Sometimes one dusts off an old LP and is surprised to find an excellent performance of a work that one previously thought merely competent or slightly above average. In the age of the CD, where remastering processes can enhance recordings that were encumbered by bad surfaces or a constricted dynamic range, the same effect can occur. Whether this reviewer's tepid reaction to
Van Cliburn's performance of the
Liszt B minor sonata in the mid-1970s was partly due to RCA's processing or to my own misjudgment, he cannot say. The only thing that can be said is that this performance is one of the most compelling on record. The recent
Pollini reissue on Philips' Great Pianists Series clocks in with an almost identical timing (29 minutes plus), but is a far less effective rendering in its straightforward predictability.
Cliburn's approach here is passionate and big, favoring clarity of line at all times. Whenever any important motif appears, he points it up almost pedantically. Yet he does so with imagination and a fine sense for drama. The big tolling-bell chords that come at just before the 10-minute mark have a crushing impact here, and the poetry in all the slower sections comes through with incredible sensitivity. If
Cliburn has a weakness, it might be in his pedaling, which can turn into too much of a good thing and at times impart a slight haze to the sonic happenings. Still, this is one of the finest recordings this sonata has received.
Argerich and Horowitz probably still have a slim edge, but
Cliburn's reading is a valid, compelling alternative to their more blood-and-thunder approaches.
The other works here fare well, too. Un Sospiro and Liebestraum No. 3 are played with just the right mixture of sentimentality and drama. Both Consolations are given rather straightforward and wholly effective performances, as well. The Petrarchian Sonnet is not quite as successful, Cliburn's dynamics favoring mezzo-forte and forte a little too much throughout.
Of the fillers here, the most attractive is the Mephisto Waltz No. 1. Cliburn begins at as swift a tempo as there is to be heard, and he goes on to impart a sense of menace and mystery, of passion and presentiment throughout. The slow music comes through with the requisite sensual twistedness, and Cliburn's ability to color with well-judged rubato and a wide range of dynamics is impressive.
Cliburn was said to be past his prime in the 1970s, despite his still relatively young age. Yet, this reissue of performances from between 1972 and 1975 clearly demonstrates the talent he then possessed. His many
Chopin recordings, his
Brahms Second Concerto, his
Rachmaninov Second Sonata, and his
Prokofiev Sixth Sonata have been widely praised, and this
Liszt collection must join that select company.