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Piano Concerto in G major (Ravel)

Maurice Ravel's Piano Concerto in G major, was composed between 1929 and 1931. The piano concerto is in three movements, with a total playing time of a little over 20 minutes. Ravel said that in this piece he was not aiming to be profound but to entertain, in the manner of Mozart and Saint-Saëns. Among its other influences are jazz and Basque folk music.

Piano Concerto in G major
by Maurice Ravel
Ravel c. 1925
CatalogueM. 83
Composed1929 (1929)–1931
DedicationMarguerite Long
Movements3

The first performance was given in Paris in 1932 by the pianist Marguerite Long, with the Orchestre Lamoureux conducted by the composer. Within months the work was heard in the major cities of Europe and in the US. It has been recorded many times by pianists, orchestras and conductors from all over the world.

Background and first performance edit

The concerto was Ravel's penultimate composition. He had contemplated a piano concerto, based on Basque themes, in 1906;[1] he returned to the idea in 1913, but abandoned work on the piece in 1914.[2][n 1] Fifteen years elapsed before he turned once more to the idea of writing a concerto. He began sketching it in 1929 but throughout his career he had been a slow, painstaking worker,[3] and it was nearly three years before the concerto was finished. He was obliged to put it to one side while he worked on a deadline to write another concerto, the D major, for the left hand, commissioned by Paul Wittgenstein.[4]

The biographer Arbie Orenstein writes that while touring the US in 1928, Ravel had been "impressed by its jazz, Negro spirituals and the excellence of its orchestras".[5] Jazz had been popular in Paris since the start of the decade: Ravel had first heard, and enjoyed, it in 1921, and its influence is heard in the violin sonata, completed in 1927, and in the D major piano concerto.[6][n 2] The Basque theme mooted in 1906 and 1913 was not wholly abandoned. His colleague Gustave Samazeuilh believed that Ravel drew on his earlier ideas for the outer movements of the G major concerto, and Orenstein notes a Basque influence in the opening theme of the work.[9]

In an interview with the music critic Pierre Leroi, published in October 1931, Ravel said:

My only wish … was to write a genuine concerto, that is, a brilliant work, clearly highlighting the soloist's virtuosity, without seeking to show profundity. As a model, I took two musicians who, in my opinion, best illustrated this type of composition: Mozart and Saint-Saëns. This is why the concerto, which I originally thought of entitling Divertissement, contains the three customary parts: the initial Allegro, a compact classical structure, is followed by an Adagio, in which I wanted to render particular homage to "scholasticism", and in which I attempted to write as well as I could; to conclude, a lively movement in Rondo form, likewise conceived in accordance with the most immutable traditions.[10]

He had intended to be the soloist in the first public performance of the new work, but fatigue, poor health and pressure of work led him to offer the premiere to Marguerite Long, to whom he dedicated the concerto. Long, who was known for her performances of the works of Fauré and Debussy had earlier asked Ravel for a new work. She received the completed score on 11 November 1931, and played the concerto at the Salle Pleyel on 14 January 1932, with Ravel conducting the Orchestre Lamoureux.[11]

A few days after the premiere, Ravel and Long began a European tour with the concerto, playing in sixteen cities, starting in Antwerp and including Brussels, Vienna, Bucharest, Prague, London, Warsaw, Berlin, Amsterdam and Budapest.[11] The first North American performances were given on 22 April 1932, in Boston and Philadelphia.[n 3]

Instrumentation edit

Ravel told Leroi, "In order not to needlessly weigh down the orchestral texture, I called for a reduced orchestra: the usual strings are joined only by one flute, piccolo, oboe, cor anglais, two bassoons, two horns, one trumpet and one trombone".[10] Orenstein points out that Ravel, or Leroi, forgot to mention two clarinets and the extensive range of percussion instruments.[14] The full tally of instruments, apart from the piano, comprises piccolo, flute, oboe, cor anglais, E clarinet, clarinet in B and A, 2 bassoons, 2 horns in F, trumpet in C, trombone, timpani, triangle, snare drum, cymbals, bass drum, tamtam, wood block, whip, harp, 16 violins, 6 violas, 6 cellos, and 4 double basses.

