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19 Hungarian Rhapsodies,S244 - No. 1 in C sharp minor;No. 2 in C sharp
minor;No. 3 in B flat;No. 4 in E flat;No. 5 in E minor;No. 6 in D flat;No. 7 in D
minor;No. 8 in F sharp minor;No. 9 in E flat (Carnival in Pest);No. 10 in E (Preludio);No.
11 in A minor;No. 12 in C sharp minor;No. 13 in A minor;No. 14 in F minor;No. 15 in A
minor (Rákóczy) Rapsodie espagnole,S254
György Cziffra pf
EMI
CZS7 67888-2 (131 minutes : ADD)
From (HMV) ALP1534(5712)
Reviewed: Gramophone (11/1994)
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These recordings date from 1957-9 and were made at a time when Cziffra's star
shone with a unique, unsurpassed brilliance. Here is all his death-defying bravura: the
dizzying changes of pace and direction, the hair-raising crescendos within the bar (almost
as if a grenade had been tossed into the piano), the steam-drill left-hand accentuation,
and the sky-rocketing flights that leave a trail of sparks in their wake. Rarely has one
idiosyncrasy been more perfectly matched with another. The Liszt Hungarian Rhapsodies and
Cziffra were surely made for each other. Above all, these are so much more, despite their
often outrageous extravagance, than the readings of a 'gipsy' pianist.
Cziffra's characterization can be subtle as well as bold, and the continuous sense of
improvisation (almost as if the music were being composed on the spot, with several added
ornaments and flourishes Liszt forgot), wit and relish is breathtaking. How jaunty the
""Friska"" from the Second Rhapsody sounds after that truly lugubrious
Lento a capriccio introduction, and listen to the final Vivace of No. 11, the last word in
glistening perle pianism. Try the opening of No. 9, the Carnival in Pest, where a superb
sense of swagger and braggadocio is at once followed by the musical equivalent, in the
principal idea, of sly winks and naughty nudges. But pride of place should surely go to
the Rhapsodie espagnole, where Cziffra's alternation of languorous poetry and the most
tightly coiled virtuosity makes the mind reel. The split octave ascent at 9'52""
is one of several instances where the effect is like rapidly applied centrifugal force.
The recordings, when you notice them, vary from the uncomfortably close and airless to a
greater sense of ambience. Yet they do nothing to dim one's overall impression. Cziffra
is, quite simply, unique in this repertoire. |
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