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{{Short description|Hungarian composer and pianist (1811–1886)}}
'''Franz Liszt''' (Hungarian; '''Liszt Ferenc''') ([[October 22]], [[1811]] – [[July 31]], [[1886]]) was a Hungarian virtuoso [[pianist]] and [[composer]].
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{{Hungarian name|Liszt Ferenc}}
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{{Infobox classical composer
| name = Franz Liszt
| image = Franz Liszt 1858.jpg
| caption = Liszt in 1858
| birth_date = 22 October 1811
| birth_place = [[Raiding, Austria|Doborján]], Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire
| death_date = {{death date and age|1886|7|31|1811|10|22|df=y}}
| death_place = [[Bayreuth]], Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire
| works = [[List of compositions by Franz Liszt|List of compositions]]
| partner = {{unbulleted list|[[Marie d'Agoult]] (1833{{endash}}1839)|[[Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein]] (1847)}}
| children = 3, including [[Cosima Wagner]]
| signature = Liszt's signature (transparent).png
}}


'''Franz Liszt'''{{refn|{{IPA-de|ˈlɪst|lang}}; {{lang-hu|Liszt Ferencz|link=no}}, in modern usage ''Liszt Ferenc'' {{IPA-hu|ˈlist ˈfɛrɛnt͡s}}. Liszt's Hungarian passport spelled his given name as "Ferencz". An orthographic reform of the Hungarian language in 1922 (which was 36 years after Liszt's death) changed the letter "cz" to simply "c" in all words except surnames; this has led to Liszt's given name being rendered in modern Hungarian usage as "Ferenc". From 1859 to 1867 he was officially '''Franz Ritter von Liszt'''; he was created a ''[[Ritter]]'' (knight) by Emperor [[Franz Joseph I of Austria|Francis Joseph I]] in 1859, but never used this title of nobility in public. The title was necessary to marry the Princess [[Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein]] without her losing her privileges, but after the marriage fell through, Liszt transferred the title to his uncle Eduard in 1867. Eduard's son was [[Franz von Liszt]].|group=n}} (22 October 1811 – 31 July 1886) was a Hungarian composer, [[virtuoso]] pianist, conductor and teacher of the [[Romantic music|Romantic period]]. With a diverse [[List of compositions by Franz Liszt|body of work]] spanning more than six decades, he is considered to be one of the most prolific and influential composers of his era, and his piano works continue to be widely performed and recorded.{{sfn|Botstein|2011}}{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§28}}{{sfn|Deaville|2005|p=56}}
[[Image:Franz Liszt photo.jpg|thumb|right|Franz Liszt]]


Liszt gained renown during the 1830s for his skill as a pianist. Regarded as one of the greatest pianists of the time, he toured Europe during the 1830s and 1840s, often playing for charity. In these years, Liszt developed a reputation for his powerful performances as well as his physical attractiveness. In a phenomenon dubbed "[[Lisztomania]]", he rose to a degree of stardom and popularity among the public not experienced by the virtuosos who preceded him.
Possibly the greatest piano [[virtuoso]] of all time, Liszt studied and played at [[Vienna]] and [[Paris]] and for most of his life toured throughout [[Europe]] giving concerts. His virtuosity earned him approbations by composers and performers alike throughout [[Europe]]. His great generosity with both time and money benefitted the lives of many people: victims of disasters, orphans and the many students he taught for free. He also contributed to the Beethoven memorial fund.


During this period and into his later life, Liszt was a friend, musical promoter and benefactor to many composers of his time, including [[Hector Berlioz]], [[Frédéric Chopin]], [[Robert Schumann]], [[Clara Schumann]] and [[Richard Wagner]], among others. Alongside Wagner, Liszt was one of the most prominent representatives of the [[New German School]], a progressive group of composers involved in the "[[War of the Romantics]]" who developed ideas of [[programmatic music]] and harmonic experimentation.
His piano compositions include works such as his [[Piano Sonata (Liszt)|Piano Sonata in B minor]], and two [[piano concerto]]s, which have entered the standard repertoire. He also made many exuberant piano [[transcription]]s of [[opera]]s, famous [[symphony|symphonies]], and [[Franz Schubert|Schubert]] [[Lieder]]. As would be expected from a pianist-composer of Liszt's virtuosity, many of his piano compositions are amongst the most technically challenging in the repertoire.


Liszt taught piano performance to hundreds of students throughout his life, [[List of music students by teacher: K to M#Franz Liszt|many of whom]] went on to become notable performers. He left behind an extensive and diverse body of work that influenced his forward-looking contemporaries and anticipated 20th-century ideas and trends. Among Liszt's musical contributions were the concept of the [[symphonic poem]], innovations in [[thematic transformation]] and [[impressionism in music]], and the invention of the [[masterclass]] as a method of teaching performance. In a radical departure from his earlier compositional styles, many of [[Late works of Franz Liszt|Liszt's later works]] also feature experiments in [[atonality]], foreshadowing developments in [[20th-century classical music]].
==Biography==


== Life ==
Liszt was born in the village of Doborján, near [[Sopron]], [[Hungary]], in what was then the [[Austrian Empire]] (Doborján is now [[Raiding (Austria)|Raiding]] in [[Austria]] after the [[Treaty of Trianon]] of [[1920]]). His baptism record is in [[Latin]] and lists his first name as Franciscus. The [[Hungarian language|Hungarian]] variant Ferenc is often used, though this was never used by Liszt himself. His parents were his Hungarian father [[Adam Liszt|Ádám Liszt]] and [[Austria]]n-born mother [[Anna Liszt]], ''née'' Lagen.
=== Early life ===
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| footer = Franz Liszt's father [[Adam Liszt]] (left), and mother Anna Liszt (right)
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Franz Liszt was born to Anna Liszt (née Maria Anna Lager){{sfn|Walker|1987|p=xviii}} and [[Adam Liszt]] on 22 October 1811, in the village of [[Raiding, Austria|Doborján]] (German: Raiding) in [[Sopron County]], in the [[Kingdom of Hungary (1526–1867)|Kingdom of Hungary]], [[Austrian Empire]].{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=15}}{{refn|His [[Liszthaus Raiding|birthplace]] is now a museum. Throughout his life, he claimed to be [[Magyar people|Magyar]], rather than German, and referred to Hungary as his homeland. When later in his life he gave charity concerts in Hungary, he sometimes appeared wearing national dress.{{harv|Walker|1987|p=48}}|group=n}} Liszt's father was a land steward in the service of [[Nikolaus II, Prince Esterházy|Prince Nikolaus II Esterházy]];{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=15}} a keen amateur musician, he played the piano, cello, guitar and flute,{{sfn|Ramann|1882|p=7}}{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=16}} and knew [[Haydn]] and [[Johann Nepomuk Hummel|Hummel]] personally.{{sfn|Ramann|1882|p=8-9}} Franz began to improvise at the piano from before the age of five, and his father diligently encouraged his progress.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=16}} Franz also found exposure to music through attending Mass, as well as traveling [[Romani people|Romani]] bands that toured the Hungarian countryside.{{sfn|Ramann|1882|p=21-23}} His first public concert was in [[Sopron]] in 1820 at the age of nine; its success led to further appearences in [[Pressburg]] and for Prince Nikolaus' court in [[Eisenstadt]]. The publicity led to a group of wealthy sponsors offering to finance Franz's musical education in Vienna.{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=16-17}}
Liszt displayed incredible talent at a young age, easily [[sight-read]]ing multiple staves at once. His father Ádám Liszt, who worked at the court of Count [[Estarházy]], gave him his first music lessons when he was aged 6. Local aristocrats noticed his talent and paid a scholarship so that he was able to go with his family to [[Vienna]], and later to [[Paris]]. As a result, Liszt never fully learned [[Hungarian language|Hungarian]]; his later letters and diaries show that he came to regret this deeply. One letter to his mother begins in faltering Hungarian, and after an apology continues in [[French language|French]] (his preferred language).


There, Liszt received piano lessons from [[Carl Czerny]], who in his own youth had been a student of Beethoven and Hummel. Czerny, already extremely busy, had only begrudgingly agreed to hear Liszt play, and had initially refused to entertain the idea of regular lessons. Being so impressed by the initial audition, however, Czerny taught Liszt regularly, free of charge, for the next eighteen months, at which point he felt he had nothing more to teach.{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=18-19,23}} Liszt remained grateful to his former teacher,{{sfn|Ramann|1882|p=60}} later dedicating to him the ''[[Transcendental Études]]'' on their 1830 republication.{{sfn|Sitwell|1967|p=57}} Liszt also received lessons in composition from [[Antonio Salieri]], the accomplished music director of the Viennese court who had previously taught [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]] and [[Franz Schubert|Schubert]].{{sfn|Hamilton|2002}}{{sfn|Bertagnolli|2021}} Like Czerny, Salieri was highly impressed by Liszt's improvisation and sight-reading abilities.{{sfn|Bertagnolli|2021}}
In [[Vienna]] he was educated in piano technique by [[Carl Czerny]]. His father had wanted him to be taught by [[Johann Nepomuk Hummel]], but Hummel's fees were too high. [[Antonio Salieri]] taught him the technique of composition and fostered the young Liszt´s musical taste.


Liszt's public debut in Vienna on 1 December 1822 was a great success.{{sfn|Ramann|1882|pp=67-69}} He was greeted in Austrian and Hungarian aristocratic circles and met Beethoven and [[Schubert]].{{sfn|Sitwell|1967|pp=10-11}} To build on his son's success, Adam Liszt decided to take the family to Paris, the centre of the artistic world.{{sfn|Whitelaw|2021}} At Liszt's final Viennese concert on 13 April 1823, Beethoven was reputed to have walked onstage and kissed Liszt on the forehead, to signify a kind of artistic christening. There is debate, however, on the extent to which this story is apocryphal.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§1}}{{sfn|Walker|1970|p=20}} The family briefly returned to Hungary, and Liszt played a concert in traditional Hungarian dress, in order to emphasise his roots, in May 1823.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§1}}
He formed an early friendship with [[Frédéric Chopin]] — some of Chopin's early compositions including the Études Op. 10 are dedicated to Liszt — but later fierce competition turned the men into rivals.


In 1824 a piece Liszt had written at the age of 11 – his [[Variation on a Waltz by Diabelli (Liszt)|Variation on a Waltz by Diabelli]] (S. 147) – appeared in {{nowrap|Part II}} of ''[[Vaterländischer Künstlerverein]]'' as his first published composition. This volume, commissioned by [[Anton Diabelli]], includes 50 variations on his waltz by 50 different composers ({{nowrap|Part I}} being taken up by Beethoven's 33 variations on the same theme, which are now separately better known simply as his ''[[Diabelli Variations]]'').{{sfn|de Beer|2008|p=6}}{{sfn|Latham|2002|p=357}} Liszt was the youngest contributor to the project, described in it as "a boy of eleven years old";{{sfn|Ramann|1882|p=62}} Czerny was also a participant.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=23}}
On April 13, 1823, Liszt gave a concert, and it is often said that the 53-year-old [[Ludwig van Beethoven]] gave him a kiss for his marvellous playing, although this is unlikely to be true as Beethoven was profoundly deaf by this time. An account of the episode can be found in the separate article [[Liszt and Beethoven]].