Structure edit

 
Poster for the 1932 premiere of the piano concerto

The concerto typically plays for about 22 minutes.[n 4]

I. Allegramente edit

The first movement, in G major, is in 2
2
time. It opens with a single sharp whip-crack, followed by an exposition that contains five distinct themes. Orenstein says of them that the first suggests a Basque folk melody, the second the influence of Spain, and the other three derive from the idiom of jazz.[16] The development section – "a lively romp" – is followed by a cadenza-like passage leading to the recapitulation. Where a cadenza might be expected in such a concerto movement, Ravel writes three: first for harp, then for the woodwind, and finally for the piano; the last of these draws on the fifth theme of the exposition. An extended coda concludes the movement, bringing back some of the material from the development section and finishes with a series of descending major and minor triads.[16]

II. Adagio assai edit

The slow movement, in E major, is in 3
4
time. In contrast with the preceding movement, it is a tranquil subject of Mozartian serenity written in ternary form. Ravel said of it, "That flowing phrase! How I worked over it bar by bar! It nearly killed me!"[17] The first theme is presented by the piano, unaccompanied. Ravel said he took as his model the theme from the Larghetto of Mozart's Clarinet Quintet, but in an analysis of the work published in 2000 Michael Russ comments that whereas the Mozart melody unfolds across 20 bars, Ravel builds an even longer – 34-bar – melody, without repeating a single bar.[18] The musicologist Michel Fleury calls the opening an "extended monologue in the style of a stately Sarabande", and remarks that it derives "its curiously hypnotic character" from the rhythmic discrepancy between the 3
4
time signature of the melody in the right hand and the 3
8
signature of the accompaniment.[19] After thirty bars – about three minutes in a typical performance[n 5] – the solo flute enters with a C and oboe, clarinet and flute carry the melody into the second theme.[19] There follows a more dissonant episode, imbued with what Fleury calls a slight sense of trepidation; the orchestra plays slowly ascending chord progressions while the piano part consists of "iridescent harmonies". The cor anglais reintroduces the opening theme beneath the piano's "delicate filigree in the high register".[19]

III. Presto edit

The finale, in G major, is in 2
4
time. At just under four minutes in a typical performance it is much the shortest of the three.[n 6] Four brisk chords at the beginning launch what Fleury describes as "an unstoppable onslaught, spurred on by the shrieks of the clarinet and the piccolo, the donkey brays of the trombone and occasional fanfare flourishes in the brass".[19] Orenstein finds the opening recalls the carnival atmosphere of Stravinsky's Petrushka or Satie's Parade. The solo part begins with a series of demisemiquavers marked to be played piano – a technically demanding combination.[20] The music progresses through several modes before coming to its conclusion with the same four chords with which the movement begins.[19] Reviewing the premiere of the work, Henry Prunières wrote, "The spirit of jazz indeed animates this last movement ... but with extreme discretion".[21]

Recordings edit

The first recording of the concerto, made in 1932, featured Marguerite Long as soloist with an ad hoc orchestra of the best players in Paris,[22] conducted, according to the label, by the composer.[23] In fact Ravel supervised the recording sessions, while a more proficient conductor, Pedro de Freitas Branco, took the baton.[22]

The many later recordings include:

