Franz LISZT (1811-1886)
Totentanz (1865) [14:24]
Petrarch Sonnet 47 (1858) [6:51]
Petrarch Sonnet 104 [5:57]
Petrarch Sonnet 123 [6:11]
Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)
Piano Concerto No. 1 in B flat minor, Op. 23(1865) [33:43]
Sergio Tiempo (piano)
Orchestra delle Svizzera Italiana/Alexandre Rabinovich-Barakovsky
rec. Palazzo dei Congressi, Lugano, 18 June 2004 (Liszt Totentanz); Auditorio
Stelio Molo, Lugano, 26 July 2011 (Liszt Petrarch Sonnets); 29 June 2009 (Tchaikovsky)
AVANTI CLASSIC 10382 [66:21]
Sergio Tiempo is one of the leading pianists of our time, and this interesting
disc of Liszt and Tchaikovsky finds him on good form in repertoire that suits
him admirably. Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1 may be one of the best
loved of all his compositions, and of all piano concertos too, but it is also
one of the most Lisztian of Tchaikovsky’s works. He admired the earlier
master and frequently turned towards him as an example, so to couple the concerto
as here with music by Liszt is an eminently suitable choice.
Tiempo galvanises the performance with a thrilling opening phrase, and though
the relationship with the orchestra doesn’t sustain this kind of frisson
throughout, the performance always sounds well. The vivacity of the finale and
above all, the charm of the central movement, bring many moments to savour.
Liszt’s Totentanz, first performed by Hans von Bülow at The
Hague in 1865, is the master’s greatest work for piano and orchestra,
despite the two concertos. It takes the form of a powerful set of variations
on the Medieval plainchant the Dies Irae, which Liszt first encountered
in the finale of Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique, of which he made
a notable piano transcription. Tiempo’s live performance has real electricity,
with slightly faster tempi than the benchmark recording by Krystian Zimerman
(DG 423 571-2) but rather less rhythmic bite. This may be down to the relative
lack of depth in the recorded sound, but either way Tiempo’s performance
is highly rewarding, with a good piano-orchestra balance and a satisfying collaboration
of intent.
Perhaps the highlight of the disc comes in the three Petrarch Sonnets from the
second book of Années de Pèlerinage, a collection inspired
by literary sources. The piano sound does full justice to Tiempo’s control
of dynamic shadings, while his command of line and keyboard texture is no less
impressive.
Terry Barfoot
Sergio Tiempo is one of the leading pianists of our time.