Originally posted by umslopogaas
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In addition to the Schiller/Humphreys 2-piano version of Fantasia Contrappuntistica, there's one by Stevenson and Banowetz, also on Altarus, that's well worth getting.
Busoni's piano concerto isn't often played, even these days, largely because of its size and the forces required for it, but it's anything but "tosh"(!) and it has been recorded quite few times now; a pity that none of these recordings is by Carlo Grante, a great Busoni exponent whom I heard perform it in Rome several year ago Yes, Ogdon's recording is unsurpassable although some of the orchestral playing on it leaves rather much to be desired; in that particular respect, Hamelin's is much better (and it's conducted by Elder, who was already well familiar with the work having conducted it with Donohoe many years earlier, just as, curiously, Fabio Luisi, who conducted the Grante performance I attended, had also performed, though not recorded, it with Hamelin.
The Toccata for piano is a must, as are the seven Elegies and six Sonatinas for piano. There's also a violin concerto, on a much smaller scale and of less substance than the piano concerto but still well worth getting to know. Then there's Berceuse Élégiaque, Nocturne Symphonique...
Curiously, I once attended a recital in London many years ago by Ricci and Ogdon in which I understood they were supposed (according to advance publicity) to play Busoni's "Violin Sonata in E minor", a great favourite of mine written at around the time of the composer's piano concerto; when they began to play, I couldn't understand what on earth was going on until I looked down at the programme booklet to find that they were playing his first, not his second, violin sonata (and those who know will realise that they're both in the same key and I knew nothing of that first one at the time!).
All four operas are well worth getting to know and although the first, Die Brautwahl, is perhaps rather too long for its own good, much from it turns up as the opening of his much later piano Toccata; as already mentioned, Barenboim's the man for this...
The problem with the unfinished ending of Doktor Faust is which completion to use; Jarnach's is undoubtedly flawed, Beaumont's has more going for it and there have been two by Stevenson, neither of which has yet seen the light of day - and there's another by Larry Sitsky which looks to be impressive but which I have yet to hear.
OK, it's high time I shut up, dismounted from this particular one of the hobby-horses in my stable and gave someone else a word in edgeways!...
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