Daniil Trifonov, The Philadelphia Orchestra, Yannick Nézet-Séguin DESTINATION RACHMANINOV - DEPARTURE
Amid the excitement over a rediscovered rehearsal tape of the
composer playing Symphonic Dances, there arrives a new account of two
concertos with Rachmaninov’s favourite orchestra and the living pianist
who most resembles him. Deutsche Grammophon has titled the album Destination Rachmaninov. Departure and
furnished the cover with a portrait of the soloist, Daniil Trifonov,
sitting in the kind of railway compartment that went out with shellac
records. Do not be distracted by these marketing tricks.
Trifonov opens with C minor concerto with quiet authority, each chord
darker than the one before, Rachmaninov at his most morose. If this
concerto had a physical colour it would be brown, streaked with
alabaster flashes of erotic fantasy. Trifonov paints brown deeper than
any pianist of the present generation, or the last. He inhabits
Rachmaninov’s peculiar mindset, rooted in Russia yet drawn to the West,
deeply pessimistic yet abnormally energetic, introspective yet
showman-like. The finale of the second concerto comes as close to the
source as any recording I know.
The fourth concerto, always problematic, is propelled at speed by
Yannick Nézet-Séguin and played by the Philadelphia Orchestra with
something of the burnish that so captivated the composer. The Three
Blind Mice central movement, often made to sound simplistic, acquires an
edge of menace. The finale is pure helter-skelter. Between the two
concertos, Trifonov plays Bach transcriptions, just as Rachmaninov might
have done. This recording stands with the greats. (Norman Lebrecht)
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