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Music Minus One - Ethan Winer: Cello Concerto; Franz Schubert: Ave Maria; Camille Saint-Saens: Allegro Appassionato

W.A. Mozart: Piano Concerto No.18 In B Flat KV.456

Felix Mendelssohn: 'Double' Concerto For Piano, Violin And String Orchestra In D Minor

Music Minus One - Beginning Trumpet Solos Vol.II

Music Minus One - Giovanni Bottesini: Concerto In B Grande Allegro Di Concerto

Music Minus One - Joseph Haydn: String Quartet In B-Flat Op.76 No.4

Music Minus One - W.A. Mozart: Quintet For Piano And Winds In E-Flat KV452

Music Minus One - W.A. Mozart: Quintet For Piano And Winds In E-Flat KV452

Music Minus One - W.A. Mozart: Piano Quartet No.2 In E-Flat KV493

Music Minus One - 'The Cello Soloist' Classic Solos For Cello And Piano

Camille Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto No. 4 In C Minor, Op.44 (Book/CD)

Camille Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto No. 4 In C Minor, Op.44 (Book/CD)

Not available to customers in France, Germany or The Netherlands. Piano Concerto No. 4 In C Minor (concerto pour Piano en ut mineur), Op. 44 by Camille Saint-Saëns , is the composer's most structurally innovative Piano concerto. In one sense it is like a four-movement symphony, but these are grouped in pairs. That is, the piece is divided into two parts, each of which combines two main movements (Part 1: I. Moderatetempo Theme and Variations in C Minor; II. Slower Theme and Variations in A-flat Major; Part 2: III. Scherzo in C Minor; IV. Finale in C Major). However, in each part there is a bridge-like transitional section, between the two main "movements" – for example, a fugal Andante in part II functions as an interlude between the two main sections. The concerto begins with a gently mischievous chromatic subject, heard in dialogue between the strings and piano soloist, and continues in a creative thematic development similar to Saint-Saëns ' Third Symphony. The composer demonstrates brilliant skill in employing the piano and orchestra almost equally. In the Andante, he moves to A-flat major with a chorale-like theme in the woodwinds (also strikingly similar to the tune of the Third Symphony's final section), and uses this as a platform on which to build a series of variations before bringing the movement to a quiet close. The Allegro vivace begins again in C minor as a high-spirited scherzo, using material foreshadowed in the first movement. 2/4 and 6/8 are playfully juxtaposed throughout. At one point, the Piano boldly leads the orchestra in an energetic 6/8 theme in Eflat major. Eventually the orchestra moves to a lush Andante, recapitulating the Andante section from the first movement. Rather suddenly, the piano climbs up to a flurry of double octave trills, and a climactic trumpet fanfare, leads to the jubilant finale based on a hymn-like theme in triple time. The concerto concludes with the piano, in glittering cascades, guiding the orchestra to a fortissimo close. The piano concerto was premièred in 1875 with the composer as the soloist. The concerto is dedicated to Antoine Door, a professor of piano at the Vienna Conservatory. It continues to be one of Saint-Saëns ' most popular piano concertos, second only to the Piano Concerto No. 2 in G minor. This highly inventive work, along with many others, does much to refute the caricature of a purely reactionary Saint-Saëns .

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