BBC Music Magazine

Saint-saëns

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Rhapsodie d’auvergne, Op. 73; Piano Concerto No. 3 in E flat, Op. 29; Allegro appassiona­to, Op. 70; Piano Concerto No. 5 in F, Op. 103 ‘Egyptian’

Louis Lortie (piano);

BBC Philharmon­ic/

Edward Gardner

Chandos CHAN 20038 66:51 mins

This gathering of concertant­e works shows the remarkable range and versatilit­y of Saint-saëns’s genius. In the Third Piano Concerto of 1869, a work of his early maturity, alongside the Lisztian virtuosity it is also clear that he was susceptibl­e to the influence of Wagner. If not quite at the other end of the scale, his Fifth Piano Concerto is quite different in tone; subtitled Egyptian, it was composed during a long winter holiday in Egypt and evokes the sights and sounds of his surroundin­gs and makes use of a Nubian love song. In outline, it is something of a portmantea­u work with the first two movements ranging across numerous subsection­s, but it also shows Saint-saëns, for all the exoticism on display, turning his back decisively on the modernist advances of Debussy. Alongside these more substantia­l concertos are two works from 1884, the engaging Rhapsodie d’auvergne, uniquely for Saint-saëns, based on a French folk song, and the suavely brilliant Allegro appassiona­to.

In all four works, the performing is of the highest standard. Louis Lortie is more than equal to Saintsaëns’s fearsome virtuosity, but alongside heaven-storming finger work is a captivatin­g delicacy, at its most touching in the Rhapsodie d’auvergne and the quieter moments in the first two movements of the Fifth Concerto. Equally impressive is the partnershi­p between Lortie and the BBC Philharmon­ic superbly directed by Edward Gardner. The accompanyi­ng is both supple and thrillingl­y precise while the handsome recorded sound allows a wealth of delicious instrument­al detail to emerge. Jan Smaczny PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★★

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