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Piano Concerto No. 1 (Prokofiev)
1912 piano concerto by Sergei Prokofiev
1912 piano concerto by Sergei Prokofiev
Sergei Prokofiev set about composing his Piano Concerto No. 1 in D-flat major, Op. 10, in 1911, and finished it the next year. The shortest of all his concertos, it is in one movement, about 15 minutes in duration, and dedicated to the “dreaded Tcherepnin.”
Structure
The work's single 15-minute span has the following tempo markings:
- Allegro brioso —
- Poco più mosso —
- Tempo I —
- Meno mosso —
- Più mosso (Tempo I) —
- Animato —
- Andante assai —
- Allegro scherzando —
- Poco più sostenuto —
- Più mosso —
- Animato Described as extroverted, even showy, for much of its length, the concerto begins and ends with the same spacious D-flat theme. Its Andante assai section, in G-sharp minor, offers warm, veiled contrast: a quasi “middle movement.”
Premiere
The concerto was first performed in Moscow on 25 July, 1912, with the composer as soloist and Konstantin Saradzhev conducting. Saradzhev “realized splendidly all my tempos,” wrote Prokofiev afterwards.
Rubinstein Prize
The 22-year-old composer-pianist won the Anton Rubinstein Prize for pianistic accomplishments in an 18 May 1914 performance of the work before the Saint Petersburg Conservatory. He had proposed his own concerto for the programme, reasoning that, though he may not be able to win with a classical concerto, with his own concerto the jury would be “unable to judge whether he was playing well or not.” Competition rules required that the piece be published, so Prokofiev found a publisher willing to produce 20 copies in time for the event. The jury headed by Alexander Glazunov awarded Prokofiev the prize rather reluctantly.
Recordings
This is a partial list. At least 62 recordings exist in all.
| Pianist | Orchestra | Conductor | Record company | Recording date | Recording location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sviatoslav Richter | † | Prague Symphony Orchestra | Karel Ančerl | Supraphon | May 24, 1954 |
| John Browning | † | Boston Symphony Orchestra | Erich Leinsdorf | RCA | Dec. 1-8, 1965 |
| Gary Graffman | † | Cleveland Orchestra | George Szell | CBS Masterworks | 1966, possibly in March |
| Vladimir Ashkenazy | † | London Symphony Orchestra | André Previn | Decca | Jan. 28-29, 1974 |
| Michel Béroff | † | Gewandhaus-Orchester Leipzig | Kurt Masur | EMI Pathé-Marconi | Jan. 2-7 and Feb. 24-27, 1974 |
| Gabriel Tacchino | † | Orchestra of Radio Luxembourg | Louis de Froment | Turnabout | 1973 |
| Vladimir Krainev | † | Moscow Philharmonic | Dmitri Kitaenko | Melodiya | 1976 |
| Viktoria Postnikova | † | USSR Ministry of Culture Symphony Orchestra | Gennady Rozhdestvensky | Melodiya | 1985 |
| Boris Berman | Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra | Neeme Järvi | Chandos | May 8–12, 1989 | |
| Vladimir Krainev | † | Radio-Sinfonie-Orchester Frankfurt | Dmitri Kitaenko | Teldec | Jan. 1991 |
| Yefim Bronfman | † | Israel Philharmonic | Zubin Mehta | Sony Classical | Oct. 14-25, 1991 |
| Evgeny Kissin | Berliner Philharmoniker | Claudio Abbado | Deutsche Grammophon | Sept. 1993 | |
| Alexander Toradze | † | Kirov Orchestra | Valery Gergiev | Philips Classics | live in July 1997 |
| Martha Argerich | Orchestre symphonique de Montréal | Charles Dutoit | EMI Classics | Oct. 1997 | |
| Oleg Marshev | † | South Jutland Symphony Orchestra | Niklas Willén | Danacord | July 30 to Aug. 10, 2001 |
| Abdel Rahman El Bacha | † | Orchestre Symphonique du Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie | Kazushi Ōno | Fuga Libera | live, Sept. 24-26, 2004 |
| Jean-Efflam Bavouzet | † | BBC Philharmonic | Gianandrea Noseda | Chandos | Nov. 5, 2012 |
† — Part of a complete cycle of the five concertos by this pianist and conductor. There have been relatively few such cycles (14 as of 2020) due to the diversity of the five works and their technical demands, and to the extraordinarily central role played by the conductor, such that a majority of pianists omit at least one or two of them from their repertory. The extant cycles are: Browning/Leinsdorf (Nos. 1 and 2: Dec. 1-8, 1965; No. 3: Nov. 25-27, 1967; No. 4: Nov. 27, 1967; and No. 5: April 25, 1969), Béroff/Masur (all: Jan. 2-7 and Feb. 24-27, 1974), Ashkenazy/Previn (Nos. 1 and 3: Jan. 28-29, 1974; No. 2: Sept. 30 to Oct. 2, 1974; No. 4: April 25, 1975; and No. 5: Dec. 9, 1974), Tacchino/de Froment (No. 1: 1973; Nos. 2 and 3: 1972; and Nos. 4 and 5: 1977), Krainev/Kitaenko (Moscow; Nos. 1 and 2: 1976; No. 3: 1981; and Nos. 4 and 5: 1983), Postnikova/Rozhdestvensky (No. 2: 1983; Nos. 1, 3 and 4: 1985; and No. 5: 1987), Paik/Wit (all: May 13–18, 1991), Krainev/Kitaenko (Frankfurt; Nos. 1 and 3: Jan. 1991; No. 2: Jan. 1992; No. 4: May 1992; and No. 5: May and Aug. 1992), Bronfman/Mehta (Nos. 1, 3 and 5: Oct. 14-25, 1991; and Nos. 2 and 4: July 8–17, 1993), Demidenko/Lazarev (Nos. 2 and 3: Dec. 19-20, 1995; and Nos. 1, 4 and 5: Jan. 2-3, 1998), Toradze/Gergiev (No. 1: July 1997; (Nos. 1 and 3: Oct. 1997) Martha Argerich/Charles Dutoit; Nos. 2 and 5: July 1–7, 1995; and Nos. 3 and 4: July 1996), Marshev/Willén (all: July 30 to Aug. 10, 2001), El Bacha/Ōno (all live: Sept. 24-26, 2004), and Bavouzet/Noseda (Nos. 1 and 4: Nov. 5, 2012; No. 2: Aug. 8-9, 2013; No. 3: June 29, 2012; and No. 5: Sept. 11, 2013).
References
References
- Barbara Heninger. "Program Notes Sergei Prokofiev Piano Concerto No. 1".
- This date on old Gregorian calendar converts to 7 August on new Julian Calendar
- [http://nyphil.org/programNotes/0304_Prokofiev_PC1.pdf New York Philharmonic Orchestra program notes]{{dead link. (March 2018)
- "CD Baby".
- "Sleeve note of the Supraphon CD (SU 3670-2 011)".
- "Prokofiev Piano Concerto No. 1".
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