Franz Liszt, Gaetano Donizetti, Charles Gounod, Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Giuseppe Verdi Richard Wagner, Ferruccio Busoni, Jean-Yves Thibaudet - Jean-Yves Thibaudet ~ Liszt - Opera Transcriptions ~ Wagner A· Mozart A· Donizetti A· Verdi A· Gounod A· Tchaikovsky
Facts
| Artist(s) | Franz Liszt, Gaetano Donizetti, Charles Gounod, Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Giuseppe Verdi Richard Wagner, Ferruccio Busoni and Jean-Yves Thibaudet |
| Studio | Decca |
| Release Date | January 18, 1994 |
| UPC Code | 028943673624 |
Tracks
- Rigoletto: paraphrase de concert (Verdi)
- Valse de concert sur deux motifs de Lucia et Parisina (Donizetti)
- Valse de l'opera Faust (Gounod)
- Polonaise From Eugene Onegin (Tchaikovsky)
- Spinning Chorus From Der fliegende Hollander (Wagner)
- Recitative And Romance From Tannhauser (Wagner)
- Lohengrins Verweis An Elsa From Lohengrin (Wagner)
- Schluss-Szene aus Tristan und Isolde - Isoldens Liebestod (Wagner)
- Fantasie uber 2 Motive aus W.A. Mozarts Die Hochzeit des Figaro (erganzt von Ferruccio Busoni)
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Superb playing |
The pieces are all arrangements by Liszt of popular tunes from famous operas. Liszt wrote many such pieces and, of course it's a matter of opinion, but for my money Thibaudet has selected most of the best ones for this CD. Perhaps the least exciting one is the well-known Rigoletto paraphrase, a piece which has been done to death by so many pianists. I don't know if this is what takes the edge off it, perhaps it even took the edge off it for Thibaudet and so although his performance of this is very good, it is not inspirational like the other pieces.
The Spinning Chorus paraphrase is played superbly and with a great deal of charm and grace. Similarly, the Concert Waltz based on tunes from 2 operas by Donizetti is played with power and charm - brilliant octave and chordal playing throughout and in the exciting finale. The Polonaise from Eugene Onegin is also excellent - you'll be humming the tune to yourself for ages afterwards and listen out for the glittering passage work in the middle of this piece, Thibaudet makes the piano sparkle and sing.
The biggest feat of technique is in the notoriously difficult Figaro paraphrase. Here the music makes many demands of the pianist right from the word go yet when you hear Thibaudet playing it, it's hard to guess at how difficult the piece is so graceful and easy is his playing. There are a couple of minor clinkers towards the end in a fiendish passage but frankly that's neither here nor there. Particularly impressive (for the pianists among you) is his playing of the rapid contrary motion scales in thirds in both hands - such speed and accuracy and he even manages to inject some wit into it. A phenomenal performance.
The Faust waltz is great too. Listen out for the fun glissandos in the recapitulation of the second theme towards the end.
Finally, a word about the Liebestod from Tristan & Isolde. A very performance but the definitive performance of this is by Horowitz in his CD "The Last Recording".
A great CD, destined to become a classic recording. Thibaudet should be proud of this superb piece of work. If only other pianists took the same care to make their playing as polished and musical and imaginative. December 27, 2006
| Thibaudet triumphs on this disc |
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