LISZT Complete Piano Music, Vol 46 – Berlioz Transcriptions
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Franz Liszt
Genre:
Instrumental
Label: Naxos
Magazine Review Date: 07/2017
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 65
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 8 573710
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Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Benvenuto Cellini bénédiction et serment (Berl |
Franz Liszt, Composer
Feng Bian, Piano Franz Liszt, Composer |
Valse des Sylphes (Berlioz) |
Franz Liszt, Composer
Feng Bian, Piano Franz Liszt, Composer |
Idée fixe (Berlioz) |
Franz Liszt, Composer
Feng Bian, Piano Franz Liszt, Composer |
Marche au supplice de la Sinfonie fantastique (Ber |
Franz Liszt, Composer
Feng Bian, Piano Franz Liszt, Composer |
Pilgrims' March (Berlioz) |
Franz Liszt, Composer
Feng Bian, Piano Franz Liszt, Composer |
Francs-juges Overture (Berlioz) |
Franz Liszt, Composer
Feng Bian, Piano Franz Liszt, Composer |
(Le) Roi Lear Overture (Berlioz) |
Franz Liszt, Composer
Feng Bian, Piano Franz Liszt, Composer |
Author: Patrick Rucker
Bian’s programme spans the Berlioz-Liszt connection, one of the storied relationships between 19th-century composers. When they met in 1831 – Berlioz was 27 and Liszt 19 – their mutual admiration forged a friendship that would endure for 35 years. The earliest piece here, the overture Les francs-juges, dates from 1833, the year of the famous Symphonie fantastique transcription. The latest, the ‘March of the Pilgrims’ from Harold in Italy and the ‘Dance of the Sylphs’ from The Damnation of Faust are both from 1866, the year after Berlioz essentially ended things when he declared the first Paris performance of Liszt’s Missa solennis ‘the negation of art’.
The most successful of these interpretations derive from the more familiar Berlioz scores. A persuasive dreamy quality suffuses the ‘Dance of the Sylphs’. The ‘March to the Scaffold’, later and less pianistically demanding than the 1833 transcription of the entire symphony, scores a bull’s eye in its effective conjuration of the colours of the orchestral original. Liszt’s extended meditation on the idée fixe of the Fantastique emerges as a tender idyll of appealingly wistful innocence. Bian’s understated approach to the Pilgrims’ March from Harold, on the other hand, fails to leave much of an impression.
Though the Benediction and Oath from Cellini achieves a certain cumulative weight, the literally construed repeated chords of the finale grow tiresome. The longest work on the disc, the overture King Lear, seems to lose its way in a thicket of insufficiently differentiated recitative passages. Liszt carefully notated the orchestration of Berlioz’s overture to his unfinished youthful opera Les francs-juges, though not much of its flavour and vigour survives in this performance. In fact, for a sense of the atmosphere and urgency of the score, it’s probably best to look elsewhere.
For a sampling of the quicksilver synergy that the Berlioz-Liszt interaction could achieve, Roger Muraro’s recording of the Symphonie fantastique (Decca) is a good place to begin.
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