===Inspiration of Pilgrimage===
=== Paris ===
[[File:Nîmes,Beaux Arts086,Liszt vers 14-15 ans.jpg|thumb|Liszt in 1826 by {{ill|Jean Vignaud|fr}}]]
[[Image:4AgesOfLiszt.jpg|thumb|right|350px|Four ages of Franz Liszt]]


Having made significant sums from his concerts, Liszt and his family moved to Paris in 1823, with the hope of his attending the [[Conservatoire de Paris]]. The director [[Luigi Cherubini]] refused his entry, however, as the Conservatoire did not accept foreigners. Nevertheless, Liszt studied under [[Anton Reicha]] and [[Ferdinando Paer]], and gave a series of highly successful concerts debuting on 8 March 1824. Paer was involved in the Parisian theatrical and operatic scene, and through his connections Liszt staged his only opera, ''[[Don Sanche]]'', which premiered shortly before his fourteenth birthday. The premiere was warmly received, but the opera only ran for four performances, and is now obscure.{{sfn|Whitelaw|2021}} Accompanied by his father, Liszt toured France and England, where he played for [[George IV|King George IV]].{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=24-26}}
Liszt left [[Vienna]] in [[1823]] to travel. In Paris, he attended a concert by the virtuoso violinist [[Paganini]] and became motivated to become the greatest pianist of his day. He often took to seclusion in his room, and was heard practising for over 10 hours a day. In 1832 he wrote the ''[[Grande Fantaisie de Bravoure sur La Clochette de Paganini]]'' ("Great Bravura Fantasy on Paganini's ''[[La Campanella]]''"). A shorter piece using the same thematic content was included in the 1838 ''[[Etudes d'Execution Transcendante d'apres Paganini]]'' ([[Etude]]s for Transcendental Technique after Paganini). Also composed in this period were the 12 Grandes Etudes (Liszt later rewrote these into the 12 [[Transcendental Etudes]] in 1851).


Adam Liszt died suddenly of [[typhoid fever]] in the summer of 1827, and for the next eight years Liszt continued to live in Paris with his mother.{{sfn|Whitelaw|2021}} He gave up touring, and in order to earn money, he gave lessons on piano and composition, often from early morning until late at night. His students were scattered across the city and he had to cover long distances. Because of this, he kept uncertain hours and also took up smoking and drinking, habits he would continue throughout his life.{{sfn|Searle|1995|p=30}}{{sfn|Walker|1987|p=131}} During this period Liszt fell in love with one of his pupils, Caroline de Saint-Cricq, the daughter of [[Charles X of France|Charles X]]'s minister of commerce, [[Pierre de Saint-Cricq]]. Her father, however, insisted that the affair be broken off.{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=26-27}}
He fraternized with such noted composers of his time as [[Frédéric Chopin]], [[Hector Berlioz]], [[Robert Schumann]], and [[Richard Wagner]], the last of whom his daughter later married. He was very widely read in philosophy, art and literature and was on friendly terms with the painter [[Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres|Ingres]] and the authors [[Heinrich Heine|Heine]], [[Hughes Felicité Robert de Lamennais|Lamenaise]], [[Hans Christian Andersen|H.C. Andersen]], and [[Charles Baudelaire|Baudelaire]] who wrote the poem "[[le thyrse]]" to Liszt.


Liszt fell very ill, to the extent that an obituary notice was printed in a Paris newspaper, and he underwent a long period of religious doubts and introspection. He stopped playing the piano and giving lessons, and developed an intense interest in religion, having many conversations with [[Hugues Felicité Robert de Lamennais|Abbé de Lamennais]] and [[Chrétien Urhan]], a German-born violinist who introduced him to the [[Saint-Simonianism|Saint-Simonists]]. Lamennais dissuaded Liszt from becoming a monk or priest.{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=27-28}} Urhan was an early champion of Schubert, inspiring Liszt's own lifelong love of [[Schubert's song cycles|Schubert's songs]]. Much of Urhan's emotive music which moved beyond the [[Classical period (music)|Classical]] paradigm, such as ''Elle et moi, La Salvation angélique'' and ''Les Regrets'', may have helped to develop Liszt's taste and style.{{sfn|Walker|1987|pp=137–138}}
From [[1835]] to [[1839]] Franz Liszt lived with [[Marie d'Agoult|Marie Catherine Sophie de Flavigny]], ex-wife of the Comte d'Agoult. She is better known by her pen name, "Daniel Stern". They had two daughters and one son.


During this period Liszt came into contact with many of the leading authors and artists of his day, including [[Victor Hugo]], [[Alphonse de Lamartine]], [[George Sand]] and [[Alfred de Vigny]]. He composed practically nothing in the years between his father's death and the [[July Revolution|July Revolution of 1830]], which inspired him to sketch a symphony based on the events of the "three glorious days" (this piece was left unfinished, and later reworked as ''[[Héroïde funèbre (Liszt)|Héroïde funèbre]]'').{{sfn|Whitelaw|2021}} Liszt met [[Hector Berlioz]] on 4 December 1830, the day before the premiere of the ''[[Symphonie fantastique]]''. Berlioz's music made a strong impression on Liszt, and the two quickly became friends.{{sfn|Macdonald|2005|loc=§17}}{{sfn|Bloom|1998|p=64}} Liszt also befriended [[Frédéric Chopin]] around this time.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=36}}
In [[1847]] Liszt met [[Princess Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein]] and he lived with her until his death. The Princess was an author, whose one work was published in 16 volumes, each containing over 1600 pages. Her longwinded writing style had some effect on Liszt himself. His biography of [[Chopin]] and his chronology and analysis of [[Roma (people)|Gypsy]] music (which later inspired [[Béla Bartók]]) were both written in the Princess' loquacious style. The couple had intended to marry in [[1860]], but since the Princess had been previously married and her husband was still alive, the Roman Catholic authorities would not approve the wedding. Liszt and Princess Carolyne remained friends, although Liszt never recovered from being unable to marry her.


[[File:Niccolo Paganini.jpg|thumb|upright|Niccolò Paganini (1828)]]
===Liszt in Germany===
In [[1848]], Liszt gave up public performances on the piano and went to [[Weimar, Germany|Weimar]], remaining there until [[1861]]. During this period he acted as conductor at court concerts and on special occasions at the theatre, gave lessons to a number of pianists, including the great virtuoso [[Hans von Bülow]], who married Liszt's daughter [[Cosima Wagner|Cosima]] in [[1857]]. He also wrote articles championing [[Berlioz]] and Wagner, and produced those orchestral and choral pieces upon which his reputation as a composer mainly rests. His efforts on behalf of [[Richard Wagner|Wagner]], who was then an exile in Switzerland, culminated in the first performance of ''[[Lohengrin]]'' in [[1850]].


After attending a concert featuring [[Niccolò Paganini]] in April 1832,{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§5}} Liszt resolved to become as great a virtuoso on the piano as Paganini was on the violin. He dramatically increased his practice, sometimes practising for up to fourteen hours a day, and in 1838 published the six ''Études d'exécution transcendante d'après Paganini'' (later revised as ''[[Grandes études de Paganini]]''), aiming to represent Paganini's virtuosity on the keyboard.{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=31-32}} The process of Liszt completely redeveloping his technique is often described as a direct result of attending Paganini's concert, but it is likely that he had already begun this work previously, during the period 1828{{endash}}1832.{{sfn|Davison|2006|pp=38-39}}
The compositions belonging to the period of his residence at Weimar comprise two piano concertos, in E flat and in A, the ''[[Totentanz (Liszt)|Totentanz]]'', the ''[[Concerto pathetique]]'' for two pianos, the solo [[Piano Sonata (Liszt)|sonata ''An Robert Schumann'']], sundry Etudes, fifteen Rhapsodies Hongroises, twelve orchestral Poemes symphoniques, ''Eine Faust Symphonie'', and ''Eine Symphonie zu Dantes Divina Commedia'', the 13th Psalm for tenor solo, chorus and orchestra, the choruses to [[Johann Gottfried Herder|Herder]]'s dramatic scenes ''Prometheus'', and the ''Graner Fest Messe''.


=== "Years of Pilgrimage" and touring Europe ===
In 1851 he published a revised version of the 1838 ''Etudes d'Execution Transcendante d'apres Paganini'', now titled ''[[Grande Etudes de Paganini]]'' (Grand etudes after Paganini), the most famous of which is ''[[La Campanella]]'', a study in octaves, shakes (trills) and leaps.
==== Affair with Countess Marie d'Agoult ====
[[File:Marie d’Agoult by Henri Lehmann.jpg|thumb|upright|Marie d'Agoult (1843)]]


In 1833, Liszt began a relationship with the Countess [[Marie d'Agoult]], who was married to a French cavalry officer but living independently.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§6}} In order to escape scandal they moved to [[Geneva]] in 1835;{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§7}} their daughter Blandine was born there on 18 December.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|pp=54-55}} Liszt taught at the newly-founded [[Conservatoire de Musique de Genève|Geneva Conservatoire]] and contributed essays for ''[[L'Artiste]]'' and the ''[[Revue et gazette musicale de Paris]]''.{{sfn|Celenza|2021}}{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§7}}
===In Retirement===


For the next four years, Liszt and the countess lived together. In 1835 and 1836 they travelled around Switzerland, and from August 1837 until November 1839 they toured Italy. It was these travels that later inspired the composer to write his cycle of piano collections entitled ''[[Années de pèlerinage]]'' (''Years of Pilgrimage'').{{sfn|Jost|2021}}{{sfn|Jost|2020}} Their daughter, [[Cosima Wagner|Cosima]], was born in [[Como]] on 24 December 1837, and their son Daniel on 9 May 1839 in [[Rome]].{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|pp=65,59}}
Liszt retired to [[Rome]] in [[1861]]. He joined the Franciscan order in [[1865]], receiving the tonsure and four [[Minor orders|Minor Orders]] of the Catholic Church (namely, [[Porter (doorkeeper)|Porter]], [[Lector]], [[Exorcist]] and [[Acolyte]]). From [[1869]] onwards, Abbé Liszt divided his time between Rome, Weimar and Budapest where during the summer months he continued to receive pupils gratis, including [[Alexander Siloti]]. During this time, his relationship with Wagner grew more strained. Cosima left Bülow, who abused her, for Wagner in [[1869]]. The intensely devout Catholic Liszt was personally repulsed by his new son-in-law, but continued to champion his music, and regularly attended the [[Bayreuth Festival]].


That autumn relations between them became strained. Liszt heard that plans for a [[Beethoven Monument]] in Bonn were in danger of collapse for lack of funds and pledged his support, raising funds through concerts.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§7}} The countess returned to Paris with the children, while Liszt gave six concerts in Vienna, then toured Hungary.{{sfn|Searle|1995|p=30}} Liszt would later spend holidays with Marie and their children on the island of [[Nonnenwerth]] on the Rhine in the summers of 1841 and 1843. In May 1844, the couple finally separated.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|pp=73,85}}
From [[1876]] until his death he also taught for several months every year at the Hungarian Conservatoire of Budapest. He died in [[Bayreuth]] on [[July 31]], [[1886]] as a result of [[pneumonia]] which he contracted during a Wagner festival hosted by his daughter, Cosima. At first he was surrounded by some of his more adoring pupils, including [[Arthur Friedheim]], Siloti and [[Bernhard Stavenhagen]], but they were denied access to his room by Cosima shortly before his death at 11:30pm. He is burried in the Bayreuth Friedhof.


