano of the Romanza from Chopin's Piano Concerto No. 1. He tried recording it at least five times, but unfortunately, a recording of this work was never released.

Backhaus was in England in November and December 1932 where he gave a recital of popular sonatas at the Queen's Hall with the violinist Mischa Elman. A newspaper reviewer was in the fortunate position of being able to compare the performances of the sonatas by Franck, Brahms and Beethoven with those he had heard previously by another duo, Ysaÿe and Busoni. A week later Backhaus gave a solo recital at Grotrian Hall of early Beethoven works and Brahms's Variations on a Theme of Paganini. During the ensuing week Backhaus went to HMV's Abbey Road Studios to record the First Piano Concerto by Brahms with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Adrian Boult. Two sessions were needed on consecutive days to record this large work, but the recording was a straightforward affair with few sides needing to be repeated. Boult and the BBC Symphony Orchestra match Backhaus's virility and drive in the outer movements giving excellent rhythmic support. In this new transfer, the quality of Backhaus's tone on the Bechstein piano he used for the recording can be savoured in the Adagio. Backhaus recorded much of his repertoire again in the LP era, but after the Second World War his playing took on a less heroic, more serious aspect, and the recording of the same concerto with the Vienna Philharmonic and Karl Böhm made for Decca in 1953 does not have the same vitality of this earlier recording; after all, this is a young man's concerto written when Brahms was in his twenties.

The two Rhapsodies come from a series of solo sessions Backhaus made in December 1932. The following year, 1933, was to be the centenary of Brahms's birth, and during the previous December Backhaus recorded many of the short piano solos from Op. 118 and Op. 76 as well as these heard here from Op. 79.

Backhaus's performances had a conviction and integrity about them, and in 1928, a few years before these recordings were made, he was described as resembling 'no one more than the great Anton Rubinstein in the reverent attitude he brings to bear on all aspects of his art and he belongs to that select minority of great virtuosi who interpret the great masters with religious enthusiasm and unswerving fidelity to the spirit of their music.'
© Jonathan Summers

Tracks:

Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor, Op. 15
Variations on a Theme by Paganini, Op. 35
Rhapsody in B minor, Op. 79, No. 1
Rhapsody in G minor, Op. 79, No. 2