Paderewski, Piano Concerto in A minor, Op.17 - PolArt2015
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- Опубліковано 14 жов 2024
- Piano Concerto in A minor, Op.17 - Ignacy Jan Paderewski
1. Allegro
2. Romanza: Andante 17:25
3. Allegro molto vivace 27:15
Zelman Memorial Symphony Orchestra (ZMSO, Melbourne)
conducted by Mark Shiell
Konrad Olszewski - piano
13th National Polish Arts Festival - PolArt2015
polart2015.com.au/
A classical concert celebrating Ignacy Jan Paderewski
2 January 2016
Melbourne Town Hall
A concert dedicated to Polish pianist and composer, Ignacy Jan Paderewski on the 111th anniversary of his first recital in Australia. On the night, excerpts of his 1904 performance has been mirrored for the first time one the same Melbourne Town Hall stage.
Zelman Memorial Symphony Orchestra
( performers from both concerts: 2 Jan - Paderewski, Melbourne Town Hall and 3rd Jan - Chopin, Hamer Hall )
Violin I
Adam Piechociński - concertmaster
Daisy Wong
Amelie Neate
Janusz Nowakowski
Milena Kowalski
Stephanie Medrzycki
Eric Adams
Gyula Cseszko
Maxim Sheko
Jessie Regan
Robert Wakely
Mary Haitidis
Violin II
Alyssa Kennedy
Yvonne Kushnir
Pamela Fewster
Kate Marshall
Paulina Michalak
Eric McGee
Tom Pepprell
Viola
Rosia Pasteur
George Deutsch
Daniel Kirkham
Zdzisław Kowalik
Ela Stęplewska
Holly Hayes
Tudor Bostock
Violoncello
James Abougelis
Ella Duke
Sarah Fitchett
Christine Mack
Elizabeth Radcliffe
Adrianna Krysta
Julia Cianci
d'Artagan Skendzic
Double Bass
Pedro Fuentes
Mary Macmillan
Trevor Irwin
Nicholas Ayres-Wearne
Woodwind
Carol Galea - flute
David Rowlands - flute
Sam Cooke - flute/piccolo
Fliss Hardiman - oboe
Laura Schultze - oboe
Vanessa George - clarinet
Barbara Radcliffe - clarinet
Greg Hannan - bassoon
Shane Simpson - bassoon
French Horn
Jo Spencer
Ryan Cooke
Melissa Banks
Lauren Davine
Brass
Claire Ferguson - trumpet
Rachael Bean - trumpet
Paul Lam - trombone
Kit Millais - trombone
Hugh McKelvey - trombone
Tympani & Percussion
Christine Flood
Conductor
Mark Shiell
I like Chopin. I love Poland!
And this is Paderewski 🙂
Bravo! Bravissimo! And what an incredible componist, human and politician
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ignacy_Jan_Paderewski
There is much to admire in this concerto. It's pianistic and wonderfully lyrical. Thanks so much for posting.
Tan bello es ese Concierto de Paderewsky que aún con errores en la ejecución no deja de ser bello
This is wonderful
Excellent
Excellent !
Bravo brilliance concerto
Mindblowing outstanding !!!!!!
absolutnie przepięknie
超絶技巧を求めていないがスクリャービンのピアノ協奏曲みたいに心地良く心揺さぶらせてくれる名曲だ。
Wonderfully exuberant and communicative: an astonishingly brilliant performance. Thank you so much for sharing.
Bellísima interpretación del concierto en la menor de Paderewsky. Deslumbrante.
Great!
So amazingly similar in my ways to MacDowell.
This is quite a beautiful concerto. Thank you for sharing it.
Yes . Big thanks . It a nice tribute to a very famous pianist .
I wonder what group this is. Around 24:25, horrible intonation in the violins. But the pianist is spot-on. Love this concerto!
I'm hardly a musician (only just taken up the violin) but even I picked up on that via my headphones while distracted with some computer work... A real 'eurgghh' moment. Otherwise a lovely piece. Listening to it again after hearing it on Classic FM this evening...
Magnífico!!!!!
I must study it;)
I think it's great:)
Sadly, extra beautiful romanza was played out of tune in most important phrases and with missed notes in orchestra part... It's a pity, we don't have many recordings of this Paderewski amazing concerto and we almost don't have good recordings of this piece...
Good for posterity
There is an excellent recording by Piers Lane and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra under Jerzy Maksymiuk on the Hyperion label. The coupling is Moszkowski's E major Concerto.
Wonderful
I think everyone did a good job too .
Indeed . Wish I was there to hear it live .
💖💖👏
Hay muy poca música de Paderewki. Pongan más 🇮🇷🆗❤️
Wonder 🎶🎵🎼🎶🎵
bravo!
Never performed in the Netherlands in the Concertgebouw.I guess. Poor public to applaud in between the movements!!
I'd always prefer too much applause to too little. Chill out.
@@bomcabedal the main idea is that applause between movements might bring unnecessary chaos to the soloist and the orchestra alike you need to be focused 100% otherwise you might make a mistake or have a memory slip
@@mateuszkozieja7537 It was quite common before 1900 though. Probably more to do with the establishment of classical music as "High Culture".
