For those without any 
                Liszt orchestral music in their collection 
                this might make a good start-up disc 
                by virtue of the selection of works. 
                There are two symphonic poems including 
                the most well known - Les Préludes, 
                an orchestral arrangement of Liszt’s 
                most famous piano piece – the second 
                Hungarian Rhapsody, and one of 
                the two piano concertos. 
              
 
              
Liszt, "the Great 
                Romantic", had such contrasting 
                sides to his musical personality that 
                some people have thought they amounted 
                to a form of schizophrenia. This can 
                be heard in the music where we can rapidly 
                be taken from a brooding, restrained, 
                ruminative lyricism to macho flamboyance; 
                the latter quality visually expressed 
                in the cartoon on the disc cover. Conductors 
                tend to lean more to one side than the 
                other, perhaps reflecting their own 
                personalities. Those who try to compromise 
                can end up with performances that fall 
                between two stools. I feel this is the 
                case with, for example, Bernard Haitink 
                whose recording of Les Préludes 
                sounds surprisingly bland. Leonard 
                Bernstein, as you might expect, goes 
                for glittering panache whereas with 
                Karajan we get blended beauty in the 
                slow romantic passages. 
              
 
              
The Soviet-born conductor, 
                Vakhtang Jordania, definitely goes for 
                the macho approach at the expense of 
                brooding romanticism. The Russian Federal 
                Orchestra is ideally suited to this 
                treatment, for although they might be 
                a little short on beauty of string tone, 
                they certainly make up for it with hefty 
                and often exciting blasts of brass. 
                That said, the strings are recorded 
                so close here that they are in danger 
                of stealing the brass desks’ thunder. 
                There is also an emphasis on rhythm 
                which you do not always get in these 
                works. In the First Piano Concerto the 
                pianist, Hooshik Hwang fits in perfectly 
                with the style. Although he comes from 
                South Korea, there is something of the 
                ivory basher about his playing that 
                one associates with some Russian (or 
                Soviet) virtuosi. This is a man who 
                is at home thumping out his double octaves 
                and sufficiently cavalier about it that 
                he is not averse to the odd wrong note. 
              
 
              
These are out-going 
                performances that bring out the extrovert 
                side of Liszt’s character and with that 
                proviso can certainly be enjoyed. Apart 
                from Les Préludes, the 
                recorded sound has considerable depth 
                and this may reflect the venue which 
                is the Great Hall of the Tchaikovsky 
                Conservatory. I rather like it but some 
                may find it over-reverberant, something 
                that particularly affects the piano 
                sound and tends to emphasise the bass. 
                Les Préludes was recorded 
                in Moscow’s Radio Palace Hall which 
                clearly has a damper acoustic. 
              
John Leeman