Tippett Britten & Walton Express Delivery
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DISC: 1
| 1. Sinfonia Concertante for Orchestra with Piano Obbligato~I. Maestoso |
| 2. Sinfonia Concertante for Orchestra with Piano Obbligato~II. Andante comodo |
| 3. Sinfonia Concertante for Orchestra with Piano Obbligato~III. Allegro vivo, sempre scherzando |
| 4. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Theme |
| 5. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation I. Recitative |
| 6. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation II. Romance |
| 7. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation III. March |
| 8. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation IV. Arabesque |
| 9. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation V. Chant |
| 10. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation VI. Nocturne |
| 11. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation VII. Badinerie |
| 12. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation VIII. Burlesque |
| 13. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation IXa. Toccata I |
| 14. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation IXb. Toccata II |
| 15. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Variation X. Adagio |
| 16. Diversions, Op. 21 for piano (left hand) and orchestra~Finale (Variation XI). Tarantella |
| 17. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra~I. Allegro non troppo |
| 18. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra~Il. Molto lento e tranquillo |
| 19. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra~III. Vivace |
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Three major works for piano and orchestra by English composers, all eschewing the traditional nineteenth-century model of a bravura virtuoso soloist pitted against an orchestra, in distinctive ways. Together with the BBC Symphony Orchestra under George Vass, Clare Hammond presents an original programme that provides a unique perspective on how the piano concerto reflected musical currents in mid-twentieth-century Britain.William Walton’s Sinfonia Concertante for Orchestra with Piano Obbligato began as a ballet score. After it was rejected by Sergei Diaghilev, Walton arranged his scoreinto a leaner, more direct and more effective work thatreveals the influences of Stravinsky, Poulenc, Rimsky-Korsakov, Borodin and, at times, Elgar. Benjamin Britten’s Diversions was commissioned by the left-hand pianist Paul Wittgenstein. Enthusiastic about the challenge of writing for the left hand, Britten devised a work in variation form; he did not seek to conceal the soloist’s one-handedness, but revelled in it while still retaining emotion and grandeur. Michael Tippett’s Piano Concerto completes the programme. Inspired by a performance of Beethoven’s Fourth Concerto, Tippett was convinced that a contemporary concerto could be written, ‘in which the piano is used once again for it’s poetic capabilities’. In his work, the orchestra does not merely accompany; the principal players shine when they get their opportunity for solos or close dialogue with the soloist.





