The Piano Concerto No. 5 in F major,
Op. 103, popularly known as The Egyptian, was
Camille Saint-Saëns' last
piano concerto. He wrote it in 1896, 20 years after his
Fourth Piano Concerto, to play himself at his own Jubilee Concert on May 6 of that year. This concert celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of his début at the
Salle Pleyel in 1846.
This concerto is nicknamed "The Egyptian" for two reasons. Firstly, Saint-Saëns composed it in the temple town of
Luxor while on one of his frequent winter vacations to
Egypt, and secondly, the music is among his most exotic, displaying influences from
Javanese and
Spanish as well as Middle-eastern music. Saint-Saëns said that the piece represented a sea voyage.[1]
Saint-Saëns himself was the soloist at the première, which was a popular and critical success.
The Allegro animato alternates several times between two contrasting themes. It begins warmly, introducing a simple subject on the piano, which is imbued at each new variation with increasing energy by a brilliant and technically challenging piano part featuring runs up and down the keyboard. This dissolves into a much slower, more melancholic subject, recalling that of the Andante sostenuto movement of Saint-Saëns'
second piano concerto. Like waves, the two lead into one another until finally the second theme gives way to a gentle coda.
The Andante, traditionally the slow and expressive movement in
concerto form, begins literally with a bang; the timpani punctuate an orchestral chord followed by an intensely rhythmic string part and an ascending and descending exotic run on the piano. This exciting introduction segues into the thematic exposition based on a
Nubian love song that Saint-Saëns heard boatmen sing as he sailed on the
Nile in a '
dahabiah' boat. Lush and exotic, this is the primary manifestation of the Egyptian sounds of the piece and probably the source of the nickname. Toward the end of the section, the piano and orchestra produce impressionistic sounds representing frogs and the chirping of Nile crickets.[2]
Molto allegro
The soloist begins the third Molto allegro with low rumbles suggesting the sounds of ships' propellers before exhibiting a vigorous and bustling first theme that rushes all over the piano. The piano continues in its dizzying motion as the woodwinds and strings bring in a driving new melody. The two combine and overlap, creating an active tension that Saint-Saëns uses to great dramatic effect, concluding the movement with a triumphant flourish. He later adapted these themes in 1899 for the Toccata that closes the Opus 111 series of piano
études.
Classic recordings of this work by
Hisatada Odaka and Kazuko Yasukawa are not currently available. Selected recordings presently available include:
Magda Tagliaferro and the Orchestre Lamoureux, conducted by
Jean Fournet. Recorded 1954. Reported on 3 CD set with other composers APR 2021. Diapason d’or
Jeanne-Marie Darré and the Orchestre National de la Radiodiffusion Française, conducted by Louis Fouretier. Recorded 1957. Reported on a 2-CD set with all 5 Saint-Saëns piano concertos (Emi classics 1996)
Mūza Rubackyté and the Lithuanian National Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by
Hans Martin Schneidt (with Piano concerto n°2, conducted by
Alain Pâris). Live record. CD Doron music 2014
Louis Lortie and the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra (complete piano concertos
n°1,
n°2,
n°3,
n°4, n°5), conducted by Edward Gardner
(en). 2 CD Chandos 2018-2019