Musique de la Vie et de la Terre

Franz Liszt
A great pianist and composer who changed the world of piano forever, he also behind the piano's ways and traditional on today.
Who is Liszt
Liszt began to compose at the age of eight. When only nine he made his first public appearance as a concert pianist at Sopron and Pozsony (now Bratislava, Slovakia). His playing so impressed the local Hungarian magnates that they put up the money to pay for his musical education for the next six years. Ádám obtained leave of absence from his post and took Liszt to Vienna, where he had piano lessons with Carl Czerny, a composer and pianist who had been a pupil of Ludwig van Beethoven, and studied composition with Antonio Salieri, the musical director at the Viennese court. He gave several concerts in Vienna, with great success. The legend that Beethoven attended one of Liszt’s concerts and kissed the prodigy on the forehead is considered apocryphal—but Liszt certainly met Beethoven.
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Between 1830 and 1832 he met three men who were to have a great influence on his artistic life. At the end of 1830 he first met Hector Berlioz and heard the first performance of his Symphonie fantastique. From Berlioz he inherited the command of the Romantic orchestra and also the diabolic quality that remained with him for the rest of his life. He achieved the seemingly impossible feat of transcribing Berlioz’s Symphonie fantastique for the piano in 1833, and he helped Berlioz by transcribing other works of his and playing them in concert. In March 1831 he heard Niccolò Paganini play for the first time. He again became interested in virtuoso technique and resolved to transfer some of Paganini’s fantastic violin effects to the piano, writing a fantasia on his La campanella. At this time he also met Frédéric Chopin, whose poetical style of music exerted a profound influence on Liszt.
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His visit to Hungary in 1839–40, the first since his boyhood, was an important event. His renewed interest in the music of the Roma laid the foundations for his Hungarian Rhapsodies and other piano pieces composed in the Hungarian style. He also wrote a cantata for the Beethoven Festival of 1845, his first work for chorus and orchestra, and some smaller choral works.
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The avant-garde composers of the day regarded Weimar as the one city where modern composers could be heard, and many of them came to Liszt as pupils. The so-called New German school hoisted the banner of modernism, which naturally annoyed the more academic musicians. Some members of the Weimar court also were upset by Liszt’s continued support of the composer Richard Wagner, who had to flee in 1849 with Liszt’s help from Germany to Switzerland because of his political activism. The straitlaced citizens of Weimar also objected strongly to the princess openly living with Liszt, and the grand duchess of Weimar was under pressure from her brother, Nicholas I of Russia, to ban Princess Sayn-Wittgenstein from all court functions. Furthermore, the grand duke who originally appointed Liszt died in 1853, and his successor took little interest in music. Liszt resigned five years later, and, though he remained in Weimar until 1861, his position there became more and more difficult. His son, Daniel, had died in 1859 at the age of 20. Liszt was deeply distressed and wrote the oration for orchestra Les Morts in his son’s memory. In May 1860 the princess had left Weimar for Rome in the hope of having her divorce sanctioned by the pope, and in September, in a troubled state of mind, Liszt had made his will. He left Weimar in August of the following year, and after traveling to Berlin and Paris, where he saw Marie d’Agoult, he arrived in Rome. He and the princess hoped to be married on his 50th birthday. At the last moment, however, the pope revoked his sanction of the princess’s divorce; they both remained in Rome in separate establishments.
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In 1886 Liszt left Rome for the last time. He attended concerts of his works in Budapest, Liège, and Paris and then went to London—his first visit there in 45 years—where several concerts of his works were given. He then went on to Antwerp, Paris, and Weimar. He played for the last time at a concert in Luxembourg on July 19. Two days later he arrived in Bayreuth for the festival. His health had not been good for some months, and he went to bed with a high fever, though he still managed to attend two Wagner performances. His illness developed into pneumonia, and Cosima, who was then the director of the festival, left him to the care of a doctor as she managed the performances. He died on July 31.
Ballade No.2 in B minor
The Ballade No.2 in B minor (1853) this ballade inspired from Greek legend "Hero and Leander" or "Bürger’s Lenore".
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Hero and Leander, two lovers celebrated in Greek legend. Hero, virgin priestess of Aphrodite at Sestos, was seen at a festival by Leander of Abydos; they fell in love, and he swam the Hellespont at night to visit her, guided by a light from her tower. One stormy night the light was extinguished, and Leander was drowned; Hero, seeing his body, drowned herself likewise.
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Gottfried August Bürger’s Lenore. The story of a young woman desperately and anxiously awaiting news of her fiancé, William, who is away fighting with King Frederick in the Seven Years’ War. As the other warriors return home and receiving no news of William, Lenore struggles with God, blaming Him for the death of her beloved. During the night, a stranger who looks eerily like William arrives and offers to take Lenore to their marriage bed. However, the stranger is Death and takes her instead to the grave of her true William. The ground beneath her feat begins to crumble and Lenore is condemned to die at the grave of her beloved for blaspheming against God.
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** Actually today we still didn’t know which one that he got inspired by, perhaps it’s because this thing was told forward from his student.
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Liszt might not be only a technician, but many people or scholars were agreeable in the same way that he was more of a technician but that doesn't mean he is not well on emotion. (From my observation **only) many people compare Liszt’s Ballade with Chopin. The 1st ballade is not a popular Ballade work and there are some ideas like he does it the same way and it’s not more dramatic like Chopin 1st ballade, because that piece is one of very successful works in piano ballade.
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He wrote this ballad at the same time when he wrote a sonata in b minor at Weimar. But the reflection of these was quite not good. Perhaps the piece’s idea is quite too new and also compared with the most popular 1st ballade of Chopin with many differences in the style .
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Let's listen the piece from Horowitz
Liszt "Revolution in the piano world"
I named Liszt “Revolution” because many things that he created changed the way of piano playing completely, like the position of the piano on the stage that we use today, or playing from memory, these kinds of things began from him.
We joke that Liszt increased the workload for pianists, because his pieces are full of virtuosic piano techniques and he set the precedent of playing from memory. It’s true that these things actually were basic elements of piano playing, such as scales and arpeggios, but he increased the magnitude and quantity of these elements in his music, which is why the pieces are will be harder.
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Then the musician needs more time for practicing, also with memorizing. But in another perspective, Liszt tried to level up on piano playing or make more value on piano performance.