PianoSupplies.com (a division of Piano World) Piano & music accessories, music theme decoratons, tuning & repair tools, moving equipment, party goods,music gift items, ... more
Free shipping on Jansen Artist Benches.
|
|
64887 Members
40 Forums
132541 Topics
1894206 Posts
Max Online: 15252 @ 03/21/10 11:39 PM
|
|
|
#1310621 - 11/22/09 08:24 PM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: SlatterFan]
|
Full Member
Registered: 10/05/09
Posts: 281
|
The orchestration of Albeniz' El Peurto from Iberia is probably better than the version for piano. Balakirev and Glazunov have orchestrated some of the piano works of Chopin to great effect.
_________________________
You play it & I'll hum it, but currently rehearsing:
Bach WTC book 2 no 15 G major, no 20 A minor, no 22 Bb Minor Mozart A minor Sonata K310 Mendelssohn Op 35 preludes and fuges Busoni Carmen Fantasy Rachmaninov Bb prelude OP 23 no 2 Lyapunov Humoreske Op 34 and others
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1310757 - 11/23/09 01:39 AM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: Andromaque]
|
5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/23/07
Posts: 5429
|
I think the whole thing was orchestrated for a Diaghilev ballet, with various sections done by Glazunov, Rimsky-K, Liadov, and A. Tcherepnin.
Interesting. Is there a recording? Thanks. There's an old Ansermet recording with the Suisse Romande Orchestra on Decca. It's been reissued as part of a 6 CD set, but I think it may also be found on Australian Eloquence as a single. A few other fairly obscure orchestrations people may find it interesting to know exist - Felix Weingartner did one of the Hammerklavier, Percy Grainger did a wonderful one of Ravel's La vallée des cloches, Jean Francaix did the Chopin Preludes (ssshh!! don't tell Bruce  ), and Edmund Rubbra did one of Brahms' Handel Variantions.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1310760 - 11/23/09 01:54 AM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: Frozenicicles]
|
5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/23/07
Posts: 5429
|
In terms of orchestral transcriptions, I haven't heard very many besides Pictures. Orchestration really highlights the majestic quality in the Great Gate of Kiev. I'm not sure people realize there are other orchestrations of Pictures besides the ubiquitous one by Ravel. Leonard Slatkin has made something of a speciality of putting together performances of Pictures that sample from various orchestrations, and this recording is an example of it. The review at that site gives some specifics about each section. Also, I highly recommend that people who really love the music hear the complete Stokowski orchestration - it's a knock-out.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1310948 - 11/23/09 01:04 PM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: Andromaque]
|
500 Post Club Member
Registered: 03/07/08
Posts: 589
Loc: Los Angeles
|
I think the whole thing was orchestrated for a Diaghilev ballet, with various sections done by Glazunov, Rimsky-K, Liadov, and A. Tcherepnin.
Interesting. Is there a recording? Thanks. If you can stomach it, this is kind of funny: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=np4jmFNX5Mw
_________________________
Bach - WTC I in C major & C minor (BWV 846-847) Mozart - Sonata K 282 Chopin - Polonaises Op 26 Schumann - Fantasiestücke Op 12
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1311205 - 11/23/09 09:19 PM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: Andromaque]
|
Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/29/01
Posts: 14710
Loc: New York City
|
It sounds so.. banal..magic-free. But for me it's at least partly because I am so used to the piano version. I find it impossible to answer the question "would I like it more if I had never heard the original?"
Edited by pianoloverus (11/23/09 09:21 PM)
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1311253 - 11/23/09 10:19 PM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: pianoloverus]
|
Full Member
Registered: 05/25/09
Posts: 294
Loc: Hacienda Heights, CA
|
Has anyone mentioned Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2? It seems to be much better suited to orchestra than for piano!
_________________________
"Nie Dam Sie!"
