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Eduard Schütt (1856-1933) was a Russian/Austrian composer. Born in St. Petersburg, he moved to Vienna, where he did most of his composition. This is the second of two piano concertos that I know of, though I have found no trace of the first. Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eduard_... IMSLP: https://imslp.org/wiki/Category:Sch%C... Movements: 0:00 - I. Allegro risoluto 12:48 - II. Andante tranquillo 18:03 - III. Allegro vivace If you like what I do, please consider supporting me on Patreon: patreon.com/ForgottenPianoConcertos Patrons get priority requests and early access on all my videos. This is the first of my Phase Two pieces (originally done in MuseScore) to get a remaster. I finished all of my Phase One remasters, so I can now move onto these. This was one of my favorite pieces that I've discovered since starting the channel (certainly one of the best pieces I found myself rather than having it recommended by viewers), so it was the first one to get the treatment. The original version still holds up for the most part, but NotePerformer does still give it a marked improvement. I've also added some more nuanced tempo changes across the whole piece, and there's a number of ornaments in the 2-piano reduction which are omitted from the full conductor score which I've added in. This version also has one section in the 1st movement where there's an Ossia staff for the piano which I opted not to do originally, but I did it this time. Look for it around 9:35. IMSLP has both the full conductor's score and a reduction for 2 pianos, in separate parts for each. I chose the 1st piano part of this reduction for the video, so some themes which play on the 2nd piano or the orchestra in the full version will not be seen in the video. There are also some minor differences in ornamentation and articulation between the full version and the reduction. I still find this easier to follow while listening than the full score, but if you want to follow along with that, the links are above. I quite like the first and second movements. The second is shorter than I'd like, but the theme sneaks back in near the end of the third. I think the third movement might be a bit too fast, but this is one of the times when the composer provided explicit tempo markings in BPM, so I tried to respect that as much as possible. The only adjustments I made were to the pedaling, which was making the third movement a bit mushy in parts. (How do you write staccato notes with the sostenuto pedal being held at the same time? Completely defeats the purpose.) Disclaimer: Yes, it's synthesized. Obviously real musicians with real instruments would be vastly superior, but this simulated performance is better than nothing at all, which is what existed previously. My greatest wish is that these videos will inspire someone with the means to arrange a real performance and hopefully record and publish it so we can hear them in their full glory. If that someone is you, or you know of an existing recording of this, please let me know and I may add a link to this description.