Franz LISZT (1811-1886)
CD 1
La Leggierezza (Concert Etude No. 2 in F minor) [4.21]
Un Sospiro (Concert Etude No..3 in D flat major) [4.41]
Funérailles (Harmonies Poétiques et Réligieuses) [12.37]
Paysage (Etudes d’exécution Transcendante, Etude No.3) (1852) [4.41]
Ricordanza (Etudes d’exécution Transcendante, Etude No.9) (1852)
[9.23]
Hungarian Rhapsody No.4 in E flat major S244 [4.49]
Sonetto 47 del Petrarca (Années de Pèlerinage, Deuxième
Année, Italie) S161 (1858) [5.56]
Sonetto 123 del Petrarca (Années de Pèlerinage, Deuxième
Année, Italie) S161 (1858) [6.02]
Valse Oubliée No.1 (Années de Pèlerinage, Deuxième
Année, Italie) S161 (1858) [2.41]
Mephisto Waltz (Années de Pèlerinage, Deuxième Année,
Italie) (1858) [3.54]
La Capriccioso No.2 in E flat major (Grandes Etudes de Paganini) S141 [4.42]
La Chasse No.5 in E major (Grandes Etudes de Paganini) S141 [2.56]
La Campanella No.3 in G sharp minor (Grandes Etudes de Paganini) [4.36]
CD 2
Réminiscences de ‘Robert la Diable’ de Meyerbeer; valse infernale
S413 [10:02]
Gnomenreigen [2:49]
Mephisto Polka S217 [3:59]
Mephisto Waltz No.1 [10:39]
Réminiscences de ‘Don Juan’ de Mozart S148 [17:04]
Waltz from ‘Faust’ by Gounod S407 [10:10]
Earl Wild (piano)
rec. Chicago, 1979 (tracks CD 1: 1 and 2), Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, 1973
(CD 1: tracks 3-10), Tokyo, 1983 (CD 1: tracks 11-13); CD 2: 1968, Vanguard
LP. ADD
PIANO CLASSICS PCLD 0021 [72.13 + 55:03]
This two-disc compilation constitutes a veritable feast for admirers of Earl
Wild. All the performances on disc one were recorded live in London (1973),
Chicago (1979) and in Tokyo (1983) and were first issued on Ivory Classics 73002,
from which company it has been licensed by Piano Classics. Liszt is a Wild speciality
and the means at his disposal: a quicksilver, dramatic, leonine control over
rhetoric, a big, burnished malleable tone and an incisive command of structure.
This suits very well as a description of his mature playing of the B minor sonata
- a piece not here - though we have more than one example of his way with it
on other Ivory releases. Instead we have more than enough to demonstrate quite
why he has been held in such esteem - and awe - these many years. I should sound
a mild cautionary note about the recording quality from these venues first;
there can be a clangourous sound that, very occasionally, leads to climax distortion.
But I should also add that these are, by and large, rare moments and I can guarantee
that, so swept up will you be in some incendiary music-making, that you won’t
notice, still less care.
Let’s start with La Leggierezza in this extrovert, propulsive and
intoxicating reading. Yes, maybe he can push the rhythm in his driving torrent
but just listen to the brilliantine treble, the stunning technical resource,
and also the interpolated (Wild composed) coda, a witty sign-off in the tradition
of Leschetizky. Such leonine magnificence is heard in Un Sospiro the
changing performances of which the assiduous Wild collector can trace back to
a 1946 Stradivarius LP and thence forward to Etcetera LPs and CDs in 1987 as
well as a Pearl disc from 2000. Funérailles receives a high wire
and unremittingly virtuosic traversal, magnificently contoured and strongly
rhetorical with an intensifying screwing up of tension. It’s only slightly
vitiated by a somewhat clangy piano attack, as preserved in the recording, which
can blunt the ultimate transmission of that level of tension and power. For
a more nuanced and less Krakatoan performance try the Quintessence LP of the
late seventies or the Etcetera discs already cited. But there is really very
little to quibble with here, even given the octane frenzy Wild exhibits with
such panache. It’s a slight shame that Paysage ends so abruptly
- leading me to speculate an instant outburst of applause (it does slightly
break the spell) - and whilst Ricordanza isn’t quite note-perfect,
should such considerations trouble you, it has a truly noble poeticism throughout.
The Valse Oubliée No.1 is full of flighty wit and colouristic
skill and depth. There’s some tape hiss in La Chasse but such is
the dramatic incision of the playing on offer, so reverberant are the flourishes,
that one feels oneself in some huge Vulcanic forge scorched by the energy of
the pianism. The two Petrarch Sonnets are examples of super-Romanticism in action;
more ascetic listeners might find these and the recital as a whole too much
red meat but one always finds that Wild is ultimately on the side of the Angels
and generally doesn’t go in for trick inflations, texture thickenings
or the like. For readers who may blanch there are always the rather more measured
studio recordings; in the case of the Sonnets for instance go to Etcetera for
No.47 and to a multiplicity of sources for No.123 - I’d recommend an EMI
disc of 1973 if you can get it or the Quintessence LP of 1978. Such is the bravura
of the playing that avenues like this open up all the time.
For the second disc we go to rather better established territory via a Vanguard
LP of 1968. This needs less saying about it. It simply exudes Wild’s protean
greatness and rightness in matters Lisztian. There’s a vast reservoir
of technical adroitness on offer, fusillades of diablerie in a repertoire designed
to show it off. Meyerbeer and Mozart, through Robert le Diable and Don
Juan, light the fuse for Liszt’s exceptionally punishing writing.
Wild offers a battery of pianistic delights, barnstorming in the Meyerbeer concoction,
glittering and witty in the Mozart (and never interested in speed for its own
sake), precise in Gnomenreigen, and wisely warm in passages in the Mephisto
Waltz. Incidentally there’s a particular pleasure to be taken in hearing
the much less well known Mephisto Polka where the echo effects are expertly
realised.
A strong entry for Wildeans. Prepare to be gloriously singed.
Jonathan Woolf
A strong entry for Wildeans. Prepare to be gloriously singed.