Liszt: Schubert and Weber Transcriptions

On this CD:

1. Impromptu, transcription for piano in E-flat Major (after Schubert, D899/2), S. 565b1
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Leslie Howard

2. Impromptu, transcription for piano in G-flat Major (after Schubert, D899/3), S. 565b2
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Leslie Howard

3. Die Rose (3 versions), transcription for piano (after Schubert, D. 745a), S. 556 (LW A17)
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Leslie Howard

4. Jubelouvertüre, transcription for piano (after von Weber), S. 576 (LW A121)
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Leslie Howard

5. Konzertstück, transcription for piano (after von Weber, Op. 79), S. 576a
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Leslie Howard

6. Polonaise brillante, transcription for piano (after von Weber: Opp. 21 & 72) , S. 455 (LW A175)
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Leslie Howard

Liszt: Schubert and Weber Transcriptions, Music, Franz Liszt, Leslie Howard, Chamber Music & Recitals, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Keyboard, Transcription for Keyboard
Liszt: Weber & Schubert Transcriptions
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Liszt the Editor
Liszt: Weber & Schubert Transcriptions

Manufacturer: Hyperion
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

All Works by LisztAll Works by Liszt | Liszt, Franz | ( L ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
Chamber MusicChamber Music | Forms & Genres | Classical (c.1770-1830) | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Keyboard | Instruments | Classical | Styles | Music
Howard, LeslieHoward, Leslie | ( H ) | Featured Performers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
ClassicalClassical | Imports | Stores | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Liszt at the Opera, Vol 4
  2. Liszt: Excelsior! and Other Rare Original Works
  3. Liszt at the Opera: Operatic Fantasies, Paraphrases, and Transcriptions, Vol. VI (Complete Music for Solo Piano, Vol. 54)
  4. Liszt: Complete Paganini Etudes

ASIN: B0000063BV
Release Date: 1998-04-14

Tracks:

  1. Schubert And Weber Transrciptions: Schubert 'Wanderer' Fantasy In C Major - Allegro con fuoco ma non troppo
  2. Schubert And Weber Transrciptions: Schubert 'Wanderer' Fantasy In C Major - Adagio
  3. Schubert And Weber Transrciptions: Schubert 'Wanderer' Fantasy In C Major - Presto
  4. Schubert And Weber Transrciptions: Schubert 'Wanderer' Fantasy In C Major - Allegro
  5. Schubert And Weber Transrciptions: Schubert - Impromptu In E Flat Major
  6. Schubert And Weber Transrciptions: Schubert - Impromptu In G Flat Major
  7. Schubert And Weber Transrciptions: Schubert - Die Rose
  8. Schubert And Weber Transrciptions: Weber - Jubelouverture
  9. Schubert And Weber Transrciptions: Weber - Konzertst
  10. Schubert And Weber Transrciptions: Weber - Polonaise brillante

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Liszt the Editor.......2007-06-09

Liszt's adoration for Schubert and Weber was perfectly genuine. The astounding amount of piano transcriptions Liszt created after Schubert's lieder is testimony to that fact. Leslie Howard has recorded every Schubert transcription, producing a total of 9 discs of Schubert-Liszt. Weber, however, has only occasionally popped up in the Liszt at the Opera series or the Beethoven/Hummel Septet transcriptions, where Liszt's piano transcription of Weber's "Lyre and Sword" is presented. So how is this volume different? With the exception of the 1837 intermediate version of Schubert's "Die Rose," the other Schubert pieces here are the labors of Liszt's editing. Liszt makes minute changes and essentially edits the music for the purpose of making these works easier to play in his own published editions (it should be noted that he did this in the interest of exposing the music he loved to the public). And of course, this recording offers a stupendous trio of Weber transcriptions.

Liszt's, but perhaps more substantially, Howard's efforts with Schubert's Wanderer Fantasie is unbelievably first-class. If there is a top-five ranking of Wanderer Fantasy performances, I have no compunction about placing Howard in such a high rank. Endless paragraphs could be written in praise of Schubert's phenomenal piano composition, but I'll let Howard explain Liszt's edition of this work: "Schubert's text is presented with many an alternative suggestion for the first three movements, either to replace some of Schubert's less pianistic textures (it must be remembered that at the time practically everybody, from Schubert onwards, declared the work unpianistic and unplayable as it stood) or take advantage of the greater compass of the keyboard in the mid-nineteenth century." I've compared Liszt's version with Schubert's original, and it's striking how much more effective the Liszt edition is. Howard further observes that in the final section of the work, "the fearsome arpeggios and semiquavers are all but eliminated and the texture is more orchestral." As far as Howard's indomitable performance, I can only say that Pollini, Brendel, and any other high-caliber pianist I've encountered must greet Howard as a contender.

Liszt also paid attention to Schubert's Impromptus. Howard says, "the Impromptu in E flat major has so many clever little proposals to make a fuller texture and vary repeated phrases that the extra systems printed above the main text pretty well amount to another work altogether." There are noticeable changes in texture, but the music is never damaged by these changes. Regarding the Impromptu in G flat major, Howard notes that it "has only one alternative passage: its recapitulation is astonishingly rearranged with fulsome left-hand arpeggios and the melody played an octave higher reinforced with chords in the right hand; the rest of the piece is unaltered in any way."

Liszt's piano transcriptions of Weber are, like his Beethoven, simply superior in every facet. I've recently heard Weber's own piano four hand arrangement of the Jubilee Overture (Weber: Piano Music Vol 5 - Overtures) and I must stress how much better Liszt's monumental transcription sounds. The music itself is brilliant and melodic, but besides that, we hear Liszt, the master, at his best: capturing orchestral effects, exploiting pianistic sonority and generally bringing a level of craftsmanship to the transcription never before imagined. The quintessence of Liszt's transcribing powers, not to mention Weber's own neglected genius is demonstrated in the Konzertstuck. Liszt's prodigious undertaking transforms this remarkable programmatic Piano Concerto, inspired by a medieval story of a lady mourning the absence of her knight who is off in the Crusades, into a flawless solo piano composition. From the profound melancholy and tempestuous drama of the beginning to the resplendent glissandi and the rousing march at the end, Liszt succeeds in convincing me that an orchestra is not at all needed (or wanted) here.

Bottom line: The lack of reviews for this recording is surprising and I hope any Lisztians, pianophiles, or Schubertians out there will take my word that this volume in the Hyperion Liszt series is a blockbuster: the three Weber transcriptions make such effective piano music and Howard's passionate performance of the Schubert-Liszt Wanderer Fantasie is one of the best I've heard.

Music Track:

  1. Lyadov: Musical Snuffbox Op32; Variations Op35
  2. Magnificent Caruso
  3. Mahler: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 9
  4. Martin Jean, Organist
  5. Millennium Music
  6. Mozart: Piano Concertos 21 & 24
  7. Mozart, Schubert: Chamber Music
  8. Mozart: Six Trios for Piano, Violin & Cello
  9. Mozart: Symphonies 32,35,36,39,41
  10. Mozart: Symphonies KV 114, 134, 201

Music Track

music track

Recommended Music:

Hank Marvin [Import]

Nielsen: Symphonies No. 4 'The Inextinguishable' & No. 6 'Sinfonia Semplice'

Jules Massenet: Poëms Vocaux

Music: Spiritual Reflections

Live From Austin [EP] [Live]

Signals through the Glass

Passion Flower

Mozart: Symphonies Nos. 38 & 40

Lost in Transit

Out of Nowhere

Post

Piano Masters Jazz [Box set] [Import]

Pa Puros Compas

The Fear Is What Keeps Us Here

Paradise