Steven Osborne, Martyn Brabbins - Michael Tippett: Piano Concerto, Piano Sonatas (2007)

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Artist:
Title: Michael Tippett: Piano Concerto, Piano Sonatas
Year Of Release: 2007
Label: Hyperion
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,booklet)
Total Time: 02:20:46
Total Size: 459 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

CD 1:
Piano Concerto
1. I. Allegro non troppo
2. II. Molto lento e tranquillo
3. III. Vivace
4. Fantasia on a theme of Handel
Piano Sonata No.1
5. I. Allegro
6. II. Andante tranquillo
7. III. Presto
8. IV. Rondo giocoso con moto

CD 2:
1. Piano Sonata No.2
Piano Sonata No.3
2. I. Allegro
3. II. Lento
4. III. Allegro energico
Piano Sonata No.4
5. Movement I
6. Movement II
7. Movement III
8. Movement IV
9. Movement V

Performers:
Steven Osborne, piano
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Martyn Brabbins

What the world needs more of is intelligently planned, stupendously played, and brilliantly recorded collections like this one. These two discs contain all the piano works of Michael Tippett, works that come from every period of the composer's very long life except his very last. It includes the youthful, tuneful Piano Sonata No. 1 written between 1936 and 1938 and revised in 1941, the massive Fantasia on a Theme of Handel from 1941, the exuberant Piano Concerto from 1955, the experimental Piano Sonata No. 2, the gnomic almost Beethovenian Piano Sonata No. 3 from 1973, and the gnarly post-Beethovenian Piano Sonata No. 4. It features a bravura performance by pianist Steven Osborne that makes the best case for all the music, no matter how outré or recherché its harmonic proclivities or rhythmic audacities. Osborne has the emotional enthusiasm, intellectual clarity, physical strength, and sheer willpower to make listeners believe that Tippett is a major English composer and make them wonder why they ever doubted it. With the superlative accompaniment of the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Martyn Brabbins in the Concerto and the Fantasia and the sparkling recording by Andrew Keener for Hyperion, this disc marks a major step forward in the Tippett discography.