Franz Liszt - Mephisto Waltz No.2, S515 (Vladimir Sofronitsky)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 ก.พ. 2025
- Franz Liszt - Zweiter Mephisto-Walzer 'Mephisto Waltz No 2', S515
Performer: Vladimir Sofronitsky
Twenty years separate the famous Mephisto Waltz No 1 from its companion pieces of the 1880s, but the work marks a point of transition to Liszt’s later style. Early critics were shocked by the daring harmonies, especially at the beginning where a devilish pile of fifths is assembled. The original title is Dance in the Village Inn, and refers specifically to a long passage (quoted in the score) from Nikolaus Lenau’s dramatic poem Faust. In the orchestral version the waltz is preceded by Der Nächtliche Zug (The Nocturnal Procession) and the whole work is called Two Episodes from Lenau’s ‘Faust’. Unlike the piano duet version, which is a straight forward transcription of the orchestral work, the solo version is really quite an independent piece. It is not known when Liszt wrote the two extra passages, but this was certainly a habit of his later years when, probably whilst teaching his music to aspiring pianists, he made a good many slight additions and alterations to the published versions-which, happily, may be consulted in the Neue Liszt-Ausgabe.The Mephisto Waltz No 1 (piano version) is dedicated to Karl Tausig; the Mephisto Waltz No 2, in both the concurrently written piano and orchestral versions, is dedicated to Camille Saint-Saëns. The second waltz begins, and dares to end, with the unresolved interval of a tritone-the familiar diabolus in musica, whilst the piece proper is, for all its spiky dissonance, firmly in E flat until the expected climax is shattered by the return of the B-F interval, and the piece ends unmistakably and disconcertingly on B, rather than in B! Anticipations of the harmonic world of Busoni, Skryabin or Bartók continue in the Mephisto Waltz No 3 (which, like its successor, exists only as a solo piano piece).
My favourite recording on this piece at all. Sofronitsky played alike real orchestra. Enormous video!
A very good interpretation of one of my favorite waltzes by Liszt... I like the transition between the first part and the rest of the piece. Thanks for this recording!
Excellent, he makes wonderful narrative sense out of this piece!
Hell yeah
Wheres my Alkan-Lasagna Garfield?
I just realized the first theme ofthis waltz is quite similar to second theme of hammerklavier's fugue
Of course, I prefer the barnstorming of Nyiregyhazi. But this too is excellent!
Why does he play so differently from the score
Improvisation or some similar thing was common in Liszts time, but it could also be a different score than what’s being played