Soloist Orchestra Conductor Year
Leonard Bernstein Philharmonia Orchestra Leonard Bernstein 1948
Monique Haas NDR Sinfonieorchester Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt 1948
Nicole Henriot Paris Conservatoire Orchestra Charles Munch 1949
Jacqueline Blancard Orchestre de la Suisse Romande Ernest Ansermet 1953
Vlado Perlemuter Concerts Colonne Jascha Horenstein 1955
Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli Philharmonia Orchestra Ettore Gracis 1957
Leonard Bernstein Columbia Symphony Orchestra Leonard Bernstein 1958
Philippe Entremont Philadelphia Orchestra Eugene Ormandy 1960
Samson François Orchestre de la Société des concerts du Conservatoire André Cluytens 1961
Julius Katchen London Symphony Orchestra István Kertész 1965
Monique Haas Orchestre National de France Paul Paray 1965
Martha Argerich Berliner Philharmoniker Claudio Abbado 1967
Werner Haas Orchestre National de l'Opéra de Monte-Carlo Alceo Galliera 1969
Alicia de Larrocha London Philharmonic Orchestra Lawrence Foster 1973
Aldo Ciccolini Orchestre de Paris Jean Martinon 1974
Yvonne Lefébure Orchestre national de l'ORTF Paul Paray 1977
Pascal Rogé Montreal Symphony Orchestra Charles Dutoit 1982
Martha Argerich London Symphony Orchestra Claudio Abbado 1984
Jean-Philippe Collard Orchestre National de France Lorin Maazel 1986
Louis Lortie London Symphony Orchestra Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos 1989
Cécile Ousset City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra Simon Rattle 1991
Alicia de Larrocha St. Louis Symphony Orchestra Leonard Slatkin 1991
Hélène Grimaud Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Jesús López Cobos 1992
Jean-Yves Thibaudet Montreal Symphony Orchestra Charles Dutoit 1995
Krystian Zimerman Cleveland Orchestra Pierre Boulez 1995
Pascal Rogé Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra Bertrand de Billy 2004
Zoltán Kocsis Budapest Festival Orchestra Iván Fischer 2006
Francesco Tristano Schlime Russian National Orchestra Mikhail Pletnev 2006
Yundi Li Berliner Philharmoniker Seiji Ozawa 2007
Pierre-Laurent Aimard Cleveland Orchestra Pierre Boulez 2010
Martha Argerich Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana Jacek Kaspszyk 2012
Yuja Wang Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich Lionel Bringuier 2015
Francesco Piemontesi Orchestre de la Suisse Romande Jonathan Nott 2022
Source: WorldCat.[24]

Trivia edit

Notes, references and sources edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The concerto was to be called Zaspiak-Bat (The Seven Are One), a single movement work with seven episodes, each using a theme from one of the seven Basque provinces.[2]
  2. ^ Ravel remarked that "The most captivating part of jazz is its rich and diverting rhythm. ... Jazz is a very rich and vital source of inspiration for modern composers and I am astonished that so few Americans are influenced by it."[7] The music critic Jonathan Swain suggests that a theme in the first movement, shortly before figure 10 in the 1932 Durand score of the G major concerto, is reminiscent of "J'ai deux amours", a song made famous in Paris by Josephine Baker.[8]
  3. ^ The soloist in Boston was Jesús María Sanromá, with the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Serge Koussevitzky;[12] in Philadelphia the soloist was Sylvan Levin, with the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Leopold Stokowski.[13]
  4. ^ In recordings by Krystian Zimerman, Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli, Martha Argerich and Pascal Rogé the playing times are 22m 6s, 21m 58s, 22m 14s and 22m 03s respectively.[15]
  5. ^ In the recordings by Zimerman, Michelangeli, Argerich and Rogé mentioned above, the flute enters at 3m 2s, 3m 3s, 3m 1s and 3m 10s respectively.[15]
  6. ^ In the recordings by Zimerman, Michelangeli, Argerich and Rogé referred to above, the movement lasts 3m 57s, 3m 58s, 3m 55s and 3m 54s, respectively.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ Orenstein (1991), p. 72
  2. ^ a b Orledge, p. 34
  3. ^ Sackville-West and Shawe-Taylor, p. 607
  4. ^ Nichols, p. 313
  5. ^ Orenstein (2003), p. 10
  6. ^ Orenstein (1991), pp. 198–199 and 202
  7. ^ Rogers, M. Robert. "Jazz Influence on French Music", The Musical Quarterly January 1935, p. 64
  8. ^ "Building a Library", BBC Radio 3, 14 February 2015. Event occurs at 7m 55s.
  9. ^ Nichols, p. 328
  10. ^ a b Quoted in Orenstein (2003), pp. 485–486
  11. ^ a b Nichols, p. 322
  12. ^ "Music", The Boston Globe, 23 April 1932, p. 4
  13. ^ "Stokowski gives curious concert", The Philadelphia Inquirer, 23 April 1932, p. 10
  14. ^ Orenstein (2003), p. 486
  15. ^ a b c DG CD OCLC 610629801, EMI CD OCLC 855933506, DG CD OCLC 655354721 and Decca CD OCLC 11277617
  16. ^ a b Orenstein (1991), p. 204
  17. ^ Quoted in Russ, p. 133
  18. ^ Russ, p. 133
  19. ^ a b c d e Fleury, Michel. Notes to Ars CD ARS38178 (2015) OCLC 8051028520
  20. ^ "Building a Library", BBC Radio 3, 14 February 2015. Event occurs at 34m 10s.
  21. ^ Prunières, Henry in La Revue musicale, February 1932, quoted in Rogers, M. Robert. "Jazz Influence on French Music", The Musical Quarterly January 1935, p. 68
  22. ^ a b Orenstein (2003), p. 536
  23. ^ Columbia advertisement,The Gramophone, Volume 10, p. xv
  24. ^ "Ravel G major Piano Concerto", WorldCat. Retrieved 19 June 2020
  25. ^ Blair, Iain (February 1, 2011). "Director's Chair: Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu - 'Biutiful'". Post Magazine. Retrieved November 12, 2023.
  26. ^ Dawson, Tom (March 29, 2022). "Biutiful - Alejandro González Iñárritu interview". The Liast. Retrieved November 12, 2023.
  27. ^ Justin Marc Joshua Weyn-Vanhentenryck (2020). Dynamic Curves and Poetic Lyricism in Selected Chansons of Jacques Brel (PDF) (Report). The University of Texas at Austin. p. 78.

