2022年6月13日月曜日

Prokofieff: Concerto no. 3 / MacDowell: Concerto no. 2 by Prokofieff; Edward MacDowell; Van Cliburn; Chicago Symphony Orchestra; Walter Hendl; MacDowell RCA Victor Red Seal (LSC-2507) Publication date 1961

 Prokofieff Concerto No. 3  

MacDowell Concerto No. 2  


Chicago Symphony Orchestra  
pe . Walter Hendl conducting  


IViING STEREO  


RCA VICTOR  


RED SEAL  


not the Prokofieff Third Piano Concerto to be per-  
formed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra seems  
particularly appropriate, since it was this orchestra which  
presented the world premiére of the work in. 1921.  

Prokofieff, after studying with Rimsky-Korsakoff, Liadoff  
and T’cherepnin at the St. Petersburg conservatory, had  
graduated there in 1914 with three diplomas and the Anton  
Rubinstein Prize in piano. His music for a ballet, Chout,  
commissioned by Diaghileff established him as a young com-  
poser of promise.  

Immediately following World War I and the Russian  
Revolution, Prokofieff barnstormed about Europe as a con-  
cert pianist and eventually made his way to the United  
States.  

New York, then as always bursting at the seams with  
musical talent, was not overly impressed by the young  
Russian visitor. Chicago proved more hospitable, and for  
several years Prokofieff made that city his base of opera-  
tions in this country. His opera The Love of Three Oranges  
was commissioned and first performed by the Chicago  
Opera Company.  

During his industrious lifetime Prokofieff wrote eight  
concertos—one for cello, two for violin and five for piano,  
one of the latter for left hand alone. By the time he arrived  
in Chicago, the first and second piano concertos were already  
written.  

Prokofieff, then at the peak of his powers as a concert  
performer, received numerous invitations to appear with  
orchestras. He was a little tired of his two concertos, and  
feared audiences might be too. Moreover, he had been  
accumulating fresh ideas for years. The musical subject  
which became the principal theme of the second movement  
of the C Major Concerto had been in the back of his mind  
since 1913 when he was still a student at the conservatory.  

In the summer of 1921 Prokofieff, then in France, set to  
work in earnest on the Third Concerto, finishing it that  
October. The world premiére took place December 16,  
1921, with the composer as soloist and Frederick Stock  
conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.  

‘The concerto has never really been out of the repertoire  
since. It is a bold, sweeping work which achieves exactly  

Prokofieff  


CONCERTO NO. 3 IN C, OP. 26  


MacDowell  


CONCERTO NO. 2 IN D MINOR, OP. 23  


Chicago Symphony Orchestra + Walter Hendl, conducting  
Produced by Richard Mohr ¢ Recording Engineer: Lewis Layton  


what the composer set out to do—to write an effective dis-  
play piece for piano and orchestra. The first and last move-  
ments afford ample opportunity for bravura display, and  
the beauties of the Theme and Variations second movement  
have charmed listeners in many countries. Stylistically, the  
‘Third Concerto resembles its near predecessor, the “Clas-  
sical” Symphony, more than Prokofieff’s later works.  


The second of Edward MacDowell’s two piano con-  
certos is one of the most praised and most popular of his  
compositions.  

After study with the famed Venezuelan pianist ‘Teresa  
Carrefio and further training in Paris, MacDowell spent  
eight years in Germany, then the musical center of western  
Europe. His D Minor Concerto has the virtues of this  
school of musical thought. It is a big, bold, solidly-wrought  
work, imaginatively conceived on a large scale and  
unashamedly romantic. It is effective in performance;  
MacDowell, like Prokofieff, was aconcert artist who under-  
stood pianistically quite well what he was about. The con-  
certo is still heard, and perhaps deserves to be heard even  
oftener.  

MacDowell wrote the concerto in Germany during the  
winter of 1884-85. It was a remarkable accomplishment for  
this twenty-four-year-old American composer. The first  
performance was given in New York on March 5, 1889, by  
the Theodore Thomas Orchestra with the composer at the  


piano. Notes by JoHN Briccs  


Not since the Civil War days of Louis Moreau Gott-  
schalk has an American pianist attained a world-wide  
reputation comparable to that of Van Cliburn. In his fourth  
recording for RCA Victor this distinguished young artist  
has chosen two concertos that are identified with his career.  
In 1952, at the age of seventeen, as the winner of the G. B.  
Dealey Memorial Prize in Dallas, Mr. Cliburn played the  
MacDowell concerto with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra  
under Walter Hendl, then permanent conductor of the  
orchestra. It marked the pianist’s first professional appear-  
ance with orchestra. The Prokofieff and MacDowell con-  


certos were two of six works with orchestra which the  
pianist played in Russia during his overwhelmingly success-  
ful three-month tour of the Soviet Union in the summer  
of 1960.  

Walter Hendl was for six years permanent conductor of  
the Dallas Symphony Orchestra following a four-year  
tenure as associate conductor of the New York Philhar-  
monic. In 1958 he accepted the invitation of Fritz Reiner,  
musical director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, to  
become associate conductor of the magnificent orchestra  
Reiner has developed. Former director of the Chautauqua  
summer festival concerts, Mr. Hendl now serves as artistic  
director of Chicago’s Ravinia Festival. In 1955 Mr. Hendl  
conducted the Symphony of the Air during its tour of the  
Far East under the auspices of the State Department.  


© by Radio Corporation of America, 1961  


Other Recordings by VAN CLIBURN  
You Will Enjoy:  


Tchaikovsky: Concerto No. 1  
(Orchestra conducted by Kiril Kondrashin)  
LM/LSC-2252  


Rachmaninoff : Concerto No. 3  
(Symphony of the Air, Kiril Kondrashin conducting)  
LM/LSC-2355  


Schumann: Concerto in A Minor  
(Fritz Reiner and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra)  
LM/LSC-2455  


MIRACLE SURFACE  


This record contains the revolutionary new antistatic  
ingredient, 317X, which helps keep the record dust free, helps  
prevent surface noise, helps insure faithful sound reproduction.  


IMPORTANT NOTICE  


This is a TRUE STEREOPHONIC RECORD specif-  
ically designed to be played only on phonographs equipped  
for stereophonic reproduction.  


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