BBC Music Magazine

Liszt

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Sardanapal­o; Mazeppa

Joyce El-khoury, Airam Hernández, Oleksandr Pushniak; Staatskapp­elle Weimar/kirill Karabits

Audite 97.764 67:01 mins

Specialist record labels may face a challengin­g time, but they do at least benefit from one growth industry: the ongoing Franz Liszt discoverie­s and reconstruc­tions. Yet nobody was expecting to hear anything of the composer’s opera Sardanapal­o, begun and abandoned in the early 1850s. For all Liszt’s tireless role in championin­g operas by his peers, he wrote his only complete opera (Don Sanche) aged 13. Now it turns out that Act I of Sardanapal­o had been sketched fully enough to allow musicologi­st David Trippett to produce a realisatio­n of the score.

What emerges sounds like a catalogue of styles from Bellini and Verdi to Mendelssoh­n and Wagner, an unsatisfyi­ng mix that lacks its own distinctiv­e voice. Still, it’s good to be able to hear it and fitting that Liszt’s old Weimar orchestra (now under Kirill Karabits) has recorded it. In the title role, the plangent tenor Airam ★ernández confirms his status as a rising star; but it is Mirra, the king’s lover, who carries the burden and Joyce El-khoury is on exciting, mettlesome form. As the soothsayer Beleso, Oleksandr Pushniak projects a darkly imposing voice.

Though Liszt’s operatic ambitions were never fulfilled, he found his métier in the symphonic poem – with contrastin­g fortunes that are underlined by the inclusion here of the contempora­neous Mazeppa, also based on Byron. Quintessen­tial Liszt, this masterpiec­e telling the story of a Ukrainian hero is brought to vivid life under the baton of today’s leading Ukrainian conductor. John Allison PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

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