Saint-Saens: Complete Piano Concertos

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CAMILLE SAINT-SAENS
Saint-Saens: Complete Piano Concertos
Gabriel Tacchino (piano) / Orchestra of Radio Luxembourg, conducted by Louis de Froment.

[ Brilliant Classics / 2 CD Box Set ]

Release Date: Wednesday 20 August 2014

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

The reissue of one of the gems from the famous VOX catalogue: the complete Saint-Saëns Piano Concertos played by Gabriel Tacchino and the Orchestra of Radio Luxembourg, conducted by maitre Louis de Froment.

Saint Saëns' piano concertos are deservedly popular, especially number 2 and 4, but also no. 5 (with the famous African sound experiments) is played regularly nowadays, being an immensely enjoyable and attractive crowdpleaser.

All of them abound in good tunes, glittering virtuosity and a general sense of French charm, wit and drama (but never too much…).

Booklet contains the original liner notes.

Camille Saint-Saëns was a truly revered composer in mid19th and early 20thcentury France. A contributor to many genres and to the general French musical renaissance of this time, he was described as 'the greatest musical mind' of the era by Hans von Bülow, after he sight read the orchestral scores of Wagner's operas Lohengrin, Siegfried and Tristan und Isolde. Saint-Saëns' music was often bold and ambitious, but he was nevertheless a cautious composer who understood the importance of reputation in Paris at this time; his most successful work, The Carnival of the Animals, was not published until after his death, as he feared the effect it would have on his reputation as a serious composer.

This collection brings together all of Saint-Saëns' piano concertos, providing a chronological tour through much of his career: the period of composition spans from 1858 to 1896. Written just five years after the dazzling First Symphony, Concerto No.1 portrays a hint of wariness, displaying charm rather than overt bravura (the only exception being the virtuosic concluding cadenza). The perennial favourite Concerto No.2 is next, composed in just three weeks and with the ink barely dry on the page at the first performance. A highlight of No.3 is the second movement Nocturne, with its tender melody, while No.4 features hymn-like melodies and dazzling brass fanfares. No.5, the 'Egyptian', lives up to its name in its exotic, Arabian themes, with the hints of a bazaar audible in the splendid finale.