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Rautavaara, Martinu: Piano Concertos No. 3
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Rautavaara, Martinu: Piano Concertos No. 3
Current price: $23.99
Barnes and Noble
Rautavaara, Martinu: Piano Concertos No. 3
Current price: $23.99
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The program on this
BIS
release is a fresh one, and the album's success on sales charts attests to its attraction. The music of
Einojuhani Rautavaara
is almost always described in Scandinavian terms, with whatever Nordic landscape terms may spring to mind for the writer, but that is just one strand of his style. He might be thought to have little in common with
Bohuslav Martinu
, who wasn't Scandinavian at all, but pianist
Olli Mustonen
deftly shows their kinship. What is best about them is that neither can be classified according to the "-isms" that have so bedeviled listeners when it comes to 20th century music. The styles of both draw on and resynthesize discoveries of the past. Especially notable here is the
Piano Concerto No. 3
of
Martinu
, which is less popular than his first two. Much of it is Brahmsian, but the rhythmic pulsations of
Stravinsky
are never far away, and there is nothing nostalgic about it. The combination coheres in a finale that is as infectious as anything else of the postwar period when it was written, and the work will be new to many listeners.
is also an underestimated influence on
Rautavaara
, whose dry planes of sound would otherwise not sound as vivid as they do.
Mustonen
and the
Lahti Symphony Orchestra
, under conductor
Dalia Stasevska
, handle everything cleanly, and the
finale is a real joy.
' sound from Sibelius Hall in Lahti is superb. This release made classical best-seller charts in the summer of 2023. ~ James Manheim
BIS
release is a fresh one, and the album's success on sales charts attests to its attraction. The music of
Einojuhani Rautavaara
is almost always described in Scandinavian terms, with whatever Nordic landscape terms may spring to mind for the writer, but that is just one strand of his style. He might be thought to have little in common with
Bohuslav Martinu
, who wasn't Scandinavian at all, but pianist
Olli Mustonen
deftly shows their kinship. What is best about them is that neither can be classified according to the "-isms" that have so bedeviled listeners when it comes to 20th century music. The styles of both draw on and resynthesize discoveries of the past. Especially notable here is the
Piano Concerto No. 3
of
Martinu
, which is less popular than his first two. Much of it is Brahmsian, but the rhythmic pulsations of
Stravinsky
are never far away, and there is nothing nostalgic about it. The combination coheres in a finale that is as infectious as anything else of the postwar period when it was written, and the work will be new to many listeners.
is also an underestimated influence on
Rautavaara
, whose dry planes of sound would otherwise not sound as vivid as they do.
Mustonen
and the
Lahti Symphony Orchestra
, under conductor
Dalia Stasevska
, handle everything cleanly, and the
finale is a real joy.
' sound from Sibelius Hall in Lahti is superb. This release made classical best-seller charts in the summer of 2023. ~ James Manheim