Originally posted by Maclintick
View Post
Années de pèlerinage
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Mandryka View PostHow is the sound?
(His early Bach transcriptions recording on Eloquence received a fabulous transfer, so I have high hopes.)
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Mandryka View PostUnbelievably, jaw droppingly, beautiful and poetic Kempff Liszt here -- very very early and decent sound.
https://open.spotify.com/album/0OS6jAACERS4SWPIpyDLy5
Comment
-
-
It must be unbelievably hard to make music out of Book 3 - you’ve got to somehow “feel it” - it’s music which needs soul and it’s a very strange sort of soul in Bk 3. All those threnodies!
Anyway I think Cziffra’s got the chops and he’s in tune with the the Bk 3 vibe.
One thing that surprised me is how much bass comes out of his piano. I only know because - for reasons too boring to recount - I turned off the amp to the main speakers but left the subs going. The subs are getting a good work out!
I always thought I was too cool for Liszt, but I must be getting old and soppy . . .
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Mandryka View PostIt must be unbelievably hard to make music out of Book 3 - you’ve got to somehow “feel it” - it’s music which needs soul and it’s a very strange sort of soul in Bk 3. All those threnodies!
Anyway I think Cziffra’s got the chops and he’s in tune with the the Bk 3 vibe.
One thing that surprised me is how much bass comes out of his piano. I only know because - for reasons too boring to recount - I turned off the amp to the main speakers but left the subs going. The subs are getting a good work out!
I always thought I was too cool for Liszt, but I must be getting old and soppy . . .
I love book 3 - in fact I love all of the Years of Pilgrimage - but the melancholy ones in book 3 are something else, quite a unique sound world, expression-wise. I recall writing something on this forum - it is probably on the thread about Liszt, I will find it in a sec** - to the extent that the expressive ambit widens over the course of his composing life. Anyway, I'm listening to this which is nice, despite some wrong notes:
**Here it is -
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostOver on the 'now listening' thread I mentioned I was listening to the first book of Liszt's Annees de Pelerinage. It's very nice, very nice indeed, but it did give the impression of a composer whose powers were not yet fully developed; parts of it adumbrate pieces whose expressive power is more concentrated and potent - parts of Vallee d'Obermann foreshadow Andante lagrimoso, and the thin, eerie textures of La Mal du pays anticipate those of Nuages Gris. For whatever reason (because I think the composition of the first two books overlapped, rather than being chronologically separate) the second book, which I am currently listening to, seems stronger than the first. Now, trying to think of the third book, it is apparent about the expressive development of Liszt's music is that it branches out in extremities - the nature of these pieces where the classical idea of contrast and balance is dispensed with, and each composition takes its general expressive-type and really pushes it. So the melancholy of book 3 is fiercer and more tragic than that of earlier pieces, and the spiritual, ecstatic side is yet more so. I am reminded, in thinking of the nature of Liszt's inspired ideas and how they seem to just have appeared ex nihilo is some cases, of Stravinsky and specifically, the Rite, about which I remember reading that his ideas seem to have arrived fully formed - that, rather than 'organically' developing a single idea, instead a plethora of ideas with very distinctive quiddities are stated, juxtaposed, repeated and rearranged, with special attention on rhythmic process (actually I don't know that much about the Rite at all...) where I see distant similarities with Liszt probably has something to do with the improvisational aspects of Liszt and the use of exotic modes, symmetrical scales etc.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by smittims View PostThe three books of the Annees de Pelerinage are scheduled for the R3 Lunchtime concert today thru Friday.
Book I: Tanguy de Williencourt (today)
Book II: Jean-Frédéric Neuburger
Book III: Nathanaël GouinIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
Comment