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Just read the post about composers that are unjustfiably ignored, there are composers, not ness.on that list, whose oeuvre has some hidden treasures, overlooked in the modernday concert-repertoire, or there are some masterpieces, hailed by the critics, but never/hardly performed. My little beginning of a suggestion;
Poulenc: Les soirées de Nazelles Reger: Intermezzi op.45/Telemann-variations Rachmaninoff: 1st sonata,lol, Chopinvariations Chopin: op.46 Beethoven: Polonaise/Fantasie Weber: sonatas, esp.nr.2 Liszt: Scherzo und Marsch Reubke: sonata/scherzo Lyapunov: sonata/études Dale: sonata Chabrier: pièces pittoresques/bourée fantastique Balakirev: sonata Grieg: ballade Fauré: ballade etc. call me oldfashioned, oh, rather don't.
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Longtemps, je me suis couché de bonne heure, but not anymore!
#1986727 - 11/14/1206:08 PMRe: pieces that need more exposure
[Re: dolce sfogato]
pianoloverus
Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/29/01
Posts: 17765
Loc: New York City
Brahms:Variations on an Original Theme in D major, Op.21(?) Albeniz:Iberia(performed but not emough IMO considering how great it is) Chopin: Rondo a la Mazur Op.5 Bach-Busoni:St.Anne Prelude and Fugue Haydn:Capriccio in G major De Falla:Fantasia Baetica
#1986825 - 11/14/1209:59 PMRe: pieces that need more exposure
[Re: dolce sfogato]
Gould
Full Member
Registered: 09/04/10
Posts: 421
Loc: Earth
Pierne Concerto in C minor Scriabin's Concerto in F# minor Mendelssohn's Scottish Fantasy Mendelssohn's Preludes and Fugues All of Shostakovich's Preludes and Fugues Liszt Ballade Ukraine
Registered: 01/31/10
Posts: 1976
Loc: San Jose, CA
Originally Posted By: celegorma
Some of the pieces mentioned are not "overlooked" but are just too damn hard to play.
What if 10% of aspiring pianists put the same time and effort, or even half of it, into Iberia that they were going to put into Chopin Polonaises or Liszt Etudes? How much richer would we all be for it?
Pensée des morts. Variations on a theme from Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen. Mephisto Waltzes 2 and 3. Trois Odes Funèbres. The Dante Symphony. Der nächtliche Zug. The lieder in general! Christus. Missa solennis zur Einweihung der Basilika in Gran.
^I'd say all of these are among Liszt's finest works.
Also:
Apparitions. Aux cyprès de la Villa d'Este I and II: Thrénodie. Andante lagrimoso. Grosses Konzertsolo. Weihnachtsbaumin. The 'other' Lied self-transcriptions (not the third Liebestraume or the Petrarch Sonnets, but the 'other' Liebestraume (especially 1) and works like Am Rhein, im schönen Strome, Der du von dem Himmel bist, Die Zelle in Nonnenwerth, and the revised version of Die Lorelei). The tone poems not named Les Preludes. Die Glocken des Strassburger Münsters. Psalm 13. Via Crucis.
Many more. I think that Liszt's (annoyingly all-over-the-place) output is absolutely full of hidden treasures that are as good as most of the pieces that are more commonly known.
#1987021 - 11/15/1210:23 AMRe: pieces that need more exposure
[Re: dolce sfogato]
slava_richter
Full Member
Registered: 01/10/12
Posts: 126
Loc: Providence, RI
My number one choice for this category would be the Brahms variations on an original theme, Op. 21 no. 1, which another poster also mentioned. I think it's absolutely wonderful; for me, it's as good as the Haendel variations, but sadly no one plays it.
Also, Brahms' Op. 1 and 2 sonatas, they get overlooked due to phenomenal Op. 5.
A work that I've recently 'discovered' that certainly fits this category is Shostakovich's piano sonata no. 2.
Khachaturian: Concert Rhapsody for Piano and Orchestra Debussy:Fantasy for Piano and Orchestra Medtner: Piano Concertos Rachmaninnoff: Moment Musical (i think its op.16) Mozart Sonata in F (the one no one plays!!!)
Edited by Roland_Guy (11/15/1205:00 PM)
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Classical, Jazz Pianist. From Bach to the Blues.
#1987933 - 11/17/1207:12 PMRe: pieces that need more exposure
[Re: tomasino]
argerichfan
8000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/15/06
Posts: 8248
Loc: Pacific Northwest, US.
Originally Posted By: tomasino
Schubert 959 could use a little more exposure. I feel it's an even greater sonata than 960.
But aside from the bottomless pit of freight and a certain sense of calculated terror in the slow movement -something that might be almost too scary -why else would you rate this sonata over the D960?
I have heard it in concert many times, I have read through it even more often, but with due respect, none of the other movements match the D960.
#1987936 - 11/17/1207:19 PMRe: pieces that need more exposure
[Re: tomasino]
beet31425
3000 Post Club Member
Registered: 06/12/09
Posts: 3208
Loc: Bay Area, CA
Originally Posted By: tomasino
Schubert 959 could use a little more exposure. I feel it's an even greater sonata than 960.
Tomasino
But am I remembering right that you didn't care for the treatment of the last movement's theme as much as its earlier A-minor sonata setting? (I could just look this up using pianoworld search, but it's more fun not to.)
-J
_________________________ Working on: Beethoven op.57, Chopin op.25/2, Mozart K.330
Bizet's Variations Chromatiques, William Byrd, the great and mighty Purcell (just ask GMH), Sessions (his music is ignored for reasons I simply can't comprehend, it's marvelous)
#1987948 - 11/17/1207:54 PMRe: pieces that need more exposure
[Re: beet31425]
argerichfan
8000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/15/06
Posts: 8248
Loc: Pacific Northwest, US.
beet31425:
OT, have you ever seen the film 'Velvet Goldmine'? The Andante from Mahler 6 was used.
Yeah, lots of supreme scenery in the film, Jonathan Rhys Meyers was absolutely breathtaking in his sensual beauty, but it was the soundtrack which really caught my ear.
Has there ever been a movement which is so desolate and lonely? Those distant cowbells, that sense of yearning and abandonment, truly magnificently beautiful, if a bit uncomfortable.
#1987951 - 11/17/1208:02 PMRe: pieces that need more exposure
[Re: Ian_G]
argerichfan
8000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/15/06
Posts: 8248
Loc: Pacific Northwest, US.
Originally Posted By: Ian_G
William Byrd
What are you talking about, Ian?
William Byrd -both his Anglican and RC works- are CONSTANTLY sung in British cathedrals, there has never been any doubt re his status. Check out a recent recording from Durham Cathedral (Priory 801) of his choral works. Also, the weekly broadcast of Evensong via BBC frequently features works of Byrd.
Just wish I liked his instrumental works better, they are so dreary.