Some of Hungaroton's efforts toward recording Franz Liszt's unjustly neglected sacred choral music are achieved through digging back into the archives and recombining recordings made for LP; this recording of Liszt's Szekszárd Mass and the Prometheus Cantata dates from 1969 and 1972, respectively. What they are calling the Szekszárd Mass is Liszt's 1869 revision of his own Missa vocum ad aequales concinente organo, a work originally drafted in 1848 that exists in three distinct versions. This final incarnation, cataloged by ...
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Some of Hungaroton's efforts toward recording Franz Liszt's unjustly neglected sacred choral music are achieved through digging back into the archives and recombining recordings made for LP; this recording of Liszt's Szekszárd Mass and the Prometheus Cantata dates from 1969 and 1972, respectively. What they are calling the Szekszárd Mass is Liszt's 1869 revision of his own Missa vocum ad aequales concinente organo, a work originally drafted in 1848 that exists in three distinct versions. This final incarnation, cataloged by Searle as "R. 485b," was created to fulfill a promise made to a friend residing in the Hungarian town (now city) of Szekszárd to write an original mass for one of its many churches. Liszt ultimately could not comply with an original work, but offered to dust off an older one for Szekszárd. The first performance, scheduled for 1870, was canceled after a single open rehearsal in Budapest; the premiere was given in 1872 in Jena instead.The Missa vocum ad aequales concinente organo is...
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