Michael Kaykov - Liszt: Unrivalled (2022) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Michael Kaykov
Title: Liszt: Unrivalled
Year Of Release: 2022
Label: Odradek Records
Genre: Classical Piano
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 48.0kHz
Total Time: 01:02:15
Total Size: 221 / 516 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Liszt: Unrivalled
Year Of Release: 2022
Label: Odradek Records
Genre: Classical Piano
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) / flac 24bits - 48.0kHz
Total Time: 01:02:15
Total Size: 221 / 516 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Sechs geistliche Lieder von Gellert, S. 467: No. 1, Gottes Macht und Vorsehung
02. Sechs geistliche Lieder von Gellert, S. 467: No. 3, Busslied
03. La lugubre gondola, S. 200, No. 1
04. Scherzo und Marsch, S. 177
05. Nuages gris, S. 199
06. Piano Sonata in B Minor, S. 178
07. Unstern!, S. 208
08. Caprices-Valses, S. 214: III. Valse de concert sur deux motifs de Lucia et Parisina de Donizetti
American pianist and scholar Michael Kaykov plays an array of Liszt's most powerful piano pieces, including the Sonata in B minor, as well as two of Beethoven's 'Sechs geistliche Lieder von Gellert' in transcriptions by Liszt, on whom Beethoven once bestowed a 'kiss of consecration'. Of these Beethoven songs we hear Liszt's arrangements of the noble, imposing 'Gottes Macht und Vorsehung' ('God's Might and Providence'), and the sombre 'Busslied' or 'Song of Penitence' a perfect fusion of Beethoven's original material with Liszt's enriched pianism.
When Liszt joined Wagner and his wife Cosima Liszt's daughter in Venice in 1882, he became fixated on the passing funeral gondolas and went on to write two versions of the dark-hued 'La lugubre gondola'. Michael Kaykov plays the second version, which is even more uncompromising than the first, its tonally ambiguous soundworld typical of Liszt's late output. Written a year earlier, Liszt's impressionistic 'Nuages gris' has achieved almost legendary status as a work that paves the way towards modernity, with its twinging dissonances, loose approach to tonality and haunting ending. Also dating from 1881, 'Unstern!' ('Unlucky!') shows just how forward-looking Liszt's music became, with bare tritones, whole tones, jarring dissonances and a terrifying climax.
Liszt's staggeringly demanding 'Scherzo und Marsch' combines two movements into one larger structure a principle that would be taken to further extremes in the Sonata in B minor. This work is one of the most innovative piano sonatas of the 19th century: a continuous whole in which all four movements are amalgamated. The recital is completed by the third of Liszt's Three 'Caprices-Valses', the 'Valse de concert sur deux motifs de Lucia et Parisina de Donizetti', which is based on themes from Donizetti's operas 'Parisina' and 'Lucia di Lammermoor', and is striking for its wealth of ideas and for Liszt's deft combination of waltz themes from the two operas.