Sources edit

  • Nichols, Roger (2011). Ravel. New Haven, US and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10882-8.
  • Orenstein, Arbie (1991) [1975]. Ravel: Man and Musician. Mineola, US: Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-26633-6.
  • Orenstein, Arbie (2003) [1989]. A Ravel Reader. Mineola, US: Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-43078-2.
  • Orledge, Robert (2000). "Evocations of exoticism". In Deborah Mawer (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Ravel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-64856-1.
  • Russ, Michael (2000). "Ravel and the Orchestra". In Deborah Mawer (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Ravel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-64856-1.
  • Sackville-West, Edward; Desmond Shawe-Taylor (1955). The Record Guide. London: Collins. OCLC 500373060.

Further reading edit

  • Lewis, Cary (August 1965). The Piano Concertos of Ravel (M.Mus.). North Texas State University. OCLC 42709867. Retrieved 21 September 2017.

External links edit

piano, concerto, major, ravel, also, piano, concerto, left, hand, ravel, maurice, ravel, piano, concerto, major, composed, between, 1929, 1931, piano, concerto, three, movements, with, total, playing, time, little, over, minutes, ravel, said, that, this, piece. See also Piano Concerto for the Left Hand Ravel Maurice Ravel s Piano Concerto in G major was composed between 1929 and 1931 The piano concerto is in three movements with a total playing time of a little over 20 minutes Ravel said that in this piece he was not aiming to be profound but to entertain in the manner of Mozart and Saint Saens Among its other influences are jazz and Basque folk music Piano Concerto in G majorby Maurice RavelRavel c 1925CatalogueM 83Composed1929 1929 1931DedicationMarguerite LongMovements3The first performance was given in Paris in 1932 by the pianist Marguerite Long with the Orchestre Lamoureux conducted by the composer Within months the work was heard in the major cities of Europe and in the US It has been recorded many times by pianists orchestras and conductors from all over the world Contents 1 Background and first performance 2 Instrumentation 3 Structure 3 1 I Allegramente 3 2 II Adagio assai 3 3 III Presto 4 Recordings 5 Trivia 6 Notes references and sources 6 1 Notes 6 2 References 6 3 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground and first performance editThe concerto was Ravel s penultimate composition He had contemplated a piano concerto based on Basque themes in 1906 1 he returned to the idea in 1913 but abandoned work on the piece in 1914 2 n 1 Fifteen years elapsed before he turned once more to the idea of writing a concerto He began sketching it in 1929 but throughout his career he had been a slow painstaking worker 3 and it was nearly three years before the concerto was finished He was obliged to put it to one side while he worked on a deadline to write another concerto the D major for the left hand commissioned by Paul Wittgenstein 4 The biographer Arbie Orenstein writes that while touring the US in 1928 Ravel had been impressed by its jazz Negro spirituals and the excellence of its orchestras 5 Jazz had been popular in Paris since the start of the decade Ravel had first heard and enjoyed it in 1921 and its influence is heard in the violin sonata completed in 1927 and in the D major piano concerto 6 n 2 The Basque theme mooted in 1906 and 1913 was not wholly abandoned His colleague Gustave Samazeuilh believed that Ravel drew on his earlier ideas for the outer movements of the G major concerto and Orenstein notes a Basque influence in the opening theme of the work 9 In an interview with the music critic Pierre Leroi published in October 1931 Ravel said My only wish was to write a genuine concerto that is a brilliant work clearly highlighting the soloist s virtuosity without seeking to show profundity As a model I took two musicians who in my opinion best illustrated this type of composition Mozart and Saint Saens This is why the concerto which I originally thought