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             Franz LISZT (1811-1886) 
              The Sound of Weimar 
              The Authentic Sound of Liszt’s Orchestral Works 
              Volume 2 
              Les Préludes, Symphonic Poem No.3, S97 (1854, pub.1856) 
              [15:35] 
              Orpheus, Symphonic Poem No.4, S98 (1853/4) [10:27] 
              Ce qu’on entend sur la Montagne (Berg Symphonie), 
              Symphonic Poem No.1, S95 (1850, 1856) [30:12] 
                
              Orchester Wiener Akademie/Martin Haselböck 
              rec. live, Liszt Festival, Raiding, Austria, January 29-31, 2011. 
              DDD 
                
              NEW CLASSICAL ADVENTURE NCA60246 [56:34] 
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             Franz LISZT (1811-1886) 
              The Sound of Weimar 
              The Authentic Sound of Liszt’s Orchestral Works  
              Volume 3 
              Hunnenschlacht, Symphonic Poem No.11, S106 (1857) [16:12] 
              Hungaria, Symphonic Poem No.9, S104 (1854) [22:53] 
              Mazeppa, Symphonic Poem No.6, S101 (1854) [18:33] 
                
              Orchester Wien Akademie/Martin Haselböck 
              rec. Raiding, Austria, 29 January to 1 June 2011. DDD. 
                
              NEW CLASSICAL ADVENTURE NCA60250 [58:07] 
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                  These are the second and third volumes of a project, commenced 
                  in the bicentenary year, to record all Liszt’s orchestral works 
                  using 19th-century instruments, hence the use of 
                  the word ‘authentic’ in the English subtitle and Originalklang 
                  in the German. Volume 1 contains the Dante Symphony, S109, and 
                  Evocation à la Chapelle Sistine (NCA60234). 
                  As we don’t seem to have reviewed that here on MusicWeb International, 
                  I listened to it first, courtesy of the Naxos Music Library, 
                  where subscribers can also try out Volumes 2 and 3. 
                    
                  I hadn’t encountered Martin Haselböck as a conductor before, 
                  though I had heard him play Liszt’s organ music – 5 volumes, 
                  also from New Classical Adventure. My benchmark for the Dante 
                  Symphony is the performance by Daniel Barenboim and the 
                  Berlin Phil, the recording which first revealed the quality 
                  of this work, now on budget-price Warner Apex (2564 673012 for 
                  around £6: Bargain of the Month – see review) 
                  or available for download in its earlier Warner Elatus release 
                  from amazon.co.uk for £4.99. 
                    
                  Haselböck adopts slightly faster tempi for the outer movements 
                  but it’s in the second movement, Purgatorio, that he 
                  is considerably faster, without losing any sense of the mixture 
                  of despair for the consequences of sin and the hope of redemption; 
                  like Dante, Liszt places his emphasis on the hope. György Lehel 
                  on Hungaroton HCD11918 takes the movement at a tempo midway 
                  between Haselböck and Barenboim, if you’re looking for a compromise, 
                  though that’s short value with just the symphony. In any case, 
                  I never felt that the new recording was too fast – urgent, yes, 
                  which is appropriate, as opposed to what Ian Lace describes 
                  as the ‘calm and pensive’ mood of the Barenboim, but not too 
                  fast. The Magnificat finale is ethereal. With good 
                  recording, this is such a fine start to the series that it gave 
                  me high hopes for the next two volumes. 
                    
                  Volume 2 opens with probably the best-known of the symphonic 
                  poems, Les Préludes. Here again Haselböck adopts a 
                  faster tempo then my comparisons, James Conlon on Warner Classics 
                  and Gianandrea Noseda on Chandos – 15:25 against 16:49 (Conlon) 
                  and 16:04 (Noseda). Conlon is good but rather stately – writing 
                  about the recent reissue of his version on the budget Warner 
                  Apex label, Ian Lace describes him as ‘grand and imposing but 
                  rather underwhelming’, which I think is about right (2564 66586-1  
                  – see review.) 
                  Noseda’s recordings of Liszt have won golden opinions; though 
                  the views on some of the volumes here at MusicWeb International 
                  have varied, his version of Les Préludes is about as 
                  good as they come. Even so, I wanted to push him along a little 
                  faster at times. (CHAN10341). 
                    
                  Kurt Masur, on the other hand, takes the work even faster than 
                  Haselböck, with an overall timing of 15:07, yet never pushing 
                  the more portentous sections, such as the opening, too hard. 
                  In many ways this exciting account is my benchmark and it’s 
                  available inexpensively on an EMI 7-CD collection. If you subscribe 
                  to the invaluable Naxos Music Library, you can hear it there 
                  alongside the Noseda and Haselböck recordings, but if you follow 
                  the classicsonline.com button to purchase the download at £14.99, 
                  be aware that some dealers charge little more for the CD set. 
                  Either way, it’s extremely good value for seven CDs. The generously 
                  filled single CD where it’s coupled with Tasso, Orpheus 
                  and Mazeppa on EMI Encore is no longer available but 
                  can be downloaded from hmvdigital.com 
                  for £3.49. 
                    
