Beethoven: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 2 / Subdin, Vanska, Tapiola Sinfonietta
On two previous albums, Yevgeny Sudbin and Osmo VĂ€nskĂ€ have released Beethovenâs three last piano concertos to critical acclaim. Distinctions include Editorâs Choice in Gramophone and top marks from the Italian magazine Musica and the German website Klassik-Heute.de, and performances have been described as âelectrifyingâ (classicfm.com), âabsolutely stunningâ (Fanfare) and âa Beethoven experience you will not want to missâ (ClassicsToday.com). For the final release in their cycle, Sudbin and VĂ€nskĂ€ have travelled to Helsinki to team up with Tapiola Sinfonietta, one of the top Nordic ensembles, and well suited for these earlier and more classical of Beethovenâs concertos. Of the two, the one we now know as the Second was actually begun several years before Concerto No. 1, and indeed even before Beethoven left Bonn for Vienna. During the following decade, Beethoven returned to the score repeatedly and made substantial revisions â including composing a new final movement â and ultimately the C major concerto reached publication first. Both concertos were conceived long before Beethoven's involvement with the symphonic genre, and the influence of Mozart and Haydn is evident in the interaction between the orchestra and the soloist â but Beethoven's individual spirit is nevertheless unmistakeable.
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Beethoven: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 2 / Subdin, Vanska, Tapiola Sinfonietta
Beethoven: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 2 / Subdin, Vanska, Tapiola Sinfonietta
On two previous albums, Yevgeny Sudbin and Osmo VĂ€nskĂ€ have released Beethovenâs three last piano concertos to critical acclaim. Distinctions include Editorâs Choice in Gramophone and top marks from the Italian magazine Musica and the German website Klassik-Heute.de, and performances have been described as âelectrifyingâ (classicfm.com), âabsolutely stunningâ (Fanfare) and âa Beethoven experience you will not want to missâ (ClassicsToday.com). For the final release in their cycle, Sudbin and VĂ€nskĂ€ have travelled to Helsinki to team up with Tapiola Sinfonietta, one of the top Nordic ensembles, and well suited for these earlier and more classical of Beethovenâs concertos. Of the two, the one we now know as the Second was actually begun several years before Concerto No. 1, and indeed even before Beethoven left Bonn for Vienna. During the following decade, Beethoven returned to the score repeatedly and made substantial revisions â including composing a new final movement â and ultimately the C major concerto reached publication first. Both concertos were conceived long before Beethoven's involvement with the symphonic genre, and the influence of Mozart and Haydn is evident in the interaction between the orchestra and the soloist â but Beethoven's individual spirit is nevertheless unmistakeable.
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On two previous albums, Yevgeny Sudbin and Osmo VĂ€nskĂ€ have released Beethovenâs three last piano concertos to critical acclaim. Distinctions include Editorâs Choice in Gramophone and top marks from the Italian magazine Musica and the German website Klassik-Heute.de, and performances have been described as âelectrifyingâ (classicfm.com), âabsolutely stunningâ (Fanfare) and âa Beethoven experience you will not want to missâ (ClassicsToday.com). For the final release in their cycle, Sudbin and VĂ€nskĂ€ have travelled to Helsinki to team up with Tapiola Sinfonietta, one of the top Nordic ensembles, and well suited for these earlier and more classical of Beethovenâs concertos. Of the two, the one we now know as the Second was actually begun several years before Concerto No. 1, and indeed even before Beethoven left Bonn for Vienna. During the following decade, Beethoven returned to the score repeatedly and made substantial revisions â including composing a new final movement â and ultimately the C major concerto reached publication first. Both concertos were conceived long before Beethoven's involvement with the symphonic genre, and the influence of Mozart and Haydn is evident in the interaction between the orchestra and the soloist â but Beethoven's individual spirit is nevertheless unmistakeable.