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Jorge Bolet: RIAS Recordings Vol.2 (1971-1982) | Audite AUDITE97738

Jorge Bolet: RIAS Recordings Vol.2 (1971-1982)

£11.38

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Label: Audite

Cat No: AUDITE97738

Barcode: 4022143977380

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Release Date: 19th January 2018

Gramophone Editor's Choice

Contents

Artists

Jorge Bolet (piano)

Conductors

Lawrence Foster
Edo de Waart

Works

Liszt, Franz

Annees de Pelerinage, 2nd Year, S161
» no.4 Sonetto 47 del Petrarca
» no.5 Sonetto 104 del Petrarca
» no.6 Sonetto 123 del Petrarca
Piano Concerto no.1 in E flat major, S124
Piano Concerto no.2 in A major, S125
Tannhauser Overture, S422 (Wagner trans. Liszt for piano)

Artists

Jorge Bolet (piano)

Conductors

Lawrence Foster
Edo de Waart

About

Volume 2 of the RIAS Jorge Bolet recordings is dedicated to Franz Liszt, whose works helped launch the Cuban-born pianist's career; it was also his Liszt performances that shaped Bolet's later path. Jorge Bolet shot to fame with the soundtrack of the Hollywood adaptation of the Liszt biography Song Without End. The RIAS recordings also show Bolet to be a Liszt authority.

The piano concertos, conducted by Lawrence Foster and Edo de Waart, are concert recordings: the solo pieces were recorded in the studio. The concert paraphrase of the overture to Wagner's Tannhäuser, whose challenges are feared by most pianists, was one of Bolet's "war horses": few other twentieth-century pianists would have come close to the technical and interpretational perfection with which he performed the work. The recording of the three Petrarch sonnets from the second volume of Liszt's Années de Pèlerinage reveal Bolet to be a master of beautiful sound production and legato playing.

Bolet demonstrates an unerringly clear and perfectly shaped pianism, as well as his understanding of virtuosity: it is never employed for its own sake, but always to illustrate the musical context.

In contrast to the recordings in our first boxed set (AUDITE21438), all recordings presented here are in stereo.

Reviews

The repertoire is all Liszt. Bolet was one of the finest of all Liszt players. Liszt was the composer who, as we have noted before, made his name internationally famous when he played for Dirk Bogarde in Song Without End (chosen, the booklet reminds us, in preference to the younger Van Cliburn). One’s spirits lift even before the ‘play’ button is pressed.  Jeremy Nicholas
Gramophone April 2018

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