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1311263 - 11/23/09 10:43 PM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: pianoloverus]
|
6000 Post Club Member
Registered: 08/15/06
Posts: 6163
Loc: Briarcliff Manor, NY, USA
|
Even if piano solos orchestrated for piano and orchestra aren't the focus of this thread, Kazimierz Wilkomirski's treatment of Chopin's Allegro de Concert is wonderfully realized and deserves a mention anyway. Unfortunately, the only recording of it that I'm aware of—by Michael Ponti and the Berlin Symphony Orchestra on Volume 1 of Vox's "The Romantic Piano Concerto" series—has gone out of print in CD form, though it's still downloadable at Amazon.com.
Considering how little interest there is in the Allegro in its original form, it's unsurprising that its rendering as a concerto movement remains thoroughly under the radar.
Steven
_________________________
 "There are two means of refuge from the miseries of life: music and cats." —Albert Schweitzer
Chopin: Allegro de Concert Op. 46 Schumann: Toccata Op. 7 Fauré: Ballade Op. 19
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1311367 - 11/24/09 05:40 AM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: akonow]
|
5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/23/07
Posts: 5429
|
I think the whole thing was orchestrated for a Diaghilev ballet, with various sections done by Glazunov, Rimsky-K, Liadov, and A. Tcherepnin.
Interesting. Is there a recording? Thanks. If you can stomach it, this is kind of funny: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=np4jmFNX5Mw Thanks, that was really interesting. I don't really "get" old-fashioned classical ballets, so as usual, I was just kind of bemused and bewildered by the dancing (maybe my feeling about that is something like how people who aren't into classical music would feel about listening to a pianist play Carnaval). Also, since it was actually played as the accompaniment to the ballet rather than a standalone work, the conductor needed to follow the dancers rather than performing the music simply as music. And the orchestra (and the recording) didn't sound too wonderful. Still, the orchestrations seemed competent, if not very inspired or original, and it was fun to hear the music in a different guise. I found myself thinking about how different musical effect can be simply because it is being played by lots of musicians rather than just one. Especially in live performance, listening to a soloist is intensely focused on just one person, while with chamber music the focus changes (I do something like shifting focus between the whole ensemble and the individuals). With an orchestra, all that is multiplied, and in addition, there's the conductor. So, besides the changes in timbre and such, I think orchestrations also change the way we focus on the music, if that makes any sense. It is like a shift from private to public, in a way. And just the opposite happens in piano solo transcriptions of music for more than just one player.
Edited by wr (11/24/09 06:36 AM)
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1312214 - 11/25/09 02:34 PM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: SlatterFan]
|
1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 10/18/05
Posts: 1293
Loc: Finland
|
When scrolling though the mails of this thread, I did not find two IMO very good transcribtions:
- Tjaikovsky's "The seasons", arranged for orchestra by a sovjet-russian conductor. I have the whole suite on LP. Some of the pieces are very colorful with orchestra. But I personnaly like the paino version better
I scrolled so fast I did not at first read the first paragraph about the "Holberg suite". I agree it is better for orchestra.
Edited by Jan-Erik (11/25/09 02:42 PM)
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1312714 - 11/26/09 10:27 AM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: SlatterFan]
|
4000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/25/09
Posts: 4617
Loc: Louisville, Kentucky, United S...
|
The first movement Charles-Valentin Alkan's Concerto for Solo Piano Op. 39 No. 8 was orchestrated in 1872 by Karl Klindworth. People argue whether it did the original piece justice (I believe it did, and Alkan himself liked the orchestration), but even so I think it's a wonderful piece in its own right. Only the first movement was orchestrated, but the first movement is long enough to be a standalone piece. It's longer than the first movement of Tchaikovsky's first piano concerto! It sounds like what Mozart would have composed if he lived in the Romantic Era. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRIpqMXVlMw
_________________________
Discontinuing the streaming practice for now, unless a few members PM me and still want me to do it.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#1313382 - 11/27/09 02:35 PM
Re: Piano works transcribed for orchestra
[Re: wr]
|
Full Member
Registered: 02/19/05
Posts: 409
Loc: Toronto, Canada
|
I like the orchestrated versions of Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsodies better than the piano version: in fact, excerpts of it are on the lists for some instruments.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|