Berio: Nones; Allelujah II; Concerto for two pianos
豆瓣
简介
BERIO. Concerto for two pianos. Bruno Canino, Antonio Ballista (pianos), London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Luciano Berio. Nones. London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Luciano Berio. Allelujah II. BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Pierre Boulez and Luciano Serb. RCA Red Seal RL11674 (349).
The Double Piano Concerto is the point here. It was composed for New York Lincoln Center in 1972-3, designed for the marvellous pianists who play it here, as they did at the London premiere. The piano parts, not only two but three (a discrete orchestral pianist fills out the texture now and then—the violins are divided into three as well), are percussive rather than melodious, the melodies given to orchestra (flute, violin, and clarinet are all favoured in this respect). The single movement begins sensuously and lazily, with occasional outbursts, like a sunbather obliged sometimes to swat a persistent insect. The melodies flow, the pianos splash (efficiently according to the score which I hope Universal Edition will soon make commercially available). Tension heightens, pace accelerates, orchestral density increases. Gradually the excitement dies away, and the pianos sing Amen more or less in G major.
It is perhaps more entertaining than profound by intention, certainly enjoyable and worth repeated listening. The busy solo parts are admirably played and recorded; some elaborate tutti textures sound imperfectly balanced, according to the score, though more vivid than I remember of the London premiCre. Tape noise is quite high.
Side I consists of two 1950s pieces, quite early Berm. Nones by now seems an academic period piece, a sort of instrumental Passion (Nones is the ninth hour at which Jesus yielded up the ghost), cool but imagined and scored with characteristic imagination. Allelujah II, an expansion and reworking of the eponymous No. 1, makes a more colourful and lively effect. Both works are played with apparently loving labour; the acoustical complexities of Allelujah II (they involved the loan of Boulez assistance by CBS) sound really well. Nevertheless it is for the Double Piano Concerto that the record is principally recommendable, and strongly at that. W.S.M.
from the Gramophone, August 1977, p. 34.
tracks
Nones
Allelujah II
Concerto for two pianos