==Musical Style and Influence==
==== The Ivory Duel ====
[[File:Sigismond Thalberg (by Grevedon).jpeg|thumb|upright|Sigismond Thalberg (1836)]]
The majority of Liszt's piano compositions reflect his advanced virtuosity; however he was a prolific composer, and wrote works at several levels of difficulty, some being accessible to intermediate level pianists. ''[[Abschied]]'' (Farewell) and ''[[Nuages Gris]]'' are examples of this less virtuosic style.
Swiss pianist [[Sigismond Thalberg]] moved to Paris in 1835 after several successful years of touring. His concerts there were extremely well received, and Liszt, at the time living in Geneva, received news of them from his friends in Paris. In the autumn of 1836 Liszt published an unfavourable review of several of Thalberg's compositions in the ''Gazette musicale'', calling them "boring" and "mediocre". A published exchange of views ensued between Liszt and Thalberg's supporter, the critic [[François-Joseph Fétis]].{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2012|pp=17-18}}


Liszt heard Thalberg perform for the first time at the Paris Conservatoire in February 1837, and to settle the disagreement the two pianists each arranged a performance for the public to compare them the following month. Liszt performed his own ''Grande fantaisie sur des motifs de Niobe'' and Weber's ''[[Konzertstück in F minor (Weber)|Konzertstück in F minor]]''. This was considered to be inconclusive, so the two agreed to perform at the same concert for comparison on 31 March, at the salon of the [[Cristina Trivulzio Belgiojoso|Princess of Belgiojoso]], in aid of Italian refugees. Thalberg opened with his ''Fantasia on Rossini's "Moses"'', then Liszt performed his ''Niobe'' fantasy.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2012|p=18}}
In his most popular and advanced works, he is the archetypal romantic composer. Liszt pioneered the technique of thematic transformation, a method of development which was related to both the existing [[variation]] technique and to the new use of the ''[[leitmotif]]'' by [[Richard Wagner]]. As a transcriber of even the most unlikely and complicated orchestral works, he created piano arrangements which stood on their own merits; many other pianist-composers followed his example.


The result of this "duel" is disputed. Critic [[Jules Janin]]'s report in ''[[Journal des débats]]'' asserted that there was no clear winner: "Two victors and no vanquished; it is fitting to say with the poet '{{lang|la|et adhuc sub judice lis est}}". Belgiojoso declined to declare a winner, famously concluding that "Thalberg is the first pianist in the world{{snd}}Liszt is unique."{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§7}} The biographer [[Alan Walker (musicologist)|Alan Walker]], however, believes that "Liszt received the ovation of the evening and all doubts about his supremacy were dispelled. As for Thalberg, his humiliation was complete. He virtually disappeared from the concert platform after this date."{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=40}}
While his Hungarian nationalist works are widely recognized, his understanding of form, expression and use of virtuosity for musical effect are more apparent elsewhere. <!-- can this sentence be clarified? -->


==== Lisztomania ====
Later works of the composer such as [[Bagatelle sans tonalité]] ("Bagatelle without Tonality") foreshadow composers who would further explore the modern concept of [[atonality]]. His thoroughly revised masterwork, ''[[Années de Pélerinage]]'' ("Years of Pilgrimage"), arguably includes his most provocative and stirring pieces. This set of three suites ranges from the pure virtuosity of the Suisse ''Orage'' (Storm) to the subtle and imaginative visualizations of artworks by [[Michaelangelo]] and [[Raffaello Santi|Raphael]] in the second set. ''Années'' contains some pieces which are loose transcriptions of Liszt's own earlier compositions; the first "year" recreates his early pieces of ''[[Album d'un voyageur]]'', while the second book includes a resetting of his own song transcriptions once separately published as ''[[Tre sonetti del Petrarca]]'' (Three sonnets of [[Petrarch]]). The relative obscurity of the vast majority of his works may be explained by the immense number of pieces he composed.
{{further|Lisztomania}}
[[File:Franz Liszt by Herman Biow- 1843.png|thumb|right|upright=.8|Earliest known photograph of Liszt (1843) by [[Hermann Biow]] ]]
After his separation from Marie, Liszt continued to tour Europe. His concerts in Berlin in the winter of 1841{{endash}}1842 marked the start of a period of immense public enthusiasm and popularity for his performances, dubbed "[[Lisztomania]]" by [[Heinrich Heine]] in 1844.{{sfn|Pesce|Eckhardt|Mueller|2023|loc=§1.iii}} In a fashion that has been described as similar to "the mass hysteria associated with revivalist meetings or 20th-century rock stars", women fought over his cigar stubs and coffee dregs,{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§8}} and his silk handkerchiefs and velvet gloves, which they ripped to shreds as souvenirs.{{sfn|Walker|1987|p=289}} This atmosphere was fuelled in great part by the artist's mesmeric personality and stage presence: he was regarded as handsome,{{sfn|Hensher|2016}}{{sfn|Burton-Hill|2016}} and Heine wrote of his showmanship during concerts: "How powerful, how shattering was his mere physical appearance".{{sfn|Walker|1987|p=289}}{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|p=73}}


It is estimated that Liszt appeared in public well over one thousand times during this eight-year period.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§8}} Moreover, his great fame as a pianist, which he would continue to enjoy long after he had officially retired from the concert stage, was based mainly on his accomplishments during this time.{{sfn|Walker|1987|p=285}}
==Noted Works==


Adding to his reputation was that Liszt gave away much of the proceeds of his work to charity and humanitarian causes. He donated large sums to the building fund of [[Cologne Cathedral]] and [[St. Stephen's Basilica]] in [[Pest, Hungary|Pest]], and made private donations to public services such as hospitals and schools, as well as charitable organizations such as the Leipzig Musicians Pension Fund. After the [[Great Fire of Hamburg]] in May 1842, he gave concerts in aid of those left homeless.{{sfn|Walker|1987|p=290}}
* (1822) [[Variation on a Theme by Diabelli]] (S/G147, R26)
* (1826) [[Etude in Twelve Exercises]], including No. 10 in F Minor
* (1832) ''[[Grande Fantasie de Bravoure sur La Clochette]]'', variations (S/G420, R321)
* (1833) ''[[Arrangement of "Scaffold March"]]'' from Berlioz, Symphonie Fantastique (S/G470, R136)
* (1833) ''[[Divertissement on the Cavatina]]'' "I tuoi frequenti palpiti" from Pacini's La Niobe (S/G419, R230)
* (1838) ''[[Grandes Etudes de Paganini]]'', including No. 3, "[[La Campanella]]"; and No. 5, "[[The Chase]]" (revised 1851)
* (1841) ''[[Feuilles d'album]]'' ('Album Leaves'), (S/G165)
* (1841) ''[[Réminiscences de Don Juan]]'', (S/G418)
* (1848) [[Trois Études de Concert]] No. 3, ''[[Un Sospiro]]'' ("A sigh"), Etude No. 39 (piano solo) (S/G144, R5)
* (1848-53) ''[[Années de Pélerinage]]'': Première Année &mdash; Suisse; Deuxième Année &mdash; Italie - Venezia e Napoli; Troisième Année
* (1848-61) Twelve [[Symphonic Poems]]
** ''Ce qu'on entend sur la montagne'', (1848-9) (after [[Victor Hugo]])
** ''Tasso: lamento e trionfo'', (1849) (after [[George Gordon, Lord Byron|Byron]])
** ''Les préludes'', after [[Lamartine]] (1848, rev. before 1854)
** ''Orpheus'', (1853-4)
** ''Prometheus'', (1850)
** ''Mazeppa'', (1851)
** ''Festklänge'', (1853)
** ''Héro&iuml;de funèbre'', (1849-50)
** ''Hungaria'', (1854)
** ''Hamlet'', (1858)
** ''Hunnenschlacht'', (1857)
** ''Die Ideale'' (1857), after [[Friedrich Schiller|Schiller]]
* (1849) [[Piano Concerto No. 1 (Liszt)|Piano Concerto no. 1 in E-flat Major]] (S/G124)
* (1849) [[Piano Concerto no. 2 in A Major]] (S/G125) (revised 1861)
* (1849) ''[[Harmonies Poetiques et Religieuse]]'', (S/G173) a collection of solo piano pieces including Funerailles.
* (1849) ''[[Totentanz (Liszt)|Totentanz]]'' ('Dance of death') (S/G126ii), piano concerto. (revised 1853-1859)
* (1850) [[Liebestraume No. 3]] ("Dreams of Love") in A&#9837; Major (piano solo) (S/G541, R211)
* (1851) [[Transcendental Etudes]] (Prelude, Molto Vivace, Paysage, Mazeppa, Feux Follets, Vision, Eroica, Wilde Jagd, Ricordanza, Allegro Agitato Molto, Harmonies du soir, and Chasse-niege. Known well for being technically difficult, notedly Mazeppa and Feux Follets) (S/G139, R2B)
* (1851) Nineteen ''[[Hungarian Rhapsodies]]'' (S/G244, R106)
* (1853) [[Piano Sonata (Liszt)|Piano Sonata]] in B minor (S/G178, R21)
* (1854) ''[[Faust Symphony]]''
* (1857) ''[[Dante Symphony]]''
* (1860) ''[[Mephisto]] Waltz'' No. 1 (piano solo) (S/G514, R181)
* (1866) ''[[Christus]]'' (S/G498b)
* (1881) ''[[Nuages Gris]]'' ('Grey clouds') (S/G199, R78)
* (1885) ''[[Hungarian Rhapsodies|Hungarian Rhapsody No. 19 in D Minor]]''
* (1885) ''[[Bagatelle sans tonalité]]''


During a tour of Ukraine in 1847, Liszt played in [[Kiev]], where he met the Polish Princess [[Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein]]. For some time he had been considering retiring from the life of a travelling virtuoso to concentrate on composition, and at this point he made the decision to take up a court position in [[Weimar]]. Having known Liszt for only a few weeks, Carolyne resolved to join him there.{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=55-56}} After a tour of Turkey and Russia that summer,{{sfn|Predota|2019}} Liszt gave the final paid concert of his career at [[Elizabetgrad]] in September,{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=55}} then spent the winter with the princess at her estate in Woronińce.{{sfn|Searle|1995|p=31}} By retiring from the concert platform at the age of 35, while still at the height of his powers, Liszt succeeded in keeping the legend of his playing untarnished.{{sfn|Walker|1987|p=442}}
'''Note''': Although Liszt provided [[opus number]]s for his works during his lifetime, these are rarely used today. Instead, his works are usually identified using one of two different cataloging schemes:
* More commonly used in English speaking countries are the "S" or "G" numbers, derived from [[Humphrey Searle]] catalogue of the 1960s, ''The Music of Liszt''. [http://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/liszt_index.asp]
* Less commonly used is the "R" number, which derives from [[Peter Raabe]]'s 1931 catalogue ''Franz Liszt: Leben und Schaffen''.


