Please note: This performance is an ultra-romantic reading of the piece.
Hi Pianostrongbad,Yes, I did listen to your 104 and liked it a great deal! I did comment on it, in your own original posting of the piece. On the Peters Edition, I have a lot of respect for Emil von Sauer's editing in general. By the way, we usually think of him as a 19th century pianist, but the fact is, he died in 1942 and left recordings! He originally studied with Nicolai Rubinstein but worked with Liszt too, and played with great elegance. When I was doing some of Brahms' Short Works, I used Sauer's edition and found it it to be entirely satisfactory. With the differences in pedal markings you point out among editions, my guess is that in his manuscript or autograph copy, Liszt indicated no pedal markings there, leaving it to the interpreter. That probably opened the door for the editors to go town.
Hi donjuan,Sorry, I made the wrong selection while posting. 104 is up there now if you'd like to try again.
regarding the editors, I too use Sauer's editions because I think they are great. While my teacher keeps pushing me towards Henle, I keep pointing towards the price tag.