This is arguably the 
                greatest of the four ‘live’ Richter 
                accounts of the Liszt Sonata. It has 
                the drama and power lacking (comparatively 
                speaking) in the 1966 Livorno performance 
                (Philips). There’s also a sense grandeur 
                and space missing from the over-driven 
                1966 Aldeburgh account (BBC Legends), 
                and he brings even more conviction than 
                in the wonderful 1965 Moscow reading 
                (Brilliant Classics). Taken from a Carnegie 
                Hall recital (part of a series he gave) 
                just a week after Horowitz’s famed ‘return’, 
                this is a towering achievement, a performance 
                of muscle and poetry. It has an incredible 
                sense of purpose, the whole work being 
                united with a structural grasp given 
                to only a few. One feels that Richter 
                has his sights set on the end right 
                from the beginning. 
              
 
              
The opening semi-chromatic 
                descent is dark and abysmal, each note 
                taking the listener deeper into the 
                void. The pianissimo lyrical 
                sections take on a profound spirituality. 
                At 14’07" the huge but never forced 
                chords lead to right-hand octaves of 
                the most passionate cantabile and 
                fluid flexibility, which make one forget 
                the percussive nature of the piano. 
                Listen also to the subtlety of Richter’s 
                expression at 16’35", or the shimmering 
                colours he finds at 25’02" and 
                the amazing ease and lightness with 
                which he negotiates the difficult figuration 
                at 25’16". Indeed, this performance 
                demonstrates how Richter could readily 
                combine heart with intellect, passion 
                with stoicism and reserve, power with 
                tenderness; and never do these elements 
                conflict. 
              
 
              
The sound is not as 
                good as for the Carnegie Hall recital 
                from 1960 on ‘Richter Rediscovered’, 
                but it is an improvement on the 
                1990 Philips issue, the last and only 
                CD release. 
              
 
              
Funerailles gets 
                better and better after a slightly matter-of-fact 
                start, and Richter invests all the necessary 
                doom and gloom, sublimity and drive 
                to make this extremely impressive. The 
                selection from the Transcendental 
                Etudes from Moscow 1956 (he never 
                played the whole set, but these are 
                all the pieces he did play) are 
                a first release, in atrocious sound 
                but valuable since these are the only 
                1950s performances of Nos. 7, 8 and 
                10. The performances are on the rushed 
                and exaggerated side, with No. 2 in 
                particular pushed to distortion and 
                full of wrong notes, but Feux Follets 
                is utterly magical, though perhaps 
                less varied than the 1958 accounts from 
                Sofia and Moscow. 
              
 
              
The liner notes are 
                substantial and interesting, and praise 
                must go to Palexa for reissuing such 
                rare recordings. 
              
Alex Demetriou