Product Code: HIQLP037
Artist: PHILHARMONIA ORCHESTRA/BARBIROLLI/JOHN OGDEN
Origin: UK
Label: HI-Q Recordings (2013)
Format: LP
Availability: Enquire Now
Condition:
Cover: M
Record: M
Genre: Classical N

Tchaikovsky/Piano Concerto No.1/Franck

Sealed brand new album cut from the original master tapes. Made in the England.

180g Audiophile Vinyl Cut from the Original Analogue EMI Master Tapes at Abbey Road Studios!

The 1962 International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition, held in Moscow, had joint winners: Vladimir Ashkenazy (then still a Soviet citizen) and the UK's John Ogdon. Ashkenazy was signed up by Decca and went on to carve a brilliant career for himself in the West and is still with us, John Odgon was signed by EMI and also enjoyed a brilliant career as a pianist noted for a phenomenal technique and deep musical sensibilities.

He was also the composer of over 200 works, including 4 operas, orchestral and choral music, 2 piano concertos and many works for solo piano. However, in 1974 he suffered a nervous breakdown and displayed symptoms of bipolar disorder but was nursed back to health and performing by his wife and piano duet partner Brenda Lucas. He had become very active again recording and performing before being tragically struck down by pneumonia as a result of undiagnosed diabetes (he was a big man) in August 1989.

Cut at Abbey Road Studios from the original stereo analogue master tapes with the Neumann VMS82 lathe fed an analogue pre-cut signal from a specially adapted Studer A80 tape deck with additional 'advance' playback head, making the cut a totally analogue process.

In the original June 1963 review in the GRAMOPHONE, Thomas Hearns was torn between the two versions of the same work by Ashkenazy and Ogdon that were both released and reviewed together:
It is in this [first] movement that Ogden excels. His opening is grander (helped by a recording full in body); elsewhere he alternates exquisite poetry with glittering brilliance and some wonderfully skittish delicacy... the sheer richness of the Philharmonia's strings or the recording quality gives them the more glorious sound. If I'm really pushed to a recommendation... I think Ogden has it.