@@bomcabedal yes most likely because of that establishmemt. Performers got used to no disturbance and l agree that performance should be more open to contact with the audience
@@mateuszkozieja7537 That's a very good point: a new consensus creates its own "normal". The issue is that current concert practice creates an almost sacred atmosphere around the performance, which increases distance with the audience. This may work sometimes, but it also makes classical music as a whole rather impenetrable to casual listeners. In the end, it's just an unnecessary threshold. And unfortunately, one upheld by a horde of gatekeepers.
The pianist is good but the orchestra is poor. Paderewski's glorious concerto deserves better. Poor camerawork.
... not to mention the bloody applause between the movements.
Oups ... à 24:40 et suivantes, l'orchestre dérape .. dommage, un si beau concerto
That part sounds even funny, which is sad
I wonder which piano concerto is given the fewest performances?
The concertos never performed!!
@@MichaelConwayBaker Please name them.
es el padre wiski dijo el chavo
It's lovely, but somehow it doesn't stick in the mind. And it has to be said that the orchestra is not the most refined in the world. Wonderful pianism, though - and I for one would rather see his face than his hands (and I'm a pianist). Thanks for posting.
Poor camerawork indeed.First time i hear this concerto on You Tube! Never performed in the Concertgebouw Amsterdam I guess! Who can help me if ever so and in between the movements applause. Unheard in the Netherlands.
Utwór wyjątkowy. Niestety solista i orkiestra zaliczyła całą masę wpadek.
I think this was a fake performance. The pianist didn't actually play the piano but there were two speakers at his feet which were playing the music...............at least that's what I came away with due to the very poor job done by the videographer. What a shame that a great performance by Machnacki wasn't seen playing the keyboard throughout most of the performance. What was the video people thinking? I saw more of the other instruments being played than I did of the hands playing the keyboard. The pianist was the star performer at this concert and unfortunately he was not highlighted. This type of video coverage is becoming more the norm in these days as the videographers seem to want to put on their show and the artist's performance becomes secondary. When I go to a concert I want to see the hands play the piano. This I did not see in this performance.
Absolutely agreed. This whole video is an elaborately stitched together digital farce. The string players are clearly faking it too, as well as the pianist. It is very suspicious that the fingers of the pianist is barely seen. Actually, it is rumoured Kondad Olszewski only has 6 fingers making this nigh on impossible to play. Moreover, upon closer inspection it is clear that the conductor is actually holding a chopstick making his timing and credibility as a musician extremely questionable.
Did you not see the hammers and strings moving inside the piano? There were no hidden speakers! I agree that this was badly videoed, but if you took the trouble to check, you would see that this was an amateur performance by a community orchestra who did a sterling job with a very difficult piece. I think it's a shame that you feel the need to be derogatory - perhaps you're a thwarted wannabe pianist?
The movement of the hammers hitting the strings could have been a result of a player piano. My comment was in humor but I was making a point. You missed that part. This was not derogatory but a message to the novice videographer who filmed this great performance. People attend these kinds of events to see the artist play the keyboard, plain and simple. Otherwise we might as well just listen to the audio recording. To me this was not being respectful to the pianist.
First of all, the soloist of this concert is Konrad Olszewski not Machnacki !!! Konrad is an Australian pianist of the Polish descent. Secondly, the recording is not professional and has only to commemorate the event of the Polish festival in Australia, PolArt2015. The concert was organized on the 111th Anniversary of Paderewski's performance exactly on the same stage, Melbourne Town Hall. The concert program was much broader. In the first part, Paderewski's repertoire from 1904 was repeated in part. The pianist was accompanied by Zelman Symphony Orchestra conducted by Mark Shiell, as in the description. In my opinion, it is not necessary to see the pianist's hands to hear but we will fix this inconvenience in the next recording. Paderewski's concert will be repeated soon. June 1, 2018 Sydney Town Hall. You're welcome!
As I stated previously my comments were said in jest. Maybe I should have been more straightforward and said what I really think. My point is that when a viewer watches any venue be it sports, music, plays, etc. when there is a key performer we want to see the performer's abilities. I don't want to view a soccer game where all I see is the player's head bobbing up and down. I don't want to watch a band play where the camera is never focused on important solos by the various instruments. Imagine viewing a band where a drummer does a solo and all we are shown is his head moving up or down. What I've seen lately and this has been true for many classical piano competitions is that the videographer wants to put on their own show and not focus on what the audience wants. Check out the last Cliburn competition and you will plainly see what I mean. Prime seating in any concert hall is on the "keyboard side" and for a reason which is the audience wants to see the pianist playing the piano and NOT from a dozen or so different angles. Just show us the pianist playing. Very simple. Otherwise do an MP3/MP4 audio recording so we just listen to the music. That's basically what we saw in this video which to me was an insult to the pianist.
Very musical and pleasing, unlike his bombastic and ugly B minor Symphony.
ew
Orchestra in the final part is absolutely out of tune and out of tempo...