Congratulations and thank you for learning this!I'm in the process of making a new transcription of this piece and I've collected every piano recording of it out there (there are 8.) Will you be learning the other movements as well?
Thank you for the comments.I might start learning the 4th movement soon, but probably not more than that at the moment. Btw, what 8 performances are there? The only ones I've heard of are Idil Biert and Leslie Howard.
If you want to see the depths of an unhealthy obsession with this piece and the different recordings on piano, plus notes on my own workings of a piano arrangement, check out my livejournal dedicated exclusively to it.https://op14.livejournal.com/if you start from the earliest entry it's more interesting, I guess.
I don't like Petrov's recording. He uses too little pedal and his sound is pretty dry. It bothers me how much credit he takes for the transcription ("Transcribed by Nikolai Petrov based on the Franz Liszt transcription") when it really is virtually all Liszt. Saying that the transcription is 5% Petrov is being generous.find Duchable's recording, the CD set also includes the sonata by Paul Dukas and some other high-quality stuff.
Giovanni Bellucci has recorded it as well.
Hello, remarkable performance. I am a DMA student at James Madison University, and I am planning to present a lecture recital on the transcription. I will be playing movements 1, 2, and 4. Do you know how I can get hold of the music score besides the Petrucci library? About your changes on the idee fixe, did you write it down? If you did, I would love to have it, and I would give full credit to your name. Thanks for posting this information, even though it has been almost two years ago.