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Chicago Concertos: Piano Concertos by Rudolph Ganz and John La Montaine
Rudolf Ganz, John La Montaine, Paul Freeman
Chicago Concertos: Piano Concertos by Rudolph Ganz and John La Montaine
Genres: Folk, International Music, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (7) - Disc #1

Ganz's Romantically styled Piano Concerto in E-flat Major, Op. 32 (1940) and La Montaine's jazzy, impressionistic Piano Concerto No. 4, Op. 59 (1989) are vastly different. Yet besides having spent significant periods of...  more »

     
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Ganz's Romantically styled Piano Concerto in E-flat Major, Op. 32 (1940) and La Montaine's jazzy, impressionistic Piano Concerto No. 4, Op. 59 (1989) are vastly different. Yet besides having spent significant periods of their lives in the Chicago area, the composers share the goal of writing "music that appeal to a wide audience, infusing their work with enough ingenuity and substance to satisfy the most discriminating performer," writes Stephen C. Hillyer in the program notes. Commissioned by the Chicago Symphony for its 50th anniversary, Ganz's concerto, like the rest of his output, is "cosmopolitan, conservative, and -- especially in the work at hand -- uncommonly witty, as was the man himself," Hillyer writes. Born in Switzerland, Ganz studied piano with Busoni in Berlin. He came to Chicago in 1901 and began a long association with the Chicago Musical College, including 25 years as its director (1929-1954). He was music director of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra (1921-27) and led its first recordings for the Victor label. Ganz conducted the New York Philharmonic's Young People's Concerts and guest conducted the symphony orchestras of Los Angeles and Chicago. Born in 1920 in Oak Park, Illinois, home of Frank Lloyd Wright's "prairie style" architecture, La Montaine (who currently resides in Hollywood, CA), studied theory at the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago and composition at Eastman with Howard Hanson. He also studied piano with Ganz for a short time. La Montaine played keyboard for the NBC Symphony during Toscanini's last four seasons (1950-54). "La Montaine's Fourth Piano Concerto," writes Hillyer, "is that rarity in this century (or any other for that matter): a listener-friendly work that immediately appeals with memorable tunes and catchy rhythms, yet grows increasingly impressive with each rehearing." The work, commissioned for the Waterbury (Connecticut) Symphony's 50th anniversary, received its world premiere in 1990. A champion of neglected American piano music, pianist and teacher Ramon Salvatore has received praise for his groundbreaking concerts and recordings on Cedille and other labels. Sadly, this was Mr. Salvatore's last recording: he died of cancer in 1996, at age 51. This recording is dedicated to his memory.