=== Weimar ===
<!-- Broken Link. Removing, but saving for archival purposes
[[File:Barabas-liszt.jpg|thumb|upright|Franz Liszt, portrait by Hungarian painter [[Miklós Barabás]], 1847]]


In July 1848 Liszt settled in Weimar, where he had been appointed the honorary title of "[[Kapellmeister]] Extraordinaire" six years previously. He acted as the official court kapellmeister at the expense of [[Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia (1786–1859)|Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia]] until 1859,{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|pp=101,115-117}} jointly with [[Hippolyte André Jean Baptiste Chélard]] until his retirement in 1852.{{sfn|Cormac|2021b}} During this period Liszt acted as conductor at court concerts and on special occasions at the theatre, arranged several festivals celebrating the work of Berlioz and Wagner, and produced the premiere of ''[[Lohengrin (opera)|Lohengrin]]''.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|pp=36,119}}{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§12}} He gave lessons to a number of pianists, including the great virtuoso [[Hans von Bülow]], who married Liszt's daughter Cosima in 1857 (she would later marry Wagner).{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=77,92}} Liszt's work during this period made Weimar a nexus for modern music.{{sfn|Cormac|2021b}}
===External catalogue===
*[http://www.emb.hu/nle2.htm A complete list of Liszt's works along with S and R catalogue numbers]
-->


As kapellmeister Liszt was required to submit every programme to the court [[Intendant]] for prior approval. This did not cause large problems until the appointment of [[Franz von Dingelstedt]] in 1857, who reduced the number of music productions, rejected Liszt's choices of repertoire, and even organised a demonstration against Liszt's 1858 premiere of {{lang|de|[[Der Barbier von Bagdad]]}}.{{sfn|Cormac|2021b}}{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=68}} Faced with this opposition, Liszt resigned in 1858.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=68}}
==See also==
* [[:Category:Compositions by Franz Liszt]]
* [[War of the Romantics]]


At first, after arriving in Weimar, Princess Carolyne lived apart from Liszt, in order to avoid suspicions of impropriety. She wished eventually to marry Liszt, but since her husband, Russian military officer Prince Nicholas von Sayn-Wittgenstein, was still alive, she had to convince the Roman Catholic authorities that her marriage to him had been invalid. Her appeal to the Archbishop of [[St Petersburg]] for an [[annulment]], lodged before leaving Russia, was ultimately unsuccessful, and the couple abandoned pretence and began to live together in the autumn of 1848.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|p=113}}
==Media==


Nicholas was aware that the couple's marriage had effectively ended, and Carolyne and Nicholas reached an agreement to annul in 1850 whereby the prince would receive some of Carolyne's estates. However, this arrangement was struck down in 1851 by the [[consistory court]] of [[Zhytomyr]].{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|pp=143-144}} Throughout the decade the couple would continue to negotiate through the complex situation.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|pp=142-175}}
{{multi-listen start}}
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{{multi-listen item|filename=Liszt- au bord d une.ogg|title=Au bord d'une source (Beside a Spring)|description=|format=[[Ogg]]}}
{{multi-listen end}}


==== The New German School and the War of the Romantics ====
==External links==
{{main|New German School|War of the Romantics}}
*[http://www.slke.org THE COMPLETE DATABASE WORKS AND GENEALOGY TREE OF FRANZ LISZT]
In 1859 [[Franz Brendel]] coined the name "[[New German School]]" in his publication {{lang|de|[[Neue Zeitschrift für Musik]]}}, to refer to the musicians associated with Liszt while he was in Weimar. The most prominent members other than Liszt were Wagner and Berlioz (although Wagner rejected the label), and the group also included [[Peter Cornelius]], Hans von Bülow and [[Joachim Raff]]. The School was a loose confederation of progressive composers, mainly grouped together as a challenge to supposed conservatives such as Mendelssohn and [[Johannes Brahms|Brahms]], and so the term is considered to be of limited use in describing a particular movement or set of unified principles.{{sfn|Warrack|2002}} What commonalities the composers had were around the development of [[programmatic music]], harmonic experimentation, wide-ranging modulation and formal innovations such as the use of [[leitmotif]]s and [[thematic transformation]].{{sfn|Grey|2001}}{{sfn|Deaville|2021}}
*[http://www.d-vista.com/OTHER/Liszttime.html A timeline of his life and works]
*[http://www.mutopiaproject.org/cgibin/make-table.cgi?Composer=LisztF&preview=1 Liszt's Scores] by [[Mutopia Project]]
*[http://www.pianosociety.com/index.php?id=62 Piano Society - Liszt] - A short biography and various free recordings in MP3 format.
*[http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/1/4/1/11419/11419-h/11419-h.htm The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 2] by Rupert Hughes, full-text from [[Project Gutenberg]]
*[http://www.lisztworks.com Lisztworks] - A complete catalogue of Liszt's works, including free recordings and other media.
*[http://www.pianopublicdomain.com PianoPublicDomain.com] Free downloadable piano sheet music editions of Franz Liszt. Most works available.
*[http://www.sheetmusicarchive.net/single_listing.cfm?composer_id=24 SheetMusicArchive.net - Liszt] Free public domain editions of Franz Liszt's piano works. Downloads are restricted to 2 per day.
*[http://www.liszt.dk/ Franz Liszt Project] - A comprehensive Liszt site with searchable databases.
*[http://www.pianoparadise.com/liszt.html PianoParadise - Liszt] - A biography including mp3 files and sheet music


The disagreements between the two factions is often described as the "[[War of the Romantics]]". The "war" was largely carried out through articles, essays and reviews. Each side claimed [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]] as its predecessor. A number of festivals were arranged to showcase the music of the New German School, notably in Leipzig in 1859 and Weimar in 1861. The [[Allgemeine Deutsche Musikverein]], intrinsically linked to the School, was founded at this time, with Liszt becoming its honorary president in 1873. However, as most of Liszt's work from the 1860s and 1870s received little attention, and Brendel and Berlioz died in the late 1860s, the focus of the progressive movement in music moved to [[Bayreuth]] with Wagner in the 1870s, who definitively moved on from the School and the {{lang|de|Neue Zeitschrift}}.{{sfn|Deaville|2021}}
==Further Reading==


=== Rome ===
*Franz Liszt: The Virtuoso Years (1811-1847) by [[Alan Walker (writer on music)|Alan Walker]], Cornell University Press, Revised Edition (1993) ISBN 0801494214
[[File:Liszt-1870.jpg|thumb|upright|Liszt, photo (mirror-imaged) by Franz Hanfstaengl, June 1870]]
*Franz Liszt: The Weimar Years (1848-1861) by Alan Walker, Cornell University Press, Reprint (1993) ISBN 0801497213
*Franz Liszt: The Final Years (1861-1886) by Alan Walker, Cornell University Press, reprint (1997) ISBN 0801484537
*The Death of Franz Liszt: Based on the Unpublished Diary of His Pupil Lina Schmalhausen by Lina Schmalhausen, annotated and edited by Alan Walker, Cornell University Press (2002) ISBN 0801440769
*The Piano Master Classes of Franz Liszt 1884-1886: Diary Notes of August Gollerich by August Gollerich, edited by Wilhelm Jerger, translated by Richard Louis Zimdars, Indiana University Press (1996) ISBN 0253332230


After a visit to Rome and an audience with [[Pope Pius IX]] in 1860, Carolyne finally secured an annulment.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|p=181}} It was planned that she and Liszt would marry in Rome, on 22 October 1861, Liszt's 50th birthday. Liszt arrived in Rome on 21 October, but a Vatican official had arrived the previous day in order to stop the marriage. This was a result of the machinations of [[Gustav Adolf, Cardinal Prince of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst|Cardinal Hohenlohe]], who wanted to protect a complex inheritance agreement brokered by [[Alexander II of Russia|Tsar Alexander II]]. Carolyne subsequently gave up all attempts to marry Liszt, even after her husband's death in 1864;{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§20}}{{sfn|Sitwell|1967|p=224}} she became a recluse, working for the rest of her life on a long work critical of the Catholic Church.{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=71-72}}
<!-- it might need to be changed to Franz Liszt or Franciszek Liszt in the future -->
[[Category:1811 births|Liszt, Franz]]
[[Category:1886 deaths|Liszt, Franz]]
[[Category:Franciscans|Liszt, Franz]]
[[Category:Hungarian pianists|Liszt, Franz]]
[[Category:Hungarian composers|Liszt, Franz]]
[[Category:Romantic composers|Liszt, Franz]]
[[Category:Classical pianists|Liszt, Franz]]
[[Category:Romanticism|Liszt, Franz]]
[[Category:Classical pianists|Liszt, Franz]]


The 1860s were a period of great sadness in Liszt's private life. On 13 December 1859, he lost his 20-year-old son Daniel to an unknown illness.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|p=177}} On 11 September 1862 his 26-year-old daughter Blandine also died, having contracted [[sepsis]] after surgery on a breast growth which developed shortly after giving birth to a son she named in memory of Daniel.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|p=189}} In letters to friends, Liszt announced that he would retreat to a solitary living.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|pp=191-192}}
[[cs:Ferenc Liszt]]

[[da:Franz Liszt]]
He moved to the monastery {{lang|it|Madonna del Rosario}}, just outside Rome, where on 20 June 1863 he took up quarters in a small, spartan apartment.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|pp=191-192}} He had a piano in his cell, and he continued to compose.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=74}} He had already joined the [[Third Order of Saint Francis]] previously, on 23 June 1857.{{sfn|Burger|1986|loc=209}} On 25 April 1865 he received the [[tonsure]] at the hands of Cardinal Hohenlohe, who had previously worked against Carolyne's efforts to secure an annulment; the two men became close friends.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|pp=181,197}}{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=79}} On 31 July 1865 Liszt received the four minor orders of [[Ostiarius|porter]], [[lector]], [[exorcist]] and [[acolyte]]. After this ordination he was often called "{{lang|fr|[[Abbé]]}} Liszt". On 14 August 1879, he was made an honorary [[canon (priest)|canon]] of [[Albano Laziale|Albano]].{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§21}}
[[de:Franz Liszt]]

[[es:Franz Liszt]]
In 1867 Liszt was commissioned to write a piece for the coronation ceremony of [[Franz Joseph]] and [[Elisabeth of Bavaria]], and he travelled to [[Budapest]] to conduct it.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=80}} The ''Hungarian Coronation Mass'' was performed on 8 June 1867, at the coronation ceremony in the [[Matthias Church]] by [[Buda Castle]] in a six-section form. After the first performance, the Offertory was added and, two years later, the Gradual.{{sfn|Fend|Noiray|2005|p=542}}
[[eo:Franz LISZT]]

[[fa:&#1601;&#1585;&#1575;&#1606;&#1578;&#1587; &#1604;&#1740;&#1587;&#1578;]]
=== "Tripartite existence" ===
[[fr:Franz Liszt]]
[[File:Liszt Ferenc Zeneművészeti Egyetem 2013-ban felújított homlokzata.JPG|thumb|[[Franz Liszt Academy of Music|Liszt Ferenc Academy of Music]] in [[Budapest]] ]]
[[he:&#1508;&#1512;&#1504;&#1509; &#1500;&#1497;&#1505;&#1496;]]

[[it:Franz Liszt]]
[[Charles Alexander, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach|Grand Duke Charles Alexander]] had been attempting to arrange Liszt's return to Weimar ever since he'd left, and in January 1869 Liszt agreed to a residency to give masterclasses in piano playing.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=82}}{{sfn|Baker|2005|p=86}} He was based in the Hofgärtnerei (court gardener's house), where he taught for the next seventeen years.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=83}} From 1872 until the end of his life, Liszt made regular journeys between Rome, Weimar and Budapest, continuing what he called his {{lang|fr|vie trifurquée}} ("[[tripartite (theology)|tripartite]] existence").{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=87}} It is estimated that he traveled at least 4,000 miles a year during this period in his life – an exceptional figure given his advancing age and the rigors of road and rail in the 1870s.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§24}}
[[hu:Liszt Ferenc]]

