Is this a rather underrated work ? I was interested by Suzy Klein’s comments in the recently repeated Revolution and Romance season on BBC4 and that led me to Tom Service’s Guardian article on the piece.I only ever had it on cassette with Beecham conducting but have been really rather impressed by it in Bernstein’s DG account which arrived at the weekend.
Liszt: a Faust Symphony
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostIs this a rather underrated work ? I was interested by Suzy Klein’s comments in the recently repeated Revolution and Romance season on BBC4 and that led me to Tom Service’s Guardian article on the piece.I only ever had it on cassette with Beecham conducting but have been really rather impressed by it in Bernstein’s DG account which arrived at the weekend.
Really well played and recorded - and grips one's attention from the start.
-
-
I'd say it's definitely an underrated work! I love the second movement especially, which evinces Liszt's ear for astonishing harmonic progressions - a quality it shares with the rest of the symphony, but it appears to me to be especially sublime in the second movement.
I don't have the Haselboeck (I have his recordings of all the symphonic poems and the Dante Symphony, but not Faust) but I can recommend this:
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI'd say it's definitely an underrated work! I love the second movement especially, which evinces Liszt's ear for astonishing harmonic progressions - a quality it shares with the rest of the symphony, but it appears to me to be especially sublime in the second movement.
I don't have the Haselboeck (I have his recordings of all the symphonic poems and the Dante Symphony, but not Faust) but I can recommend this:
Comment
-
-
A year or two back Imogen Cooper played a piano transcription of the Gretchen movement in a lunchtime concert - very effective. Constant Lambert was obsessed with the piece and quotes that same movement in (of all unlikely pieces) The Rio Grande. It's a while since I've listened to it - I must give it another airing.
It reminds me in places of what I think is my favourite of the symphonic poems, Orpheus. (And, for anyone who doesn't know it, the choral piece Via Crucis is a wonderful and underrated work - Matthew Best's recording with the Corydon Singers is quite exquisite).
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Roslynmuse View PostA year or two back Imogen Cooper played a piano transcription of the Gretchen movement in a lunchtime concert - very effective. Constant Lambert was obsessed with the piece and quotes that same movement in (of all unlikely pieces) The Rio Grande. It's a while since I've listened to it - I must give it another airing.
It reminds me in places of what I think is my favourite of the symphonic poems, Orpheus. (And, for anyone who doesn't know it, the choral piece Via Crucis is a wonderful and underrated work - Matthew Best's recording with the Corydon Singers is quite exquisite).
was my introduction to Via Crucis. I am also rather taken with:
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostIs this a rather underrated work ?.
On the other hand, the Chorus Mysticus was clearly the model Mahler had in mind for the end of the 8th so.....
Comment
-
-
My first encounter with the Cage 2-piano arrangement of Satie's Socrate was via Riri Shimada's triple CD Satie album:
.
I later got to record a performance by John Tilbury and Tania Chen at the Warehouse, Waterloo.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by BBMmk2 View PostI have Bernstein’s and Masur’s. Both very good accounts.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostAny recommendations for the Dante Symphony ? I don't have that and see that Barenboim , Sinopoli and Masur have all been recommended by Gramophone but in different order by different reviewers !
: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01MQYMUWD
EDIT : Faust was not Dante. See #18 infra
.Last edited by vinteuil; 18-05-21, 15:37.
Comment
-
Comment