of entitling Divertissement contains the three customary parts the initial Allegro a compact classical structure is followed by an Adagio in which I wanted to render particular homage to scholasticism and in which I attempted to write as well as I could to conclude a lively movement in Rondo form likewise conceived in accordance with the most immutable traditions 10 He had intended to be the soloist in the first public performance of the new work but fatigue poor health and pressure of work led him to offer the premiere to Marguerite Long to whom he dedicated the concerto Long who was known for her performances of the works of Faure and Debussy had earlier asked Ravel for a new work She received the completed score on 11 November 1931 and played the concerto at the Salle Pleyel on 14 January 1932 with Ravel conducting the Orchestre Lamoureux 11 A few days after the premiere Ravel and Long began a European tour with the concerto playing in sixteen cities starting in Antwerp and including Brussels Vienna Bucharest Prague London Warsaw Berlin Amsterdam and Budapest 11 The first North American performances were given on 22 April 1932 in Boston and Philadelphia n 3 Instrumentation editRavel told Leroi In order not to needlessly weigh down the orchestral texture I called for a reduced orchestra the usual strings are joined only by one flute piccolo oboe cor anglais two bassoons two horns one trumpet and one trombone 10 Orenstein points out that Ravel or Leroi forgot to mention two clarinets and the extensive range of percussion instruments 14 The full tally of instruments apart from the piano comprises piccolo flute oboe cor anglais E clarinet clarinet in B and A 2 bassoons 2 horns in F trumpet in C trombone timpani triangle snare drum cymbals bass drum tamtam wood block whip harp 16 violins 6 violas 6 cellos and 4 double basses Structure edit nbsp Poster for the 1932 premiere of the piano concertoThe concerto typically plays for about 22 minutes n 4 I Allegramente edit The first movement in G major is in 22 time It opens with a single sharp whip crack followed by an exposition that contains five distinct themes Orenstein says of them that the first suggests a Basque folk melody the second the influence of Spain and the other three derive from the idiom of jazz 16 The development section a lively romp is followed by a cadenza like passage leading to the recapitulation Where a cadenza might be expected in such a concerto movement Ravel writes three first for harp then for the woodwind and finally for the piano the last of these draws on the fifth theme of the exposition An extended coda concludes the movement bringing back some of the material from the development section and finishes with a series of descending major and minor triads 16 II Adagio assai edit The slow movement in E major is in 34 time In contrast with the preceding movement it is a tranquil subject of Mozartian serenity written in ternary form Ravel said of it That flowing phrase How I worked over it bar by bar It nearly killed me 17 The first theme is presented by the piano unaccompanied Ravel said he took as his model the theme from the Larghetto of Mozart s Clarinet Quintet but in an analysis of the work published in 2000 Michael Russ comments that whereas the Mozart melody unfolds across 20 bars Ravel builds an even longer 34 bar melody without repeating a single bar 18 The musicologist Michel Fleury calls the opening an extended monologue in the style of a stately Sarabande and remarks that it derives its curiously hypnotic character from the rhythmic discrepancy between the 34 time signature of the melody in the right hand and the 38 signature of the accompaniment 19 After thirty bars about three minutes in a typical performance n 5 the solo flute enters with a C and oboe clarinet and flute carry the melody into the second theme 19 There follows a more dissonant episode imbued with what Fleury calls a slight sense of trepidation the orchestra plays slowly ascending chord progressions while the piano part consists of iridescent harmonies The cor anglais reintroduces