Help
Skip to main content

Special offer. Bliss: Piano Concerto

Peter Donohoe & Martin Roscoe (pianos)

Royal Scottish National Orchestra, David Lloyd-Jones

Bliss: Piano Concerto

Awards:

Concerto for Two pianos is the most lively, attractive work on the disc, full of quick, spiky wit and delight on colour, all well brought out by Donohoe and Roscoe

Special offer. Bliss: Piano Concerto

Peter Donohoe & Martin Roscoe (pianos)

Royal Scottish National Orchestra, David Lloyd-Jones

Purchase product

CD

Original price $13.00 Reduced price $11.70

1 available: usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days

Download

From Original price $13.00 Reduced price $6.50

Download

Audio formats guide

44.1 kHz, 16 bit, FLAC/ALAC/WAV

Original price ($13.00) Reduced price $6.50

320 kbps, MP3

$10.00

This release includes a digital booklet

Stream now lossless, 44.1 kHz, 16 bit

Awards:

Concerto for Two pianos is the most lively, attractive work on the disc, full of quick, spiky wit and delight on colour, all well brought out by Donohoe and Roscoe

About

Contents and tracklist

Allegro con brio
Track length16:47
Adagietto
Track length10:39
Andante maestoso - Molto vivo
Track length11:26
Moderato marcato
Track length7:58
Adagio sereno
Track length7:56
Allegro
Track length5:58
Allegro giusto - Larghetto tranquillo - Vivo
Track length12:09

Awards and reviews

  • Gramophone Magazine
    February 2004
    Editor's Choice

Concerto for Two pianos is the most lively, attractive work on the disc, full of quick, spiky wit and delight on colour, all well brought out by Donohoe and Roscoe

2010

In recent times Bliss's swaggering Piano Concerto (written in 1938-9 for Solomon) has found a champion in Peter Donohoe, and it's good that he's been able to set down his powerful interpretation as part of Naxos's British Piano Concertos series. As those thunderous octaves at the outset demonstrate, Bliss's bravura writing holds no terrors for Donohoe and he generates a satisfying rapport with David Lloyd-Jones and the RSNO. Theirs is a beautifully prepared and attentive reading which grips from start to finish.
The bittersweet central Adagietto casts an especially potent spell, while both outer movements harness blistering virtuosity to supple affection. All told, a worthy modern counterpart to the thrilling historic displays from Solomon and Mewton-Wood.
No less compelling is the buoyant account of the Concerto for Two Pianos: an infectiously enjoyable, single-movement work that began life in 1921 as a Concerto for Piano, Tenor and Strings (that same year, Bliss embarked on his Colour Symphony, of which there are fleeting echoes here). The present revision dates from 1950; 18 years later, Bliss overhauled the piece one last time for the three-hand partnership of Phyllis Sellick and Cyril Smith. As in the Piano Concerto, the recording's a touch bright and clangorous, but the ear soon adjusts.
No such technical qualms surround Donohoe's intelligent and accomplished performance of the Sonata composed in 1952 for Noel Mewton- Wood. With his commanding presence and rich tonal palette, Donohoe again exhibits a remarkable empathy with Bliss's red-blooded inspiration. This rewarding Naxos disc deserves every success.
View download progress