[[nl:Franz Liszt]]
Liszt's time in Budapest was the result of efforts from the Hungarian government in attracting him to work there.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=87}} The plan of the foundation of the [[Franz Liszt Academy of Music|Royal Academy of Music]] was agreed upon by the Hungarian Parliament in 1873, and in March 1875 Liszt was nominated its president.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|p=262}} The academy was officially opened on 14 November 1875 with Liszt's colleague [[Ferenc Erkel]] as director and [[Kornél Ábrányi]] and [[Robert Volkmann]] on the staff.{{sfn|Liszt Museum|n.d.}} Liszt himself only arrived to deliver lessons in March 1876.{{sfn|Hilmes|2016|p=263}} From 1881 when in Budapest he would stay in an apartment in the Academy, where he taught pupils in much the same way as he did in Weimar.{{sfn|Pesce|2014|p=50}} In 1925 the institution was renamed in honour of Liszt.{{sfn|Hooker|2021}}
[[ja:&#12501;&#12521;&#12531;&#12484;&#12539;&#12522;&#12473;&#12488;]]

[[no:Franz Liszt]]
=== Final years ===
[[pl:Ferenc Liszt]]
[[File:Franz Liszt by Nadar, March 1886.png|thumb|upright|Liszt in March 1886, four months before his death, photographed by [[Nadar]] ]]
[[pt:Franz Liszt]]

[[sl:Franz Liszt]]
Liszt fell down a flight of stairs at the Hofgärtnerei in July 1881, and remained bedridden for several weeks after this accident.{{sfn|Baker|2005|p=87}} He had been in good health up to that point,{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=94}} but a number of ailments subsequently manifested, such as a [[cataract]] in the left eye, dental issues and fatigue.{{sfn|Schmalhausen|2002|pp=14,16}}{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=94}} Since around 1877 he had become increasingly plagued by feelings of desolation, despair and preoccupation with death—feelings that he expressed in his [[Late works of Franz Liszt|works from this period]].{{sfn|Baker|2005|pp=87,90}} As he told [[Lina Ramann]], "I carry a deep sadness of the heart which must now and then break out in sound."{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§25}}
[[fi:Franz Liszt]]

[[sv:Franz Liszt]]
On 13 January 1886, while [[Claude Debussy]] was staying at the [[Villa Medici]] in Rome, Liszt met him there with [[Paul Vidal]] and [[Ernest Hébert]], director of the French Academy. Liszt played "[[Au bord d'une source]]" from ''[[Années de pèlerinage]]'', as well as his arrangement of [[Ave Maria (Schubert)|Schubert's ''Ave Maria'']] for the musicians. Debussy in later years described Liszt's pedalling as "like a form of breathing."{{sfn|Walker|1997|pp=475–476}}
[[zh:&#24343;&#20848;&#20857;&#183;&#26446;&#26031;&#29305;]]

Liszt travelled to [[Bayreuth]] in the summer of 1886. This was in order to support his daughter Cosima, who was running the [[Bayreuth Festival|festival]] but struggling to generate sufficient interest.{{sfn|Schmalhausen|2002|pp=2,192}} The festival was dedicated to the works of her husband Richard Wagner, and had opened ten years previously; Wagner had died in 1883.{{sfn|Millington|Deathridge|Dahlhaus|Bailey|2009|loc=§6, §8}} Already frail, in his final week of life Liszt's health deteriorated further, as he experienced a fever, cough and delirium.{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=96-97}} He died during the festival, near midnight on 31 July 1886, at the age of 74{{mdash}}officially as a result of [[pneumonia]], which he had contracted prior to arriving in Bayreuth, although the true cause of death may have been a [[heart attack]].{{sfn|Schmalhausen|2002|pp=1,15}}{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§27}} He was buried on 3 August 1886, in the {{ill|municipal cemetery of Bayreuth|de|de:Friedhöfe_in_Bayreuth#Stadtfriedhof}}, according to Cosima's wishes; despite controversy over this as his final resting place, Liszt's body was never moved.{{sfn|Schmalhausen|2002|pp=151,166,181}}

==Relationships with other composers==
=== Hector Berlioz ===
[[File:Joseph Kriehuber, Ein Matinée bei Liszt, 1846.jpg|thumb|right|Berlioz (standing, left) listening to Liszt play the piano (1846).]]
[[Hector Berlioz|Berlioz]] and Liszt first met on 4 December 1830, the day before the premiere of Berlioz's ''[[Symphonie fantastique]]''.{{sfn|Watson|2000|p=27}} The two quickly became very close friends, exchanging intimate letters on their respective love lives, which also reveal that Liszt was aware of Berlioz's fixation on suicide.{{sfn|Bloom|1998|p=64}}{{sfn|Bloom|2013|pp=76,79}} Liszt acted as a witness at Berlioz's wedding to [[Harriet Smithson]] in 1833, despite cautioning Berlioz against it, and they worked together at several concerts over the following three years, and again in 1841 and 1844.{{sfn|Bloom|2013|p=81}}{{sfn|Watson|2000|p=30}} In Weimar the two composers revised ''[[Benvenuto Cellini (opera)|Benvenuto Cellini]]'', and Liszt organised a "Berlioz Week", which included ''[[Roméo et Juliette (Berlioz)|Roméo et Juliette]]'' and part of ''[[La damnation de Faust]]'', later dedicated to Liszt (in return, Liszt dedicated his ''[[Faust Symphony]]'' to Berlioz).{{sfn|Macdonald|2005|loc=§5}}

The orchestration of Berlioz had an influence on Liszt, especially with regards to his symphonic poems. Berlioz saw orchestration as part of the compositional process, rather than a final task to undertake after the music had already been written.{{sfn|Macdonald|2005|loc=§17}} Berlioz joined Liszt and Wagner as a figurehead of the [[New German School]], but an unwilling one, as he was unconvinced by Wagner's ideas about the "[[Music of the Future|music of the future]]".{{sfn|Watson|2000|pp=95-96}}

=== Frédéric Chopin ===
[[Frédéric Chopin|Chopin]] and Liszt first met in the early 1830s, both moving in the same circles of artists residing in Paris.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=36}} Liszt attended Chopin's first Paris performance at the [[Salle Pleyel]] on 26 February 1832, which he admired greatly, and by mid-1833 the two had become close friends. They performed together a number of times, often for charity, and since Chopin only performed in public about 12 times, these events comprise a large proportion of his total appearances.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|pp=31-32}}

Their relationship cooled in the early 1840s, and several reasons have been suggested for this, including that [[Marie d'Agoult]] was infatuated with Chopin, or Liszt with [[George Sand]], or that Liszt used Chopin's home for a rendezvous with [[Marie Pleyel]], the wife of Chopin's friend [[Camille Pleyel|Camille]]. The two musicians had very different personalities, with Liszt being extroverted and outgoing while Chopin was more introverted and reflective, so it is possible that the two never had an extremely close friendship to begin with, and the fact that they did not live physically close together would have been another barrier. On the topic, Liszt commented to Chopin's biographer [[Frederick Niecks]] that Marie d'Agoult and George Sand had frequently disagreed, and the musicians had felt obliged to side with their respective partners.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|pp=30-33}} [[Alex Szilasi]] suggests that Chopin took offence at an equivocal 1841 review by Liszt, and was perhaps jealous of Liszt's popularity, while Liszt in turn may have been jealous of Chopin's reputation as a serious composer.{{sfn|Szilasi|2011}}

Very shortly after Chopin's death in 1849, Liszt had a monument erected in his memory and began to write a biography.{{sfn|Szilasi|2011}} Chopin's relatives and friends found the timing of this insensitive, and many declined to help with Liszt's enquiries.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|pp=17-18}}

Scholars disagree on the extent to which Chopin and Liszt influenced each others' compositions. [[Charles Rosen]] identifies similarities between Chopin's [[Étude Op. 10, No. 9 (Chopin)|Étude Op. 10, No. 9]] and the early version of Liszt's [[Transcendental Étude No. 10 (Liszt)|Transcendental Étude No. 10]], but [[Alan Walker (musicologist)|Alan Walker]] argues that no such connection exists. Stylistic similarities between other studies, Chopin's ''[[Nocturnes (Chopin)|Nocturnes]]'' and Liszt's ''[[Consolations (Liszt)|Consolations]]'', and even an influence on the ornamentation and fingering of Liszt's works, have been proposed.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|pp=33-34}}

=== Robert and Clara Schumann ===
In 1837 Liszt wrote a positive review of [[Robert Schumann]]'s ''Impromptus'' and piano sonatas [[Piano Sonata No. 1 (Schumann)|no. 1]] and [[Piano Sonata No. 3 (Schumann)|no. 3]]. The two began to correspond from this time, and the following year he met Schumann's fiancée [[Clara Schumann|Clara Wieck]], to whom he dedicated the early version of ''[[Grandes études de Paganini]]''. Schumann in turn dedicated ''[[Fantasie in C (Schumann)|Fantasie in C]]'' to Liszt. The two met for the first time in [[Dresden]] in 1840.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2012|p=25}}

Schumann resigned as editor of the music journal ''[[Neue Zeitschrift für Musik]]'' in 1844, ten years after founding it.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2012|p=25}} The journal was taken over the following year by [[Franz Brendel]], who used it to publicise and support Liszt's New German School, to Schumann's chagrin.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=66}} In 1848 Liszt attended a performance of the [[Piano Trio No. 1 (Schumann)|Piano Trio No. 1]] being held in his honour in the Schumanns' home. Liszt arrived two hours late with Wagner (who had not been invited), derided the piece, and spoke ill of the recently-deceased [[Felix Mendelssohn|Mendelssohn]]. This upset the Schumanns, and Robert physically assaulted Liszt.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2012|pp=26,27}}

The relationship between Liszt and the couple remained frosty. Liszt dedicated his [[Piano Sonata in B minor (Liszt)|1854 piano sonata]] to Robert, who had by that point been committed to a mental institution in [[Endenich]]. Clara asked for Liszt's help that year in finding a performance venue in order to earn an income. Liszt arranged an all-Schumann concert with Clara as the star performer, and published an extremely positive review, but Clara did not express any gratitude. In a posthumous edition of Robert's works, Clara changed the dedication of the ''Fantasie'' from Liszt to herself. After Liszt's death, she wrote in her diary "He was an eminent keyboard virtuoso but a dangerous example for the young. ... As a composer he was terrible."{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2012|pp=26-27,29}}

=== Richard Wagner ===
[[Richard Wagner|Wagner]] first met Liszt in Paris in 1841,{{sfn|Trippett|2021}}{{sfn|Grey|2008|p=xxi}} while living in poverty after fleeing [[Riga]] to escape creditors.{{sfn|Negus|Hamilton|2021}}{{sfn|Grey|2008|p=xx}} Liszt was at this point a famous pianist, whereas Wagner was unknown; unlike Wagner, Liszt did not remember the meeting. In 1844 Liszt attended a performance of Wagner's first major success, the opera ''[[Rienzi]]'', in Dresden.{{sfn|Negus|Hamilton|2021}}{{sfn|Trippett|2021}} The two met in Berlin at the instigation of [[Wilhelmine Schröder-Devrient]], and Wagner later sent Liszt the scores of ''Rienzi'' and ''[[Tannhäuser]]'' in an attempt to elicit approval.{{sfn|Trippett|2021}} Liszt settled in Weimar in 1848, and the two grew close, Wagner still being located in Dresden.{{sfn|Negus|Hamilton|2021}} Wagner wrote to Liszt a number of times soliciting financial help.{{sfn|Trippett|2021}}

