Anton Rubinstein - Piano Concerto No. 5 (1874)
I.
Allegro Moderato - 00:00
II.
Andante - 22:32
III. Allegro - 32:37
Anton Rubinstein was one of the
Romantic era's most charismatic musical figures, and near the last in a line of pianist-composers that reached a climax with
Liszt,
Busoni, and
Rachmaninov. As a performer, some thought him at times to rival even Liszt himself. Rubinstein's reputation as one of
Russia's seminal composers of the nineteenth century has remained controversial to this day, with much of his vast compositional output remaining unexplored either on the concert platform or on recordings even in his own country
.
Over the final 44 years of his life Rubinstein published eight works for piano and orchestra, with the five concertos dating from 1850-1874. Two earlier unpublished piano concertos, now lost, were written in 1849, and a third "concerto" was revised and published as the
Octet, Op. 9. During the later 19th and early
20th centuries the concertos achieved enormous popularity, not only when performed by the composer himself, but by such distinguished artists as
Hans von Bülow, Busoni,
Anna Essipova,
Paderewski, Rachmaninov, and the composer's own brother
Nikolai.
Josef Hofmann, Rubinstein's most noted pupil, continued to perform both the
Third and
Fourth Concertos well into the
1940s, and
Josef Lhévinne made his
United States début in
1906 with the
Fifth Concerto.
The Fifth Concerto was composed in 1874. It is by far the most gargantuan of any of Rubinstein's piano and orchestra works, both by virtue of its nearly fifty minutes of music and the extreme physical demands made on the soloist. Significantly, Rubinstein dedicated the Fifth Concerto to
Charles Valentin Alkan (real name
Morhange), the eccentric
French pianist-composer whose own keyboard works often contain similar pianistic extravagances. Rubinstein's writing in the Fifth Concerto has been accused of being at times derivative of both
Beethoven and Liszt. Such strong influences were perhaps inevitable for a composer such as Rubinstein, whose style was undeniably influenced both by the
German school stemming from Beethoven and
Mendelssohn, and by the keyboard wizardry of Liszt. Conversely, the influence that Rubinstein's compositions and performance style had on such contemporaries as
Tchaikovsky, Balakirev, and both the young Busoni and Rachmaninov cannot be ignored. Tchaikovsky, who for the most part was caustic in his opinions of Rubinstein's compositions, in his own
First Piano Concerto (which was finished close to a year after Rubinstein's Fifth Concerto) came perilously close to an outright plagiarizing of certain of Rubinstein's pianistic effects
.
In the Fifth Concerto, as in his other piano concertos, Rubinstein largely adheres to traditional structure. The opening huge movement is in sonata form, complete with a solo piano cadenza
. In the opening principal theme given by the orchestra there is a pentatonic flavour, which to the listener sounds vaguely
Oriental. At the close of the movement's exposition section, the series of elephantine, powerful ascending chords played by the piano against the horns of the orchestra must have been a strong stimulus for Tchaikovsky's own famous opening to his First Concerto. Rubinstein's extreme demands for the soloist include extended octave passages and huge chords written expressly for the composer's own mammoth reach, and difficult trills in double notes for both hands.
The dark, sombre second movement is in three-part form, with rhapsodic passages in the piano which punctuate and answer the quiet, folk-like material initially given in the orchestra. After an impassioned solo piano cadenza finally signals the return to the opening material, Rubinstein now reverses the order of themes, then ends the movement with three pizzicatos and a muffled, ominious muttering of the timpani.
The finale is constructed in sonata-rondo form. Like the first movement, it is built on a huge scale, with enormous musical gestures and technical demands for the soloist.
Following several statements of a wild, rollicking theme that might be nicknamed "
The Hunt", Rubinstein has the piano play an
Italian dance tune over a typical
Central Italian drone bass of open fifths
. (In the manuscript Rubinstein indicates this as a "
Tarantella napolitaine populaire".) Considerable glittering technical display for the pianist follows, then a concluding explosion of upward moving interlocking octaves, reminiscent of the close of the first movement of Tchaikovsky's First Concerto, brings this titanic movement to a suitably brilliant conclusion.