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Manhattan Intermezzo
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Barnes and Noble
Manhattan Intermezzo
Current price: $21.99
Barnes and Noble
Manhattan Intermezzo
Current price: $21.99
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Size: OS
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Here's a collection of four classical pieces for piano and orchestra linked to New York City, written by composers from the pop world, ranging from the extremely familiar (
Gershwin
's "Rhapsody in Blue") to the almost completely unknown (the title work, by none other than
Neil Sedaka
). First off comes the
, which is worth the price of admission by itself: it gets a distinctive performance from pianist
Jeffrey Biegel
, with plenty of jazz accents, and it is presented in an edition by scholar
Alicia Zizzo
that probably represents
's own intentions. The
Sedaka
work may be what you'd expect from the composer of "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"; its melodies are straightforward. "New World a-Comin'" is among the less often programmed of
Duke Ellington
's orchestral pieces, but from the vigorous performance heard here it's hard to see why it should have been neglected. The "Piano Concerto No. 1" of
Keith Emerson
, of the progressive rock group
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
, may be the nicest surprise of the four works. Those who listened to FM rock radio in the 1970s may well be able to identify the composer, but it incorporates many other influences besides that of
ELP
(there are even a few 12-tone passages), and it weaves them all together in an attractive score that is arguably the most sophisticated of any of the four works on the album. Worthy of special notice is the work of the
Brown University Symphony Orchestra
under
Paul Phillips
, one of the fine university ensembles that give the lie to perceptions that classical music is undersupported in the United States. Recommended. ~ James Manheim
Gershwin
's "Rhapsody in Blue") to the almost completely unknown (the title work, by none other than
Neil Sedaka
). First off comes the
, which is worth the price of admission by itself: it gets a distinctive performance from pianist
Jeffrey Biegel
, with plenty of jazz accents, and it is presented in an edition by scholar
Alicia Zizzo
that probably represents
's own intentions. The
Sedaka
work may be what you'd expect from the composer of "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"; its melodies are straightforward. "New World a-Comin'" is among the less often programmed of
Duke Ellington
's orchestral pieces, but from the vigorous performance heard here it's hard to see why it should have been neglected. The "Piano Concerto No. 1" of
Keith Emerson
, of the progressive rock group
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
, may be the nicest surprise of the four works. Those who listened to FM rock radio in the 1970s may well be able to identify the composer, but it incorporates many other influences besides that of
ELP
(there are even a few 12-tone passages), and it weaves them all together in an attractive score that is arguably the most sophisticated of any of the four works on the album. Worthy of special notice is the work of the
Brown University Symphony Orchestra
under
Paul Phillips
, one of the fine university ensembles that give the lie to perceptions that classical music is undersupported in the United States. Recommended. ~ James Manheim