In 1849 Liszt sheltered Wagner after the latter's involvement in the failed [[May Uprising in Dresden]].{{sfn|Grey|2008|p=47}} Liszt arranged a false passport and lent Wagner money to allow him to escape Germany for Switzerland, and for the next ten years continued to send money and visit, as well as petition officials for a pardon which eventually came in 1860.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§12}}

To publicise Wagner's music, Liszt staged ''Tannhäuser'' in 1849, for the first time outside Dresden, and published two transcriptions from it, writing to Wagner "Once and for all, number me in future among your most zealous and devoted admirers; near or far, count on me and make use of me."{{sfn|Trippett|2021}} In 1850 he arranged the premiere of ''[[Lohengrin (opera)|Lohengrin]]'', which Wagner dedicated to Liszt, and he also mounted performances of ''[[Der fliegende Holländer]]''.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§12}} Liszt had intended to dedicate the 1857 ''[[Dante Symphony]]'' to Wagner, but upon being told this Wagner replied that, while a fine piece, he would prefer to receive money. Liszt was offended by this comment, and did not publish the dedication.{{sfn|Negus|Hamilton|2021}}

[[File:Die Gartenlaube (1894) b 521.jpg|thumb|right|Cosima and Richard Wagner at their home [[Wahnfried]], with Liszt and [[Hans von Wolzogen]] (1880).]]
By 1864 Wagner had begun an affair with Liszt's daughter [[Cosima Wagner|Cosima]], who was married to Liszt's erstwhile pupil [[Hans von Bülow]].{{sfn|Millington|Deathridge|Dahlhaus|Bailey|2009|loc=§6}} Liszt disapproved of the relationship and broke off contact with the couple for a number of years, only learning of their 1870 marriage from the newspapers.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§20}}{{sfn|Watson|2000|p=146}} Nevertheless the relationship recovered: Liszt contributed financially to the building of the [[Bayreuth Festspielhaus]] in 1871, and he began to correspond with Wagner and Cosima again, frequently visiting their home [[Wahnfried]].{{sfn|Watson|2000|p=146}}{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=93}} Liszt died in 1886 while at the latest incarnation of the [[Bayreuth Festival]], dedicated to Wagner's work, Wagner having died three years previously.{{sfn|Schmalhausen|2002|p=2}}{{sfn|Millington|Deathridge|Dahlhaus|Bailey|2009|loc=§8}}

Similarities have been suggested between Wagner's ''[[Faust Overture]]'' and Liszt's ''Faust Symphony'', but Liszt claimed that the likenesses of the themes were coincidental.{{sfn|Negus|Hamilton|2021}} Scholars also note a similarity between the opening of Liszt's song "Lorelei" and the famous "[[Tristan chord]]" from the opening of Wagner's later opera ''[[Tristan und Isolde]]'', although there is no consensus on whether Wagner was influenced by the song.{{sfn|Negus|Hamilton|2021}} There are similarities in their musical languages, however, and Wagner once even commented to Cosima that he was looking at ''[[The Bells of the Strasbourg Cathedral]]'' to ensure he hadn't overtly plagiarised the work, the opening theme of ''[[Parsifal (opera)|Parsifal]]'' being very similar to that cantata.{{sfn|Negus|Hamilton|2021}} Both composers were also prominent members of the New German School.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§12}}

== Pianist ==
At his performing peak Liszt was considered the greatest pianist of his time, and was perhaps one of the greatest who ever lived.{{sfn|Burton-Hill|2016}}{{sfn|Esteban|1971|p=4}} His popularity during the "Lisztomania" period of the 1840s was unrivalled, and the critic [[Peter G. Davis]] has written that "Perhaps [Liszt] was not the most transcendent virtuoso who ever lived, but his audiences thought he was, and no pianist since has seriously challenged the legend."{{sfn|Davis|1987}}{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=30}}

=== Performing style ===
[[File:Josef Danhauser Liszt am Flügel 1840 01.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|left|''Franz Liszt Fantasizing at the Piano'' (1840), by [[Josef Danhauser|Danhauser]]. The imagined gathering shows seated [[Alexandre Dumas]], [[George Sand]], Liszt, and [[Marie d'Agoult]]; standing [[Victor Hugo]], [[Niccolò Paganini]], and [[Gioachino Rossini]]; with a bust of [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]] looking on.{{sfn|Francis|2014|pp=140-141}}]]
{{clear|rt}}

Liszt's performance style changed throughout his life, in his interpretive decisions as well as his physicality (the young Liszt was extremely animated at the keyboard, but in old age he was very still).{{sfn|Hamilton|2008|p=242}} No recordings of Liszt exist, so to get an impression of his style scholars must go by contemporary writings and the output of his pupils, while allowing for a certain amount of mythologising around his extraordinary talent.{{sfn|Hamilton|2008|p=225,229}}

From a young age Liszt had displayed an aptitude for improvisation and sight reading. Czerny observed that Liszt was a natural who played according to feeling{{emdash}}"one saw that Nature herself had formed a pianist."{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§1}} Liszt's fourteen months under Czerny solidified his technical skills as he enthusiastically studied exercises and works.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§1}} In later life, however, he would express the opinion that despite his work under Czerny his early training had been unfocused, and he had excelled mainly "by force of personality".{{sfn|Hamilton|2008|p=250}} Reviews of his early concerts especially praise the brilliance, strength, and precision in his playing.{{sfn|Ramann|1882|pp=80-81}} At least one also mentions his ability to keep absolute tempo.{{sfn|Eckhardt|1982|p=165}}

One of the most detailed descriptions of his playing from that time comes from the diary entries of [[Caroline Boissier-Butini]], whose daughter Valerie was a pupil of Liszt's from 1831{{endash}}1832, when he was earning a living primarily as a teacher in Paris:
<blockquote>
Boissier records that Liszt did not keep his hands 'in a rounded position' nor were they 'altogether flat', but rather his fingers were 'so flexible as to possess no fixed position'. ... Mme Boissier writes that Liszt's 'hand is never unwieldy, for he moves it with grace according to his fancy', then she stresses that 'he does not play with his arms or shoulders'. In a later lesson, Liszt instructed Valerie to play 'without exception, entirely with a wrist action' ... without any interference by the arm ... Crucially, Liszt emphasised the role of the wrist, not the arm, in producing a full tone for individual notes, and did so not just in relation to octaves or chords.{{sfn|Davison|2006|pp=37-38}}
</blockquote>

During his performance career Liszt took unusually bold liberties with the score, changing tempo and adding embellishment at will. In one instance he decided on "a sudden, drastic slowing down" while performing the Scherzo movement of Beethoven's [[Symphony No. 6 (Beethoven)|Sixth Symphony]].{{sfn|Hamilton|2008|pp=228,234-235}} In a regretful letter to George Sand from 1837 Liszt admitted that he made such decisions to gain public acclaim:

<blockquote>
[I]n order to wring bravos from the public that is always slow, in its awesome simplicity, to comprehend beautiful things, I had no qualms about changing the tempos of the pieces or the composers' intentions. In my arrogance I even went so far as to add a host of rapid runs and cadenzas, which, by securing ignorant applause for me, sent me off in the wrong direction{{emdash}}one that I fortunately knew enough to abandon quickly. ... Now I no longer divorce a composition from the era in which it was written, and any claim to embellish or modernize the works of earlier periods seems just as absurd for a musician to make as it would be for an architect, for example, to place a Corinthian capital on the columns of an Egyptian temple.{{sfn|Hamilton|2008|pp=234-235}}
</blockquote>

Despite his apparent contrition, however, Liszt did continue to make large interpretive changes while performing, although he would be more concerned with fidelity to the score and composer's intentions later in life. He would be more open to pupils revising his own compositions, and he himself often produced different versions of his works over the course of his lifetime.{{sfn|Hamilton|2008|pp=235-236}}{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§28}} This attitude was in keeping with the shift in audience preferences that began in the 1830s, which started to favour a faithfully-rendered memorised performance over the improvisation that Liszt employed in these years.{{sfn|Mishra|2016|p=13}}

Certain information about Liszt's style can be inferred from the writings of his many pupils. Musicologist [[Kenneth Hamilton]] identifies several themes which occurred through Liszt's teachings, including avoiding excessive sentimentality, imagining the orchestration of the piece, flexibility of tempo, and the importance of a sense of music.{{sfn|Hamilton|2008|pp=242-243}} [[Amy Fay]] studied under Liszt in his later life, 1869{{endash}}1875, and her writings align with Boissier's four decades earlier. She also notes that Liszt kept his fingers close to the keyboard to achieve a better legato, and that Liszt discouraged unnecessary hand movements, in contrast to his flamboyant gestures during his prime. Notes by his pupil Pauline Fichtener in the 1870s again stress freedom and flexibility of the wrist.{{sfn|Davison|2006|pp=39-40}}

=== Concert repertoire ===
[[File:Boesendorfer Liszt Franz Joseph.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|Liszt giving a concert for Emperor [[Franz Joseph I]] on a [[Bösendorfer]] piano]]

Up to 1840, most concerts featuring a solo pianist included other acts, such as an orchestra, singers and ballet.{{sfn|Gould|2005|pp=62-63}} The increasing prominence of the solo piano virtuoso in the 1830s led to other acts on the bill being described as "assistant artists", with Liszt declaring his pre-eminence in a letter to a friend dated June 1839: "Le concert, c'est moi".{{sfn|Gould|2005|pp=63-64}} Liszt is credited as the first pianist to give solo recitals in the modern sense of the word; the term was first applied to Liszt's concert at the [[Hanover Square Rooms]] in London on 9 June 1840.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§8}}

During his years as a traveling virtuoso Liszt performed an enormous amount of music, usually from memory.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=51}} He was the first to include the full range of repertoire, from [[J. S. Bach]] to Chopin.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§8}} His concerts included original compositions such as ''[[Grand galop chromatique]]'', ''Fantaisie romantique sur deux mélodies suisses'' and ''Grande Valse di Bravura''; and his transcriptions of Schubert's ''[[Schwanengesang]]'', ''[[Symphonie Fantastique]]'' by Berlioz and Beethoven's [[Symphony No. 6 (Beethoven)|sixth symphony]].{{sfn|Keeling|1992|pp=400-401}} Liszt would champion Beethoven's work throughout his life, and his concerts helped popularise the [[Piano Sonata No. 29 (Beethoven)|''Hammerklavier'' sonata]] and ''[[Diabelli Variations]]''.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§8}}

=== Instruments ===
[[File:FranzLisztPiano.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|One of Franz Liszt's pianos from his apartment in Budapest]]

After arriving in Paris in 1823, [[Sébastien Érard]] presented Liszt with a grand piano featuring his newly-patented double escapement mechanism, a key development in piano technology allowing for faster note repetition.{{sfn|Walker|1973|pp=24-25}} Among the composer's pianos in Weimar were an Érard, a [[C. Bechstein|Bechstein]], the Beethovens' [[John Broadwood & Sons|Broadwood]] grand and a [[Boisselot & Fils|Boisselot]]. It is known that Liszt was using Boisselot pianos in his Portugal tour{{sfn|Walker|1987|p=409}} and then later in 1847 in a tour to Kiev and Odessa. Liszt kept the piano at his Villa Altenburg residence in Weimar.{{sfn|Walker|1987b|p=77}}

The earliest records of Liszt playing the organ date from 1836. He developed an interest in J. S. Bach's organ music in the early 1840s, probably due to Mendelssohn's influence. Later, Liszt commissioned a "piano-organ" from the Paris company Alexandre Père et Fils. The instrument was made in 1854 under Berlioz's supervision, using an 1853 Érard piano, and was a combination of piano and harmonium with three manuals and a pedal board.{{sfn|Domokos|2019}} The company called it a "Liszt piano-harmonium" and installed it in Villa Altenburg in July 1854;{{sfn|Pocknell|2000|p=68}} the instrument is now exhibited in the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde collection in Vienna.{{sfn|Domokos|2019}}

