CD1
- Henriëtte Bosmans - Concertino for Piano & Orchestra (1928)
- Kees van Baaren - Concertino for Piano & Orchestra (1934)
- Leo Smit - Concerto pour piano et orchestre d'harmonie (1937)
- Ton de Leeuw - Danses sacrées (1989-90)
CD2
- Carl Smulders - Concert in A Minor voor Piano en Orkest (1892)
- Willem Pijper - Concerto per Pianoforte e Orchestra, K.75 (1927)
- Kees van Baaren - Concerto per Pianoforte e Orchestra (1964)
- Henk Badings - Concert voor 2 Piano's en Orkest (1964)
CD3
- Tristan Keuris - Piano Concerto (1980)
- Jan van Vlijmen - Concerto per pianoforte ed orchestra (1991)
Ronald Brautigam, piano
Ellen Corver, piano
René Eckhardt, piano
Sepp Grotenhuis, piano
Ivo Janssen, piano
David Kuyken, piano
Netherlands Radio Chamber Orchestra
Netherlands Radio Symphony Orchestra
Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
Ed Spanjaard, conductor
Kees Bakels, conductor
Jac van Steen, conductor
Alexander Vedernikov, conductor
Luca Vis, conductor
Compilation: 2025
Label: Brilliant Classics
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Review
An unrivalled collection of lesser-known 20th-century piano concertos in both Romantic and modern styles, in definitive recordings by Dutch artists.
This survey of Dutch piano concertos actually begins in 1886, with the A minor work by Carl Smulders (1863-1934). Smulders sidesteps convention by opening not with a grand gesture but a slow, expectant build-up, breaking the template for A minor piano concertos established first by Schumann and then Grieg. The piano writing itself has a lyrically Griegian flavour, however, which Ivo Janssen brings out in this 1994 recording.
The collection steps confidently into the last century with a glittering 13-minute concerto of 1927 by Willem Pijper, and a punchy neoclassical concertino from 1928 by Henriette Bösmans, who brings sumptuous, Rachmaninoff-style lyricism to the contrasting episodes. The shadows of Bartók and Ravel continue to fall on Kees van Baaren’s 1934 Concertino, and Leo Smit’s 1937 concerto for piano and wind ensemble.
Another chronological leap forward takes the collection to 1964, with a second concerto by Van Baaren, who by now had adopted an angular serial idiom in tune with the times. From the same year, Henk Badings’ Concerto for Two Pianos casts a retrospective look at the age of expressionist film scores in a dark and turbulent but conventionally structured work.
Coming further up to date, the collection embraces the personal engagements with both modernism and the concerto tradition crafted by Tristan Keuris in 1980, and Ton de Leeuw in 1990. Finally, the 1991 concerto by Jan van Vlijmen encapsulates the musical journey of the 20th century into modernism and then towards an accommodation of its principles with tonality. Like several other composers in this set, the name of Van Vlijmen deserves to be known far wider than his native Netherlands, and this superbly prepared recording presents the most compelling case for his music.
Long unavailable since its original 1994 release on the specialist NM Classics label, this reissue by Brilliant Classics includes full booklet introductions to each composer and their work.
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