The Piano Concerto is a
piano concerto based on the music Nyman wrote for
The Piano organized into four phases (one movement). The
saxophone is omitted ("
Here to There" is given to the piano soloist) and the piano is accompanied by a traditional
orchestra. The work is Nyman's second
concerto, having previously written a
saxophone concerto,
Where the Bee Dances, for
John Harle.
The Piano Concerto was first premiered 26 September 1993 at the
Festival de Lille, which was also the debut of
MGV. In his
liner notes. Nyman cites the
definite article as significant, and states the order of composition of the work: Autumn 1991, piano music for
Holly Hunter to play in the film; Summer 1992, orchestral score for the completed film; concerto commissioned by Festival de Lille in Spring 1993.
Jean-Claude Casadesus conducted the premiere of both works. Stott was the premiere soloist. Nyman states that the principal goals of this "reconsideration" threefold: "to create a more coherent structure" for the musical material, elaborates upon the texture for full orchestra (the original was for saxophone and string orchestra), and to make the piano part more virtuoso. The first phase, in
A minor, is derived from the
Scottish folk song, "
Bonny Winter's noo awa"; the second phase is original and chromatic; the third is in
G/
D major and based on "
Flowers of the Forest" (much faster and cut apart) and "
Bonnie Jean" "massively slowed down" on cellos, trumpet, and
divisi violins, and a harmonic phrase derived from material in the first phase, followed by reprises of "Bonny Winter's noo awa" and "Flowers of the Forest." This recording of
The Piano Concerto runs 32:28.
The Piano Concerto has been rerecorded, first in 1996 by
Peter Lawson with the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by
Jonathan Carney, former
violinist and
violist of the Michael Nyman Band, and again in 1997, by
John Lenehan (who had performed on
The Essential Michael Nyman Band in 1992) with the
Ulster Orchestra conducted by
Takuo Yuasa, and released on
Naxos Records with
Where the Bee Dances performed by
Simon Haram, a relative Michael Nyman Band newcomer at the time who is, as of 2008, still a regular member. This latter version is slightly faster and clocks in two minutes shorter, and features a very strong and precise brass section. ==MGV: Musique à Grand Vitesse==