The Piano Concerto No. 2 in G major, Sz. 95, BB 101 of Béla Bartók is a musical composition for piano and orchestra. The work, which was composed between 1930 and 1931, is notorious for being one of the most difficult pieces in the repertoire. Playing time is 26–29 minutes.
Composition
In approaching the composition, Bartók wanted the music to be more contrapuntal. He also wanted to simplify his music (like many of his contemporaries), but his use of counterpoint in this piece makes for an extremely complicated piece of music. This aspect had proven particularly troublesome in the First Concerto, so much so, in fact, that the New York Philharmonic, which was to have given the premiere, could not master it in time, and Bartók's Rhapsody had to be substituted into the program.[1] The composer himself claimed in a 1939 article to have composed this concerto as a direct contrast to his First Concerto, acknowledging that the First "is a bit difficult — one might even say very difficult! — as much for orchestra as for audience."[2]
Even so, the Second Concerto is notorious for its difficulty. András Schiff said, "For the piano player, it's a finger-breaking piece. [It] is probably the single most difficult piece that I have ever played, and I usually end up with a keyboard covered by blood."[3]Stephen Kovacevich also declared that it was the most technically demanding piece he had ever played and that he nearly paralyzed his hands while preparing the piece.[4]
Bartók himself played the work at a BBC Symphony Concert in the Queen's Hall on 8 November 1933, with the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Adrian Boult. The concert was broadcast live and described in Radio Times as the first performance in England (Radio Times, 3 November 1933, p. 356). Bartók played it again at the Proms in London under Sir Henry Wood on 7 January 1936, an initiative of the BBC music producer Edward Clark.[9][10]
The overall form of the Second Concerto is symmetrical—the tempo structure is fast-slow-fast-slow-fast—in the Bartókian manner that has come to be identified as arch form. The first movement, marked Allegro, is highlighted by the active, punctuating piano solo. The piano's quick, rhythmic pace and fragmentary scalar movement suggest the influence of Igor Stravinsky, and the ballet Petrushka (1910–11) in particular, while other characteristics point to The Firebird; the main theme of the movement, introduced by the trumpets, is a reference to The Firebird's finale.[5]
Edith Farnadi (piano), Vienna State Opera Orchestra, Hermann Scherchen (conductor). Vega C-30-A-164 (monaural LP recording, 12 inch). [Paris]: Vega, 1954. Reissued on Westminster WL 5249 (monaural LP recording, 12 inch), New York: Westminster Records, 1954. Reissued again on Westminster XWN 18277 (monaural LP recording, 12 inch), New York: Westminster Records, 1956.
György Sándor (piano), Pro Musica Orchestra, Vienna; Michael Gielen (conductor). Recorded in Vienna. Vox PL 11.490 (LP recording, 12 inch, monaural). New York: Vox Records, 1959.
John Ogdon (piano), BBC Symphony Orchestra, Pierre Boulez (conductor), Recorded live in Moscow, January 10, 1967
László Borbély (piano), Savaria Symphony Orchestra, János Kovács (conductor), Recorded 21–24, November 2023, Bartók Concert Hall, Szombathely, Hungary, 2024 Hunnia Records & Film Production
^Kárpáti,János, "The First Two Piano Concertos", in The Bartók Companion, edited by Malcolm Gillies (Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press, 1993), pp. 498–514.
^Bayley, Amanda (2001). The Cambridge Companion to Bartók. Cambridge Companions to Music. Cambridge University Press. p. 232.
^ abPetazzi, Paolo (1979). Bartók: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 2. Liner notes to DGG 415 371-2 (Maurizio Pollini piano, Claudio Abbado conducting the CSO). Translated into English by Gwyn Morris.