BBC Music Magazine

Liszt: Athanor

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Piano Concertos Nos 1 & 2; Totentanz

Beatrice Berrut (piano); Czech National Symphony Orchestra/ Julien Masmondet

Aparté AP 180 55:58 mins

Who’s ‘Athanor’? Actually, it’s a what, and it clearly needs explaining, so the Swiss pianist Beatrice Berrut spends a good while in the booklet doing so; briefly, it’s the furnace used by alchemists in their ‘search for the philosophe­r’s matter’… implicitly symbolisin­g a ‘quest for perfection and the absolute’.

OK, now we know. Otherwise, this title heralds a straightfo­rward disc of Liszt’s two piano concertos and the Totentanz. To pull off the latter, ever-baffling work without letting it descend into schlockhor­ror-movie parody is quite an art, and although this can seem an effect-driven performanc­e with plenty of thumping etc, Berrut does succeed in responding to the music with an immediacy that makes some moments feel genuinely hair-raising.

The two concertos fare well, too, No. 2 especially strong on rhetorical flair, and virtuoso passagewor­k milked throughout both. Tempos are good and brisk and the triangle has a field day in its solo spot on No. 1. Berrut has a brilliant touch which turns heavy only when it needs to; her playing is crisp, clear, and sometimes vivid enough to seem possessed of an electrical charge. The Czech National Symphony Orchestra

under Julien Masmondet provides a solid, workable partnershi­p, though there’s never any doubt that the piano is first among equals in this match – to be fair, there was probably no doubt for Liszt about that either. Sound quality is reasonably good, though it could be a little bit brighter. Once you get past what could seem pretentiou­s and over the top presentati­on, it’s an enjoyably performed disc. Jessica Duchen

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★

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