the opening theme beneath the piano s delicate filigree in the high register 19 III Presto edit The finale in G major is in 24 time At just under four minutes in a typical performance it is much the shortest of the three n 6 Four brisk chords at the beginning launch what Fleury describes as an unstoppable onslaught spurred on by the shrieks of the clarinet and the piccolo the donkey brays of the trombone and occasional fanfare flourishes in the brass 19 Orenstein finds the opening recalls the carnival atmosphere of Stravinsky s Petrushka or Satie s Parade The solo part begins with a series of demisemiquavers marked to be played piano a technically demanding combination 20 The music progresses through several modes before coming to its conclusion with the same four chords with which the movement begins 19 Reviewing the premiere of the work Henry Prunieres wrote The spirit of jazz indeed animates this last movement but with extreme discretion 21 Recordings edit The first recording of the concerto made in 1932 featured Marguerite Long as soloist with an ad hoc orchestra of the best players in Paris 22 conducted according to the label by the composer 23 In fact Ravel supervised the recording sessions while a more proficient conductor Pedro de Freitas Branco took the baton 22 The many later recordings include Soloist Orchestra Conductor YearLeonard Bernstein Philharmonia Orchestra Leonard Bernstein 1948Monique Haas NDR Sinfonieorchester Hans Schmidt Isserstedt 1948Nicole Henriot Paris Conservatoire Orchestra Charles Munch 1949Jacqueline Blancard Orchestre de la Suisse Romande Ernest Ansermet 1953Vlado Perlemuter Concerts Colonne Jascha Horenstein 1955Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli Philharmonia Orchestra Ettore Gracis 1957Leonard Bernstein Columbia Symphony Orchestra Leonard Bernstein 1958Philippe Entremont Philadelphia Orchestra Eugene Ormandy 1960Samson Francois Orchestre de la Societe des concerts du Conservatoire Andre Cluytens 1961Julius Katchen London Symphony Orchestra Istvan Kertesz 1965Monique Haas Orchestre National de France Paul Paray 1965Martha Argerich Berliner Philharmoniker Claudio Abbado 1967Werner Haas Orchestre National de l Opera de Monte Carlo Alceo Galliera 1969Alicia de Larrocha London Philharmonic Orchestra Lawrence Foster 1973Aldo Ciccolini Orchestre de Paris Jean Martinon 1974Yvonne Lefebure Orchestre national de l ORTF Paul Paray 1977Pascal Roge Montreal Symphony Orchestra Charles Dutoit 1982Martha Argerich London Symphony Orchestra Claudio Abbado 1984Jean Philippe Collard Orchestre National de France Lorin Maazel 1986Louis Lortie London Symphony Orchestra Rafael Fruhbeck de Burgos 1989Cecile Ousset City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra Simon Rattle 1991Alicia de Larrocha St Louis Symphony Orchestra Leonard Slatkin 1991Helene Grimaud Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Jesus Lopez Cobos 1992Jean Yves Thibaudet Montreal Symphony Orchestra Charles Dutoit 1995Krystian Zimerman Cleveland Orchestra Pierre Boulez 1995Pascal Roge Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra Bertrand de Billy 2004Zoltan Kocsis Budapest Festival Orchestra Ivan Fischer 2006Francesco Tristano Schlime Russian National Orchestra Mikhail Pletnev 2006Yundi Li Berliner Philharmoniker Seiji Ozawa 2007Pierre Laurent Aimard Cleveland Orchestra Pierre Boulez 2010Martha Argerich Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana Jacek Kaspszyk 2012Yuja Wang Tonhalle Orchester Zurich Lionel Bringuier 2015Francesco Piemontesi Orchestre de la Suisse Romande Jonathan Nott 2022 Source WorldCat 24 Trivia editMexican film director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu got the idea for his film Biutiful after listening to this concerto 25 26 and the second movement features prominently in the film s soundtrack Jacques Brel used phrases of the second movement of Ravel s Piano Concerto in G in his chanson Les Desesperes 27 Notes references and sources editNotes edit The concerto was to be called Zaspiak Bat The Seven Are One a single movement work with seven