                  Slightly underwhelmed by Noseda and Conlon and somewhat overwhelmed, 
                  though not in a pejorative sense, by Masur, I finally turned 
                  to Haselböck, listening to him first via the Naxos Music Library 
                  in the same quality as I had listened to the other versions. 
                  Here you will find another button pointing you to purchase from 
                  classicsonline.com as an mp3 download in good (320kb/s) sound, 
                  complete with the booklet and all for just £4.99, which seems 
                  to be their generous price for all NCA recordings, as opposed 
                  to around £12 for the CDs. If I marginally preferred the more 
                  vigorous Masur, there was very little in it; I certainly would 
                  turn to Haselböck now in preference to Noseda or Conlon. 
                    
                  Even streamed from NML, the NCA sound is more open than the 
                  rivals – whether that’s due to the use of 19th-century 
                  instruments, Haselböck’s experience as an interpreter of Liszt’s 
                  organ music, also for NCA, or the recording quality, I couldn’t 
                  say. Perhaps the fact that this is a live recording from the 
                  Raiding Festival – though the audience are not audibly noticeable, 
                  even at the end – contributes, too. 
                    
                  In Orpheus and Ce qu’on entend, too, Masur 
                  sweeps the board with brisk tempi – brisker than Haselböck who, 
                  in turn, is faster than Noseda. Once again, Masur is a clear 
                  choice, especially at the advantageous price of the 7-CD set, 
                  and particularly in Ce qu’on entend, which can seem 
                  to outstay its welcome*, yet I find no reason to complain about 
                  Haselböck and a great deal to enjoy. If that sounds like damning 
                  with faint praise, I don’t mean it to. In the performance of 
                  Orpheus Haselböck will have had the advantage of having 
                  drawn on his own experience of recording the organ version of 
                  this work (NCA60144). 
                    
                  By accident, I presume, Volume 2 matches the contents of the 
                  Noseda recording on CHAN10341. Though the Chandos offers considerably 
                  better value, with Tasso adding another 19 minutes 
                  to the playing time – both NCA albums are rather ungenerous 
                  in terms of time – my vote goes to Masur or the new recording. 
                    
                  There is a degree of overlap, too, between NCA’s Volume 3 and 
                  Chandos’s Volume 4 on CHAN10490, with Hungaria and 
                  Mazeppa in both collections. Once again the Chandos 
                  offers much more generous playing time. In these two works Noseda 
                  is actually marginally faster than Haselböck, with Masur slightly 
                  faster still in the former and considerably so in the latter; 
                  I find it hard to choose between them. I’d be happy with any 
                  of the three; if you have access to the Naxos Music Library, 
                  you may wish to make the three-way comparison for yourself. 
                  The music on Volume 3 is less immediate in appeal than les 
                  Préludes; though Hungaria, a colourful work, with 
                  a rousing ending, is sometimes described as an extended Hungarian 
                  Rhapsody, it doesn’t have quite the attraction which that implies. 
                    
                  Mazeppa, retelling the story of the philandering nobleman 
                  who was tied naked to his horse’s back before being rescued 
                  by Cossacks and chosen as their leader, also has its exciting 
                  moments and Haselböck certainly brings out the colourful elements 
                  of both scores. 
                    
                  There’s obviously less to be gained by using 19th-century 
                  instruments in this repertoire than by employing those of a 
                  century or so earlier for music of that period, but I do think 
                  that their use here, coupled with Haselböck’s expertise in performing 
                  Liszt’s organ music, is a definite advantage. 
                    
                  Good as the NCA recordings sound when streamed from the Naxos 
                  Music Library for comparison purposes, they are even better 
                  when heard from the CDs. The presentation is not ideal – rather 
                  flimsy cardboard gatefold designs of a kind which I’ve found 
                  to fall apart in the past, but colourfully illustrated, including 
                  a reproduction of the von Kaulbach painting which inspired Hunnenschlacht, 
                  and with a fine set of notes. At the risk of seeming finicky, 
                  I wonder why the illustration on the cover of Volume 2 is noticeably 
                  larger than that on the cover of Volume 3. 
                    
                  If I were now starting to collect all Liszt’s orchestral music, 
                  even if I already had the piano concertos, I would be inclined 
                  to go for the 7-CD Masur set, not only because it is such an 
                  outstanding bargain but also for the generally greater urgency 
                  of the performances. There are undoubtedly some longueurs in 
                  some of these works, however, and seven CDs may seem too much. 
                    
                  For those who think so, especially those who already have the 
                  concertos and, perhaps, some of the symphonic poems, the new 
                  series of recordings from NCA offers a very viable alternative 
                  and Volume 2 is a good place to begin. For Volume 3, Noseda 
                  on Chandos offers a better alternative. The NCA albums are an 
                  attractive proposition on CD but even more so as inexpensive 
                  downloads from classicsonline.com. I’m also intending to check 
                  out more of Haselböck’s NCA recordings of Liszt’s organ music. 
                    
                  I have one more Liszt orchestral suggestion before I close: 
                  Ilan Volkov conducting the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra in 
                  the Funeral Odes, the symphonic poem Von der Wiege bis zur 
                  Grabe, S107, and two episodes from Lenau’s Faust, 
                  including the first Mephisto Waltz, on Hyperion CDA67856. 
                  We seem not to have reviewed this when it appeared in 2011, 
                  so let me redress the balance now and give it a strong recommendation. 
                    
                  * especially on a recording like that of Michel Plasson with 
                  the Dresden Philharmonic, who drags it out to 32:47 on an otherwise 
                  attractive and inexpensive Berlin Classics 2-CD set (0013412BC 
                  or on a single super-budget CD, 0300136BC – see review). 
                    
                  Brian Wilson 
                    
                   
                   
                 
                                    
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
                   
                 
               
             
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