British Piano Concertos Vol.3: Addison, Cannon, Chagrin
£13.78
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Label: Lyrita
Cat No: SRCD444
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Orchestral
Release Date: 2nd May 2025
Contents
Works
Concertino for piano and orchestraConversation Piece
Concertino for piano and strings
Piano Concerto
Artists
Simon Callaghan (piano)BBC National Orchestra of Wales
Conductor
William BoughtonWorks
Concertino for piano and orchestraConversation Piece
Concertino for piano and strings
Piano Concerto
Artists
Simon Callaghan (piano)BBC National Orchestra of Wales
Conductor
William BoughtonAbout
Though John Addison’s Concertino for piano and orchestra is, for the most part, couched in a lighthearted language, it is the product of a serious, and unfailingly inventive, approach to keyboard and orchestral writing. Speaking of the work to Lesie Ayre of the London Evening News, the composer remarked that, ‘it is a real concerto in the full sense of the word… I would not be ashamed to show the work to any first-class pianist’.
Francis Chagrin maintained an intensely practical and unpretentious attitude towards his own craft, observing that, ‘My music is not for first performances – it is just to be played’. His Piano Concerto was first performed by soloist Franz Osborn, with the London Symphony Orchestra, conducted by the composer, at an SPNM Experimental Rehearsal held at the Royal College of Music on 4 February 1944.
Conversation Piece by John Addison was written in 1958 to a commission from the BBC Concert Orchestra for that year’s British Light Music Festival. John Addison felt that, by the late-1950s, too great a divide had opened up between serious and light music: ‘Concertgoers think contemporary music is so alarmingly serious that when confronted with a mildly witty turn of phrase, they assume something has gone wrong. I remember the astonished sigh of relief when, in the course of introducing one of my chamber works, I told the audience I would not mind if they smiled’. In Conversation Piece, Addison exploits to the full his talent to amuse and divert.
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