Liszt owned two other organs which were installed later in his Budapest residence. The first was a "piano-orgue": this was a smaller version of Weimar's instrument, a combination of a 1864 Érard piano and a harmonium, with two independent manuals, the upper for the piano and lower for the harmonium, built again by Alexandre Père et Fils in 1865. The second was a "cabinet organ", a large concert harmonium built by the American company [[Mason & Hamlin]] and given to Liszt in 1877.{{sfn|Domokos|2019}}

== Works ==
{{Main|Musical works of Franz Liszt}}
{{See also|List of compositions by Franz Liszt}}
Liszt was a prolific composer. He is best known for his piano music, which forms the majority of his oeuvre, but he also wrote for orchestra and for other ensembles.{{sfn|Searle|1954|p=1}}{{sfn|Botstein|2011}} His piano works are often marked by their difficulty.{{sfn|Gould|2005|p=67}}{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§9}} Some of his works are [[Program music|programmatic]], based on extra-musical inspirations such as poetry or art.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§15, §17}} Liszt is credited with the creation of the [[symphonic poem]].{{sfn|Pesce|Eckhardt|Mueller|2023|loc=§1.v}}

=== Keyboard music ===
==== Piano ====
{{listen
|type=music
| filename = Franz Liszt - Second Hungarian Rhapsody.ogg
| title = Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2
| description = Performed by [[Martha Goldstein]] on an 1851 Erard piano
}}
{{listen
| type = music
| filename = Liszt-La Campanella-Greiss.ogg
| title = La Campanella
}}

The best-known portion of Liszt's music is his original piano work. During the Weimar period he composed the first 15 [[Hungarian Rhapsodies]], themselves revisions of his earlier Magyar Dalok/Rhapsódiák, which were influenced by the Romani bands he heard while visiting Hungary. ''[[Harmonies poétiques et religieuses]]'', also the result of a long gestation, was published around the same time, and dedicated to Princess Carolyne.{{sfn|Watson|2000|pp=235-237}} Likewise, the six ''Grandes Études de Paganini'' were revised from an earlier 1840 edition and published in 1851; these include the famous piece ''[[La campanella]]''.{{sfn|Watson|2000|pp=226-227}} Other notable pieces include the thoroughly revised collections of ''[[Années de pèlerinage]]'' ("Years of Pilgrimage"), inspired by his travels around Europe;{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§7}} the [[Piano Sonata in B minor (Liszt)|Piano Sonata in B minor]], which has been described as "one of the most original contributions to sonata form to come out of the 19th century";{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§17}} and the ''[[Transcendental Études]]'', which are stylistically varied, technically difficult, and have been described as "Liszt at his most Lisztian".{{sfn|Schwarm|2016}}{{sfn|Searle|2023}}

==== Organ ====
Liszt wrote his two largest organ works between 1850 and 1855 while he was living in Weimar, a city with a long tradition of organ music, most notably that of J.S. Bach. [[Humphrey Searle]] calls these works{{spaced ndash}}the ''[[Fantasy and Fugue on the chorale "Ad nos, ad salutarem undam"]]'' and the ''[[Fantasy and Fugue on the Theme B-A-C-H]]''{{spaced ndash}}Liszt's "only important original organ works";{{sfn|Searle|1995|p=46}} [[Derek Watson (actor and musicologist)|Derek Watson]] considered them among the most significant organ works of the nineteenth century, heralding the work of such key organist-musicians as [[Max Reger|Reger]], Franck and Saint-Saëns, among others.{{sfn|Watson|2000|p=286}} Liszt also wrote the monumental set of variations on the first section of the second movement chorus from [[List of Bach cantatas|Bach's cantata]] ''[[Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen, BWV 12]]'' (which Bach later reworked as the ''{{lang|la|[[Mass in B minor structure#Crucifixus|Crucifixus]]}}'' in the [[Mass in B minor]]), which he composed after the death of his daughter in 1862.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=Works: Organ, harmonium, pedal piano}} He also wrote a Requiem for organ solo, intended to be performed liturgically during the service of the spoken [[Requiem Mass]].{{sfn|Searle|1995|p=46}}

==== Transcriptions and paraphrases ====
{{Main|Transcriptions by Franz Liszt}}
{{listen
|type=music
|filename=Liszt Totentanz.ogg
|title=''Totentanz''
|description=''[[Totentanz (Liszt)|Totentanz: Paraphrase on Dies irae]]''
}}
Liszt coined the terms "[[Transcription (music)|transcription]]" and "paraphrase", the former being a faithful reproduction of the source material and the latter a more free reinterpretation.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§10}} He wrote substantial quantities of both over the course of his life, and they form a large proportion of his total output{{emdash}}up to half of his solo piano output from the 1830s and 1840s is transcription and paraphrase, and of his total output only approximately a third is completely original.{{sfn|Pesce|Eckhardt|Mueller|2023|loc=§4.v}}{{sfn|Friedheim|1962|p=83}} In the mid-19th century, orchestral performances were much less common than they are today and were not available at all outside major cities; thus, Liszt's transcriptions played a major role in popularising a wide array of music such as [[Beethoven Symphonies (Liszt)|Beethoven's symphonies]].{{sfn|Rosen|2012}} Liszt's transcriptions of Italian opera, Schubert songs and Beethoven symphonies are also significant indicators of his artistic development, the opera allowing him to improvise in concert and the Schubert and Beethoven influence indicating his compositional development towards the Germanic tradition. He also transcribed his own orchestral and choral music for piano in an attempt to make it better known.{{sfn|Pesce|Eckhardt|Mueller|2023|loc=§4.v}}

In addition to piano transcriptions, Liszt also transcribed about a dozen works for organ, such as [[Otto Nicolai]]'s ''Ecclesiastical Festival Overture on the chorale "Ein feste Burg"'', [[Orlando di Lasso]]'s motet ''Regina coeli'' and excerpts of Bach's [[BWV 21|Cantata No. 21]] and Wagner's ''[[Tannhäuser (opera)|Tannhäuser]]''.{{sfn|Gárdonyi|1985}}

=== Songs ===
Today, Liszt's songs are relatively obscure.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§19}} There are 137 secular vocal pieces, 82 of which were original songs with piano accompaniment, mostly composed in the 1840s.{{sfn|Pesce|Eckhardt|Mueller|2023|loc=§1.v}} In most cases the lyrics are in German, but there are also some in Italian and French, three in Hungarian and one in each of Russian and English.{{sfn|Watson|2000|p=305}} The influence of Italian opera can be seen in the songs' use of [[arioso]] and [[recitative]] styles.{{sfn|Pesce|Eckhardt|Mueller|2023|loc=§1.v}} While in Weimar Liszt coached the Court Opera singers, and several prominent musicians sang his songs, including [[Rosa von Milde|Rosa]] and [[Hans von Milde]].{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§19}}

=== Program music ===
{{See also|Program music|Symphonic poems (Liszt)}}

Liszt coined the term "[[program music]]" in an 1855 essay on Berlioz's ''[[Harold en Italie|Harold in Italy]]'', referring to pieces which are "driven by an overarching poetic image or narrative"{{sfn|Bonds|2014|p=210}} (in the case of ''Harold in Italy'', the piece "describes" the scenes witnessed by the character Harold as he travels through Italy).{{sfn|Macdonald|2005|loc=§3}} This is presented in opposition to [[absolute music]], which stands for itself and is intended to be appreciated without any particular reference to the outside world. This was not a new idea{{snd}}such pieces had been written since the early 18th century, and Liszt himself had written works such as the early version of ''Années de pèlerinage'' which invoked his experiences travelling{{snd}}but he presented the novel argument that program music was artistically superior, counter to the prevailing view that such work was unserious.{{sfn|Bonds|2014|pp=210-211,213}} This developed into the idea that the historical development of music as an art form was destined to move from absolute to representational: Beethoven's symphonies had mostly been non-representational, but his [[Symphony No. 9 (Beethoven)|ninth symphony]] had included some extramusical elements, and Berlioz had taken this further with ''Harold in Italy'' and ''[[Symphonie fantastique]]''. Wagner saw these developments as a stepping stone to the all-encompassing {{lang|de|[[Gesamtkunstwerk]]}}, and in this sense Liszt's programmatic works were part of his vision of the "[[Music of the Future]]".{{sfn|Bonds|2014|pp=212-213}}

[[File:Wilhelm von Kaulbach 001.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|''Die Hunnenschlacht'', as painted by [[Wilhelm von Kaulbach]], that in turn inspired one of Liszt's symphonic poems]]
Liszt's main contribution to program music was [[Symphonic poems (Liszt)|his thirteen symphonic poems]], one-movement orchestral works in which some extramusical program or idea provides a narrative or illustrative element.{{sfn|Pesce|Eckhardt|Mueller|2023|loc=preface}} The first twelve of these were written between 1848 and 1858,{{sfn|Macdonald|2001|loc=§3}} and the most well-known are ''[[Les préludes]]'' and ''[[Mazeppa (symphonic poem)|Mazeppa]]''.{{sfn|Johns|1993|p=13}} The symphonic poems were poorly received by critics, especially in Weimar, where Liszt was residing at the time{{emdash}}they criticised Liszt's compositional style as well as the whole idea of program music as the future of music.{{sfn|Johns|1993|pp=17-18,19,22}}

Believing in the power of music to transcend people's typical quotidian existence, with his program music Liszt attempted to "elevate listeners to a higher realm of consciousness".{{sfn|Bonds|2014|p=213}} He argued that its purpose was less to do with depicting a specific scene or experience, and more about allowing the listener to reach a higher state of existence. Such music would act as a more direct method of communication than language, allowing people to share exactly their own experiences.{{sfn|Bonds|2014|p=214}} This view was endorsed by [[Franz Brendel]], Wagner and [[Friedrich Theodor Vischer]].{{sfn|Bonds|2014|pp=216-217}}

=== Late works ===
{{Main|Late works of Franz Liszt}}
Liszt's final period is considered to have started from about 1869,{{sfn|Baker|2005|pp=86,88}} during which he wrote a number of short and independent works, such as the collection ''[[Weihnachtsbaum (Liszt)|Weihnachtsbaum]]'' and a piano version of ''[[Via crucis (Liszt)|Via crucis]]'', although he did continue to write transcriptions and paraphrases as well as sacred vocal music.{{sfn|Baker|2005|pp=89,90,99}}{{sfn|Pesce|2014|pp=171,216}} Studies of his output from this period typically focus on pieces which display a willingness to push the boundaries of tonality and have an association with death and mourning, such as ''[[La lugubre gondola]]'' and ''Unstern!''.{{sfn|Baker|2005|pp=90,112,113}} The morbid focus on loss may be ascribed to Liszt's mental state in his final decade, when he suffered episodes of depression.{{sfn|Baker|2005|pp=87-88}} Many of these pieces remained unpublished in Liszt's lifetime.{{sfn|Baker|2005|p=113}}

