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| Glazunov: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 2 | 
enlarge | Creators: Nikolai Artsybushev, Alexander Glazunov, Anatol Lyadov, Nikolai Rimsky-korsakov, Nikolay Alexandrovich Sokolov, Jazeps Vitols, Dmitry Yablonsky, Moscow State Symphony Orchestra, Oxana Yablonskaya Label: Naxos Category: Music
List Price: $8.99 Buy New: $6.53 You Save: $2.46 (27%)
Buy New/Used from $5.24
Avg. Customer Rating:   (2 reviews) Sales Rank: 140673
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 553928 UPC: 730099492829 EAN: 0730099492829 ASIN: B00004TQOR
Release Date: July 18, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| | Vars On A Russian Theme: Theme | | | Vars On A Russian Theme: Var I | | | Vars On A Russian Theme: Var II | | | Vars On A Russian Theme: Var III | | | Vars On A Russian Theme: Var IV | | | Vars On A Russian Theme: Var V | | | Vars On A Russian Theme: Var VI | | | Pno Con No.1 In F, Op.92: Allegro Moderato | | | Pno Con No.1 in f, Op.92: Theme & Vars: Tema Andante Tranquillo - Var I - Var II... | | | Pno Con No.2 in B/E, Op.100 |
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| Customer Reviews:
  Oxana Yablonskaya is Passion Itself November 5, 2006 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Glazunov's two piano concertos are given a stunning reading in this recording. Ms. Yablonskaya's playing is executed with what is obviously a deep love for Glazunov's music and a profound understanding of what it means to be Russian. There is a longing, a reserved melancholia, an impassioned spirit that Yablonskaya is able to elicit from the score that goes as much to her greatness as pianist as it does to Glazunov's wonderful musical abilities. This is an important recording.
Try it, you'll love it!
  Mellow Pianistic Slavicism October 28, 2000 14 out of 16 found this review helpful
This is the most peculiar disc so far in the Naxos survey of the orchestral music of Alexander Glazunov (1865-1936); but it is by no means without interest. It contains the two concerted works that the composer wrote for piano and orchestra as well as a curiosity (for orchestra alone) in which he had a hand. Let's start with the curiosity, the "Variations on a Russian Theme" (1901), in which no less than six composers took part, each contributing his own variation on the titular theme. Only two other names apart from Glazunov's mean anything to Western listeners: Rimsky-Korsakov's and Lyadov's (although I vaguely recall having heard of Jazeps Vitols). The theme is pleasant - so Russian indeed as to verge on parody - and the variations all manage to be lyrically genial and brilliantly orchestrated. (I especially dig the echo-effects in Vitols' variation, the second one after the presentation of the theme.) Glazunov's variation forms the Finale. In his concertos, oddly, Glazunov never achieved the spontaneity that he did in his ballets or symphonies. I might exempt from this judgment only the Concerto-Ballata for Cello and Orchestra and the very late Concerto for Saxophone and Strings. The two piano concertos illustrate the point. The Concerto No. 1 in F Minor (1910) has two movements, the last considerably longer than the first (13.25 as against 20.57). The First Movement, a sonata, unfolds in moderate tempi. The long Second Movement consists of eight variations, most of them fairly leisurely, on a theme that could be stronger (hence more memorable) in its outline. In a concert hall, people would start to shift in their seats. The advantage of having the work on CD is that you can halt the play-through where you want, run your errands, and take up listening again when you've come home with the groceries. The Concerto No. 2 in E Major (1917) conforms more to 19th century conventions, the model being the Lisztian type of one-movement solo-with-orchestra work. Oxana Yablonskaya plays the keyboard parts as though they were as serious as Rachmaninov. That's the spirit! Dmitry Yablonsky (Oxana's son) leads the Moscow Symphony with the same Moxy. Don't mind my reservations. It'll grow on you.
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