Rachmaninoff – Concerto No. 2 in C minor for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 18
by Michael Clive PERFORMANCE TIME: 32 MINUTES
Sergei Rachmaninoff
- Moderato
- Adagio sostenuto
- Allegro scherzando
One can hear the brooding depressive as well as the ardent romantic throughout the concerto. In the first movement, marked moderato and written in C minor, an opening of intense foreboding builds through a series of powerful chiming chords in the piano. As the tension builds to a breaking point, the piano’s simulated chiming rolls into a sweeping main theme that is taken up in the violins but quickly engulfs the entire orchestra. From this moment on—indeed, from the very opening bars, with the piano’s lone voice—the concerto announces itself as a hugely scaled musical statement that balances sweeping, melancholy “outdoor” phrases with romantic “interior” melodies.
The concerto ends in a flourish of virtuosity and optimism. The last movement, an allegro, opens with an introduction that moves away from the previous movement’s E major, where the music was lush but the emotions lingered in an atmosphere of twilit moodiness. To close, it moves from C minor to C major with ever-increasing tension and energy. The final thematic statements and coda are resolved in C major, in a loud and ecstatic finale.
