So then,
Records International kicked ass this week and got this disc to me in 3 days flat! I've listened to the concerto and I have to say that it's a pretty amazing piece. It is unspeakably epic and definitely heavy-handed in terms of harmony and overall tone. It has a real 1960s sci-fi/apocalyptic/exotic-alien-world feel to it, and some of the orchestral parts evoke memories I have of the original Planet of the Apes movies and the movie for Journey to the Centre of the Earth, which I think Bernhard Herrmann scored. There are definitely a few calmer sections to the piece, of which a very beautiful tranquillo section in the beginning of the final 1/3 is noteworthy. As that part develops, it swirls around and around back towards denser harmonies before it pauses slightly and the ensemble wells up like a volcano, delivers the final agitato, and ends on a bright and optimistic C major chord.
The disc also features a whole heap of other solo piano pieces, including the ghostly and beautiful-sounding Etude op. 11/4 in f minor and the very dark and stormy Fantasia No. 2, op. 9 in e minor, of which Christophe Sirodeau says:
"[It's] another example of haunted music, a product of its time. It was composed probably between 1918-19, a period of acute horror and suffering in Russia..."
This piece is definitely worth the attention of anyone who wants to add an extremely intense and emotionally-wrought piece to their repertoire.
I haven't thoroughly listened to the other pieces, which include short pieces ranging from 1917-1955 and a book of children's pieces Feinberg wrote in 1961-2.
All and all, this disc is a fabulous thing to grab up for anybody who likes Busoni (very strong influence on Feinberg during his developmental years), Bacevicius, Sorabji, Szymanowski, Skalkottas (who the pianist Christophe Sirodeau also promotes), Scriabin, or anything under the wide-spanning moniker of neo-romanticism, though the harmony swirls into polytonality and free tonality very often. On top of the disc being great, the booklet is like 20 pages long, with pictures and all.