MEDIA
In this section info on the missing seconds of Tchaikovsky No. 3/ Benzi.
Do use the 2nd navigation bar to check out Audio and Video. Also included an
Interview (spoken word, audio) and a Radio Play with Youri Egorov on Piano.
Audio
SoundCloud
Tchaikovsky - Piano Concerto No. 3, Op. 75/79
with Youri Egorov (piano) and Roberto Benzi (conductor)
The missing 30 - 40 seconds.
According to the booklet of the 10 CD Box the last 30 - 40 seconds of the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto
No. 3 in E flat major, Op. 75 recording are lost due an error in the original recording.
However your webmaster does have a copy with the last 30 - 40 seconds in his collection, this
including the applause. Down here you can listen to the incomplete 10 CD Box recording and to the
complete version as taken from your webmasters collection (both as excerpts).
Encore
Youri Egorov (piano)
As encore Youri played ‘October’ from The Seasons by Tchaikovsky. ‘October’ is very special to your
webmaster and feels that this is one of the finest performances of this work. This encore is not
released on CD. Down here a 2 minute audio excerpt.
Tchaikovsky - PNC No. 3, Op. 75/79
From Wikipedia
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 3 in E-flat major, Op. posth. 75, was originally begun as
a symphony in E flat. The composer ultimately abandoned this symphony, but, in 1893, decided to
rework its first movement into a concert piece for piano and orchestra. Though Tchaikovsky
completed this work, he did not live to see it published, and the concerto was published
posthumously, in 1894, as a single-movement Allegro Brillante.
Despite the composer's stated intentions made prior to his death, there remains much argument as
to what form this concerto might have taken, had Tchaikovsky continued to work on the piece. The
matter revolves around two remaining movements from the unfinished symphony in E-flat. These
had been left in sketch form by Tchaikovsky at the time of his death; but were later arranged, by
former student and fellow-composer Sergei Taneyev, into a composition for piano and orchestra,
entitled Andante and Finale. This was published in 1897 as Tchaikovsky's Op. posth. 79, even though
it is actually Taneyev's personal arrangement of what is otherwise Tchaikovsky's unscored draft.
Arguments concern whether it was worth Taneyev's efforts to resurrect this material — when
Tchaikovsky had already expressed doubts as to its musical quality — and whether the Andante and
Finale should be performed alongside Tchaikovsky's completed movement.
Most pianists performing the third concerto have only played the single-movement Op. 75. But there
have been performances when this piece was played together with the Andante and Finale, forming
a three-movement concerto, with this sometimes listed as Tchaikovsky's "Piano Concerto No. 3 in E-
flat major, Op. 75/79."
In the 1950s, Russian musicologist and composer Semyon Bogatyrev used Tchaikovsky's sketches,
including those used to create the single-movement Op. 75 and Andante and Finale, to form a
conjectural reconstruction of Tchaikovsky's so-called "Symphony No. 7." The single-movement Op. 75
also serves as the musical basis for the ballet Allegro Brillante, conceived and choreographed in 1956
by George Balanchine for the New York City Ballet.