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Llŷr Williams – Wagner without Words (24/96 FLAC)

Llŷr Williams - Wagner without Words (24/96 FLAC)
Llŷr Williams – Wagner without Words (24/96 FLAC)

HiRes FLAC

Composer: Ferencz Liszt, Richard Wagner
Performer: Llŷr Williams
Number of Discs: 2
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Signum
Catalogue: SIGCD388
Release: 2014
Size: 2.09 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

CD 01
01. Tannhäuser: Entry of the Guests (Arr. Franz Liszt)
02. Fantasy
03. Flying Dutchman: Spinning Chorus (Arr. Franz Liszt)
04. Albumblatt für Ernst Benedikt Kietz: “Song without Words” (Arr. Franz Liszt)
05. Lohengrin: Elsa’s Bridal Procession (Arr. Franz Liszt)
06. Zürich Waltzes
07. Götterdämmerung: Siegfried’s Rhine-Journey (arr. Glenn Gould, Llŷr Williams)

CD 02
01. Tristan and Isolde: Liebestod (Arr. Franz Liszt)
02. Parsifal: Transformation Music (arr. Llŷr Williams)
03. Parsifal: Parsifal and the Flower Maidens (arr. Llŷr Williams)
04. Parsifal: Good Friday Music (arr. Llŷr Williams)
05. In das Album der Fürstin M.
06. Rienzi: Santo spirito cavaliere (Arr. Franz Liszt)
07. Sonata for the Book of Mrs. M. W.
08. Ring of the Nibelungen: Walhall (Arr. Franz Liszt)
09. Albumblatt for Mrs. Betty Schott
10. The Meistersinger from Nürnberg: Prelude (arr. Glenn Gould, Llŷr Williams)

Llyr Williams’ double CD on Signum Classics is titled Wagner Without Words, but that familiar phrase usually implies orchestral arrangements of operatic excerpts without singing, along the lines of Lorin Maazel’s The Ring Without Words, or Henk de Vlieger’s symphonic syntheses. Instead, this collection consists of piano transcriptions of music from the operas, as well as several of Wagner’s original piano pieces, so a more accurate title would have been Wagner at the Piano. Williams provides some well-known crowd-pleasers, among them the Liszt transcriptions of the Entry of the Guests from Tannhäuser, the Spinning Chorus from The Flying Dutchman, Elsa’s Bridal Procession from Lohengrin, the Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde, and a handful more of pieces drawn from Parsifal, Rienzi, Meistersinger, and the Ring, all familiar to Wagnerites. But the most interesting selections are Wagner’s piano compositions, including the Fantasy, a Song without Words, the Zürich Waltzes, Sonata for the Book of Mrs. M. W. (Mathilde Wesendonck), and the Albumblatt for Mrs. Betty Schott, all rarities, even on piano collections. These are minor pieces that show a more relaxed and private side of Wagner, and their smaller scale and intimate expressions make a striking contrast with the theatrical music. Williams plays everything with polish and enthusiasm, and while he obviously enjoys the virtuosic showstoppers, he treats the less familiar pieces with special care and sensitivity.

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