

One hundred and thirty-nine years after the first public performance it came to a second “premiere” on 9 January 2014, at the Warsaw Philharmonic with Bulgarian pianist Ludmil Angelov, conductor Vladimir Kiradjiev and the Rzeszów Artur Malawski Symphony Orchestra.Ī recording of the Piano concerto in B minor op. The concerto was presumed to be lost until it showed up in a handwritten score along with other early works and diaries in an estate in the Bibliothèque nationale du France. Peters, but could neither find the manuscript nor convince the publishing director Henri Hinrichsen. After the death of the composer, his student Bernard Pollack tried to have it published by C. Liszt arranged a private concert for the Baroness Olga von Meyendorff, in which he himself played the orchestra part on the second piano.Īnother public performance of the first piano concerto is not known. It nevertheless became publicly known thanks to the enthusiasm of the dedicatee Franz Liszt, for whom Moszkowski played the concerto in the spring of 1875 in Weimar. In his own ironic way he described the unusually extensive first concert as just likely to increase his piano chair to study better works. While dismissing his first piano concerto as worthless, he praised the second Piano Concerto in E flat major op. Later, he developed a critical distance and did not want to publish it, so that he could withdraw the already sold manuscript and revise the work. Although Moszkowski’s first compositions were published since 1874 and he had reserved his opus 3 to a large French publishing house he had in mind, he did not find a publisher right away. However, the piano concerto remained unpublished. The premiere was a success and Anton Rubinstein spoke positively about the concert. The Symphony in D minor (MoszWV 146) and the Caprice op. The first performance of the piano concerto took place on Saturday, 27 February 1875, under the direction of Ludwig von Brenner and with the composer at the piano. Together with his friend and colleague Philip Scharwenka he rented the concert hall of the Sing-Akademie in Berlin for a concert of original works. 3 (MoszWV 160) was composed during his time in Berlin at the Neue Akademie der Tonkunst where Moszkowski became a teacher in 1872 while he was still a student.
