Like his contemporary Max Bruch, Ignaz Brüll lived 
          in the shadow of Brahms and even though his artistic aims were unlike 
          those of the greater composer, he has suffered neglect, much of it unwarranted. 
          The understandable problem with the nineteenth century is that focus 
          is too often on the giants leaving the smaller fry struggling for a 
          place. Brüll made Vienna his home from 1850, drawn like so many 
          to the magnet of the Austrian capital and it was Anton Rubinstein’s 
          positive opinion of his abilities which decided him on a career in music 
          rather than take over his father’s business. Although he became a renowned 
          concert pianist and teacher, it was his opera Das goldene Kreuz (1875) 
          which launched him as a composer, for it had a sensational success right 
          from its Berlin premiere. He could use his playing opportunities to 
          play his music for the instrument, including the concertos featured 
          here, and like Bruch he refused to compromise his conservative ideas 
          and move ahead with the changing musical style. Part of the Brahms circle, 
          he was always the second pianist when Brahms played his latest work 
          in private to his colleagues. 
        
 
        
Both concertos are youthful works, the first written 
          when he was only fourteen years old in 1860, the second eight years 
          later, and very assured and remarkable writing it is, the music cheerfully 
          tuneful with reminiscences of Schumann, Mendelssohn and Chopin, despite 
          some areas of ‘padding’ or predictable moments here and there. The two 
          movements making up the Konzertstück Op.88 is a later work (1902) 
          but effectively does not sound as if much has changed in the past forty 
          years since the first concerto. The piano part in all three works reflects 
          the virtuosity of Brüll’s pianism, and musical structure is conventionally 
          logical. Martin Roscoe plays magnificently, with bright tone and crisp 
          articulation in the cascading passages of the quicker movements, such 
          as the finale of the first concerto, and expressively in the reflective 
          slow movements. A slightly too distantly recorded BBCSSO does its job 
          proficiently under Martyn Brabbins, forming an experienced partnership 
          in the field of the Hyperion series to which this disc rightly belongs. 
        
 
         
        
Christopher Fifield 
        
See also review by Gerald Fenech
        
Hyperion 
          Romantic Piano Concerto Series