Minnesota Orchestra
Osmo Vänskä, conductor
Stephen Hough, soloist
October 3, 2009
Program:
[Wagner Siegfried Idyll- available but not in this post]
Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 1
including Siloti's de-arrangement of the slow movement as an encore
[Bartok The Miraculous Mandarin- unrecorded]
Hyperion Records (UK) http://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/dc.asp?dc=D_CDA67711/2&vw=dc
will offer this recording (mixed in, I imagine, with a few other nights' efforts) officially as a CD in March, but this is a sneak peek in decidedly inferior sound. Huge fun.
Yes, I still love the warhorses. So what. I can enjoy the weirdo, off beaten pathway modern composers deeply, but you've got to get silly and wave your arms around to a tried-and-true stonker every so often as well. Here is the Tchaikovsky First, and if it is your first version of it, you are in for it.
There's a small leap in the sound continuity right in the beginning, but none of it can detract from the happening captured here.
I admit to being an impatient listener to yet another new Tchaikovsky First, usually going straight to the Third Movement's hustle and sprint to see what the pairing of orchestra and soloist is up to by then. No disappointments at all there, and the whole affair holds more delights, even upon repeated listening- what more to ask?
The take is a rip-snort, plunge-taking, ace-at-the-controls barnstorm that brings to mind the epic 1940 Carnegie Hall battle between the young Horowitz and Barbirolli, abetted by a whipsmart New York Philharmonic in that instance.
Though more controlled and cooperative here, the give and take of the Minnesotans and Hough is something I can't wait to hear in high quality sound on official release!
enjoy, best heard at unconscionable volume and with a generous nature towards lo-fi...