Richard WAGNER (1813-1883) transcr. August 
            Stradal (1860-1930)
            Die Walküre: Siegmund's Love-Song [4:12]; The 
            Ride of the Valkyries [4:21]; End of the Last Act [17:34]
            Siegfried: Forest Murmurs [6:17];
            Götterdämmerung: Rhine Journey [7:53]; Siegfried's 
            Funeral March [9:17]
            Wesendonck Lieder [26:45]
            Juan Guillermo Vizcarra (piano)
            rec. 17–19 July 2012, Winspear Hall, University of North Texas, 
            Denton, Texas USA
            TOCCATA CLASSICS TOCC0151 [71:56]
	   
        
           
          While I was thoroughly enjoying myself listening to this disc an analogy 
          sprang to mind regarding 19th Century war-horse piano transcriptions. 
          It struck me that – from a 'modern' perspective – they 
          are rather like a great steam locomotive, totally redundant and outmoded 
          but actually rather inspiring and a triumph of engineering!
           
          I have written before that I have an enduring pleasure in hearing a 
          good transcription of something utterly preposterous ... and what could 
          be more preposterous than transcribing Wagner’s Ring for solo 
          piano? The key to raising both the transcription and indeed the performance 
          of it hangs on several far less absurd considerations. These are as 
          follows. How well does the transcriber retain the essence of 
          the work in question? How successfully does the transcriber satisfy 
          the twin musical imperatives of writing a work pleasing as both a virtuoso 
          piano piece and as ‘simple’ music? Lastly, how well is the performer 
          able to surmount the vast technical hurdles implied by the genre whilst 
          producing a performance of real musical value? The reason for my pleasure 
          in this disc is that on every count I would have to say: very well indeed.
           
          To start with the composer/transcriber; August Stradal was yet another 
          of those acolytes of Liszt who seem to have spent a good part of their 
          creative careers trying to out-arrange their master. One can imagine 
          an unspoken conflict between Liszt’s many disciples each trying desperately 
          to produce piano music of ever greater complexity and virtuosity. Along 
          the way Stradal had Bruckner as a teacher and in later life provided 
          important biographical information on both those masters. He also transcribed 
          Bruckner’s Symphonies 1-2 and 5-8 for piano … now there’s a project 
          for Toccata to consider! For those interested the Bruckner transcriptions 
          as well as the 2 Liszt Symphonies, Brandenburg No.3 and other works 
          too can be viewed and downloaded from the IMSLP website – unfortunately 
          none of the works recorded here can be so viewed.
           
          I quite enjoy playing a little game when listening to transcriptions 
          such as this – it’s called “count the imaginary fingers”. The closer 
          you get to twenty the better. Pianist Juan Guillermo Vizcarra makes 
          a staggeringly powerful case for these transcriptions and he is no mean 
          interpreter of Wagner either. The six excerpts from the Ring 
          are grouped sensibly together in chronological order. Hence the disc 
          opens with three selections from Die Walküre. The first two 
          are rather dwarfed by an extended transcription of its closing pages. 
          Siegmund’s Love-song comes first and shows Stradal’s skill 
          at retaining the original voicing of the opera with the hero ‘singing’ 
          in the middle register of the keyboard and the ‘orchestra’ fully represented 
          above and below. Vizcarra is especially skilled at layering the dynamics 
          within these complex textures ensuring that the ear is guided to primary 
          and secondary material. He is a very dynamic player – his performance 
          had me thinking back to the days of LPs and Michael Ponti’s trail-blazing 
          discs on Vox-Turnabout of various Opera paraphrases. Occasionally I 
          did wonder if Vizcarra was overly-muscular which, allied to a quite 
          close and dynamic recording, does risk ‘virtuosity-awareness-fatigue-syndrome’. 
          Conversely, this is music that should overwhelm one in whatever 
          format it is performed. Vizcarra goes on to prove that he is by no means 
          ‘just’ a virtuoso. Indeed I found his pacing of the seventeen minute 
          selection from the end of Die Walküre very impressive. Likewise 
          the single excerpt from Siegfried – Forest Murmurs 
          – is beautifully paced. I say this even if just occasionally the leading 
          melodic line feels a fraction heavy in comparison to the accompanying 
          material but I do feel rather mean-spirited mentioning this.
           
          Malcolm MacDonald in his predictably fascinating and insightful liner 
          cites the two Götterdämmerung excerpts as representing the 
          apogee of Stradal’s art with regard to Wagner. Certainly the sheer complexity 
          of textures that he is able to retain from the original version of Siegfried’s 
          Rhine Journey is astonishing. Again I find Vizcarra’s pacing of 
          the closing pages which then lead with seamless skill into Siegfried’s 
          Funeral March wholly convincing. Given that so much of the orchestral 
          texture in this extraordinarily valedictory passage is built on long-held 
          chords building crescendi this is the one time a piano struggles to 
          maintain the illusion of the original. This is for the simple and obvious 
          fact that a piano cannot play a crescendo without repeating a note or 
          chord. That aside Vizcarra is a very impressive interpreter and Stradal’s 
          transcription builds to a remarkably powerful climax replete with little 
          sky-bursts of keyboard flurries and virtuoso gestures.
           
          Sensibly, the final third of the disc is devoted to a far less rhetorical 
          and grandly dramatic transcription of the five Wesendonck Lieder. 
          These do already exist in the original version for piano and 
          voice. MacDonald explains that Stradal stays essentially faithful to 
          Wagner’s original except in two respects; he changes the order of the 
          songs and moves the vocal line into the middle register again whilst 
          at the same time moving Wagner’s right-hand piano part up the octave. 
          This has the twin effect of making that element of the accompaniment 
          sound immediately more ‘brilliant’ whilst keeping the now inner vocal 
          line clear of conflicting part-writing. Vizcarra is beautifully poetic 
          throughout the cycle although again I occasionally wondered if he strove 
          too hard to give the inner/vocal line prominence. Especially since the 
          placing of this line in a tenor/baritone register changes the feel quite 
          significantly from their mezzo-soprano original. Again this seems like 
          minor carping when one has been given the opportunity to hear such startlingly 
          effective transcriptions in such convincing performances.
           
          Toccata Classics is one of my favourite labels with the questing and 
          quirky nature of the repertoire they offer very much a reflection on 
          the tastes and passions their founder and executive producer Martin 
          Anderson. This disc is another excellent example of his sure-fire sense 
          of rare and unknown music well worth restoring and exploring. More Wagner 
          please but a set of the Bruckner transcriptions really would be something.
           
          Nick Barnard