episodes each using a theme from one of the seven Basque provinces 2 Ravel remarked that The most captivating part of jazz is its rich and diverting rhythm Jazz is a very rich and vital source of inspiration for modern composers and I am astonished that so few Americans are influenced by it 7 The music critic Jonathan Swain suggests that a theme in the first movement shortly before figure 10 in the 1932 Durand score of the G major concerto is reminiscent of J ai deux amours a song made famous in Paris by Josephine Baker 8 The soloist in Boston was Jesus Maria Sanroma with the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Serge Koussevitzky 12 in Philadelphia the soloist was Sylvan Levin with the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Leopold Stokowski 13 In recordings by Krystian Zimerman Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli Martha Argerich and Pascal Roge the playing times are 22m 6s 21m 58s 22m 14s and 22m 03s respectively 15 In the recordings by Zimerman Michelangeli Argerich and Roge mentioned above the flute enters at 3m 2s 3m 3s 3m 1s and 3m 10s respectively 15 In the recordings by Zimerman Michelangeli Argerich and Roge referred to above the movement lasts 3m 57s 3m 58s 3m 55s and 3m 54s respectively 15 References edit Orenstein 1991 p 72 a b Orledge p 34 Sackville West and Shawe Taylor p 607 Nichols p 313 Orenstein 2003 p 10 Orenstein 1991 pp 198 199 and 202 Rogers M Robert Jazz Influence on French Music The Musical Quarterly January 1935 p 64 Building a Library BBC Radio 3 14 February 2015 Event occurs at 7m 55s Nichols p 328 a b Quoted in Orenstein 2003 pp 485 486 a b Nichols p 322 Music The Boston Globe 23 April 1932 p 4 Stokowski gives curious concert The Philadelphia Inquirer 23 April 1932 p 10 Orenstein 2003 p 486 a b c DG CD OCLC 610629801 EMI CD OCLC 855933506 DG CD OCLC 655354721 and Decca CD OCLC 11277617 a b Orenstein 1991 p 204 Quoted in Russ p 133 Russ p 133 a b c d e Fleury Michel Notes to Ars CD ARS38178 2015 OCLC 8051028520 Building a Library BBC Radio 3 14 February 2015 Event occurs at 34m 10s Prunieres Henry in La Revue musicale February 1932 quoted in Rogers M Robert Jazz Influence on French Music The Musical Quarterly January 1935 p 68 a b Orenstein 2003 p 536 Columbia advertisement The Gramophone Volume 10 p xv Ravel G major Piano Concerto WorldCat Retrieved 19 June 2020 Blair Iain February 1 2011 Director s Chair Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu Biutiful Post Magazine Retrieved November 12 2023 Dawson Tom March 29 2022 Biutiful Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu interview The Liast Retrieved November 12 2023 Justin Marc Joshua Weyn Vanhentenryck 2020 Dynamic Curves and Poetic Lyricism in Selected Chansons of Jacques Brel PDF Report The University of Texas at Austin p 78 Sources edit Nichols Roger 2011 Ravel New Haven US and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10882 8 Orenstein Arbie 1991 1975 Ravel Man and Musician Mineola US Dover ISBN 978 0 486 26633 6 Orenstein Arbie 2003 1989 A Ravel Reader Mineola US Dover ISBN 978 0 486 43078 2 Orledge Robert 2000 Evocations of exoticism In Deborah Mawer ed The Cambridge Companion to Ravel Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 64856 1 Russ Michael 2000 Ravel and the Orchestra In Deborah Mawer ed The Cambridge Companion to Ravel Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 64856 1 Sackville West Edward Desmond Shawe Taylor 1955 The Record Guide London Collins OCLC 500373060 Further reading editLewis Cary August 1965 The Piano Concertos of Ravel M Mus North Texas State University OCLC 42709867 Retrieved 21 September 2017 External links editPiano Concerto Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Program notes from the New York Philharmonic PDF Concerto pour piano et orchestre en sol majeur at Piano Society Portal nbsp Classical Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Piano Concerto in G major Ravel amp oldid 1197936727, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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