Liszt's experimentation can be seen in his 1881 piece ''[[Nuages gris]]''. Its key signature is G minor, but ends in an ambiguous tonality; its texture is generated by a collection of fragments rather than a distinct melody and harmony; and it uses chromaticism and dissonance such as the [[tritone]].{{sfn|Pesce|2014|p=171}} Additional examples include ''[[Csárdás (Liszt)#Csárdás macabre, S.224 (1881-82)|Czardas macabre]]'', which repeatedly uses a single melodic motif and rhythm accompanied dissonantly or with open fifths, and "Csárdás obstinée", which makes extensive use of [[false relation]]s.{{sfn|Pesce|2014|p=211}} Some of his sacred vocal music also shows this type of experimentation, such as ''Via crucis'', which contains some movements without key signatures and with ambiguous tonality.{{sfn|Forte|1987|p=220}}

=== Writings ===
Liszt published a number of prose works and letters over the course of his life.{{sfn|Suttoni|1979|loc=''passim''}} Many scholars have doubted that he was their sole author, suggesting that the writings ascribed to Liszt were written partly or solely by Countess Marie d'Agoult or Princess Carolyne, but there is no consensus on this matter.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|pp=4-11}} It is known that the programs for some of his symphonic poems were ghost-written.{{sfn|Saffle|2012|p=xiii}}

One of Liszt's notable written works was his biography of Chopin, started less than a month after Chopin's funeral.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|p=17}} ''F. Chopin'' was serialised in the journal ''{{interlanguage link|La France musicale|fr}}'' in 1851 and published in book form the following year, having been edited by Carolyne.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|p=18}} The book was poorly received. Liszt had approached Chopin's sister [[Ludwika|Ludwika Jędrzejewicz]] and pupil [[Jane Stirling]] for information, but they had been uncooperative, finding the timing of his enquiries so soon after Chopin's death to be insensitive. As a result the work contained several factual inaccuracies.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|pp=18,30}} Nevertheless [[George Sand]], who features prominently in one of the chapters, admired the book.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|pp=18-19}} English translations garnered attention in the USA and UK over the subsequent two decades, leading to a second edition in 1879.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|pp=19,41}} Once again Liszt asked Carolyne to help, but her contribution was so extensive that Liszt considered it over-involvement,{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2011|p=19}} going so far as to describe the book as having been "written by Carolyne".{{sfn|Szilasi|2011}}

One significant essay by Liszt is {{lang|fr|"De la situation des artistes"}} ("On the situation of artists"), which was serialised in the Parisian ''Gazette musicale'' in 1835.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2012|pp=78,110}} This work calls for the reform of theatres: Liszt perceived the physical buildings to be unsafe and unpleasant, and their managers to be incompetent. He argues that they would book the cheapest variety of acts without concern for artistic merit, leading to subpar concert experiences. Furthermore, owners would blacklist performers who had appeared at a rival venue. Liszt was also concerned about the lack of professionalism of educational institutions, which were run by unqualified teachers and charged high tuition. In his view, their courses lacked rigour, and had an undue preference for older music over that of living composers.{{sfn|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2012|pp=30-32}}

During his Weimar years, Liszt wrote essays for audiences on ''[[Harold en Italie|Harold in Italy]]'', ''[[Lohengrin (opera)|Lohengrin]]'' and ''[[Alfonso und Estrella]]''. In addition he wrote the book {{lang|fr|Des Bohémiens et de leur musique en Hongrie}} (translated as ''The Gypsy in Music'') about the Romani and their influence on [[Hungarian folk music]].{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§14, § Writings: Books and essays from later years}} This work proved controversial in the country, with Hungarians disputing Liszt's assertion that Romani communities were responsible for a large contribution to the native music.{{sfn|Piotrowska|2013|pp=132-133}} The second edition, published in 1881, contains [[Antisemitism|antisemitic]] passages included by Princess Carolyne.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§14}}

Liszt also worked until at least 1885 on a [[treatise]] on modern harmony entitled ''Sketches for a Harmony of the Future''. [[Arthur Friedheim]], a pupil of Liszt's at the time, remembered seeing it among Liszt's papers at Weimar. Liszt told Friedheim that the time was not yet ripe to publish the manuscript.{{sfn|Walker|1970|pp=362-363}} This treatise has since been lost.{{sfn|Cook|1986|p=375}}

== Legacy ==
=== Compositions ===
[[Romantic music]] generally fell out of favour during the first half of the 20th century, as composers such as [[Igor Stravinsky|Stravinsky]], [[Arnold Schoenberg|Schoenberg]] and [[Béla Bartók|Bartók]] took the art form in new directions. Liszt's music seemed "flamboyant and excessive" in contrast with their leaner styles,{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§28}} and his work had neither become part of the established canon nor received credit for being avant-garde.{{sfn|Deaville|2005|p=28}} His piano music received attention from few pianists during this period,{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§28}} and only a few select popular pieces such as the ''[[Liebesträume]]'' and ''[[Hungarian Rhapsodies]]'' were published in collections.{{sfn|Deaville|2005|p=28}} Two notable champions were [[Ferruccio Busoni]], who delivered all-Liszt recitals in Berlin in 1904{{ndash}}1905 and 1911, and [[Humphrey Searle]], who organised concerts of Liszt's chamber and orchestral music in the 1930s and 1940s.{{sfn|Loya|2021}} Of his orchestral works, only ''[[Les préludes]]'' and the ''[[Faust Symphony]]'' were performed regularly.{{sfn|Deaville|2005|p=28}}

During the [[Romantic Revival]] of the 1950s Liszt's works and writings received greater attention, and scholars now appreciate the wide range and originality of his compositions.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§28}} In the decades since, recordings of the vast majority of his output have become available, and a complete edition of scores is being published, to modernise the previous such collection published by [[Breitkopf & Härtel]] in 1907{{endash}}1936.{{sfn|Loya|2021}}{{sfn|Walker|2011b|p=32}} Liszt competitions occur across the world, and Liszt societies promote his work.{{sfn|Walker|2011b|p=32}}

{{Quote box|align=right|width=30%|quote="The great artist's true significance was revealed to me at last. I came to recognize that, for the continued development of musical art, his compositions were more important than either Wagner's or Strauss's."
|author=Béla Bartók on Liszt{{sfn|Walker|1970|p=364}}}}
Scholar James Deaville writes that "few composers of the nineteenth century, except possibly Wagner, had the same influence upon succeeding generations as Liszt did. Indeed, one is hard-pressed to think of an innovative composer of the early twentieth century who was not influenced by Liszt's music, especially in its departures from traditional harmonies and novel approaches to form and formal unity".{{sfn|Deaville|2005|p=31}} [[Sergei Prokofiev|Prokofiev]] admired Liszt's concertos, which influenced his own, and [[Igor Stravinsky|Stravinsky]] remarked that he had "admiration for the great Liszt whose immense talent in composition is underrated."{{sfn|Deaville|2005|p=44}} Liszt's piano music had a strong influence on the [[Impressionism in music|impressionistic]] music of [[Claude Debussy|Debussy]] and [[Maurice Ravel|Ravel]];{{sfn|Deaville|2005|p=43}} one example is Debussy's ''[[L'isle joyeuse]]'', which has clear similarities with ''Les jeux d'eaux à la villa d'Este'', a piece he heard Liszt perform in 1884.{{sfn|Walker|1970|pp=351-352}} Liszt also had a marked influence on early 20th-century Hungarian composers, especially [[Zoltán Kodály|Kodály]] with his ''[[Psalmus Hungaricus (Kodály)|Psalmus Hungaricus]]'', [[Ernst von Dohnányi|Dohnányi]] in his second string quartet, and Bartók, who admired Liszt's works greatly.{{sfn|Deaville|2005|pp=40-41}} Liszt's method of using Hungarian folk music in his compositions was developed further by these composers and their successors, who integrated such themes more subtly and valued the authenticity of the source material to a greater extent.{{sfn|Deaville|2005|pp=40-41}}

It is now held that many of Liszt's late compositions, such as ''[[Nuages gris]]'', ''Les jeux d'eaux à la villa d'Este'' and ''[[Csárdás (Liszt)#Csárdás macabre, S.224 (1881-82)|Czardas macabre]]'', anticipated future developments. Their use of parallel fifths, the whole-tone scale, unresolved dissonances and parallel diminished and augmented triads, predates similar compositional techniques used by Ravel and Bartók.{{sfn|Engel|Siegmeister|1973|p=222}} Liszt also pioneered a tonal language of [[Quartal and quintal harmony|building chords in fourths]], which was a technique later used by Schoenberg.{{sfn|Walker|1970|pp=360-361}} However, many of Liszt's late works were not available until the publication of [[José Vianna da Motta]]'s final volume of Liszt's solo pieces in 1927, so much of his more radical experimentation cannot have influenced composers before then.{{sfn|Deaville|2005|pp=31,254}}{{sfn|Loya|2021}}

Liszt's invention of the symphonic poem had an impact across Europe from the last years of his life through to the 1920s. His friend [[Camille Saint-Saëns|Saint-Saëns]] wrote ''[[Le Rouet d'Omphale]]'' in 1869 and ''La jeunesse d'Hercule'' in 1877; [[Bedřich Smetana|Smetana]], another friend, wrote ''[[Má vlast]]'' in the 1870s. [[César Franck|Franck]], [[Vincent d'Indy|d'Indy]], [[Antonín Dvořák|Dvořák]] and Debussy all wrote symphonic poems in the 1880s and 1890s.{{sfn|Loya|2021}} [[Jean Sibelius|Sibelius]] was introduced to the music of Liszt through his teacher [[Martin Wegelius]], and the influence of Liszt's symphonic poems is seen in Sibelius' ''[[Kullervo (Sibelius)|Kullervo]]'' and ''[[En saga]]''.{{sfn|Deaville|2005|p=45}} [[Richard Strauss]] also wrote [[Tone poems (Strauss)|his notable collection of tone poems]] around this time, and these are similarly indebted to Liszt.{{sfn|Deaville|2005|pp=38-39}}{{sfn|Gilliam|Youmans|2010}}

=== Teaching ===
{{anchor|List of music students by teacher: G to M#Franz Liszt}}
{{For LMST|Franz|Liszt}}

From 1827 until the last month of his life, Liszt gave lessons in composition and piano playing.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=26}}{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§23}} He wrote in 1829 that his schedule was "so full of lessons that each day, from half-past eight in the morning till 10 at night, I have scarcely breathing time".{{sfn|Liszt|2021|loc=23 December 1829}} Estimates of the total number of pupils he taught range as high as over 400, although some of these may only have had one lesson, or perhaps even none at all.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§23}}

In Weimar Liszt pioneered the concept of the [[Master class|masterclass]], in which he would instruct each pupil in turn while the others observed. Students from this time included [[Karl Tausig]], [[Hans von Bülow]], [[Karl Klindworth]] and [[Hans Bronsart von Schellendorff]]. Members of these classes would also accompany Liszt to concerts and other events. In later years some in Weimar would criticise the masterclasses as a vanity club more interested in praising Liszt than in learning pianistic excellence, although [[Carl Lachmund]] commented that the success of many of its pupils, such as [[Arthur Friedheim]], [[Moriz Rosenthal]], [[Frederic Lamond (pianist)|Frederic Lamond]] and [[Alexander Siloti]], proved the group's effectiveness.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§23}}

Liszt offered his students little technical advice, expecting them to "wash their dirty linen at home," as he phrased it. Instead, he focused on musical interpretation with a combination of anecdote, metaphor, and wit. He advised one student tapping out the opening chords of Beethoven's [[Piano Sonata No. 21 (Beethoven)|''Waldstein'' Sonata]], "Do not chop beefsteak for us." To another who blurred the rhythm in Liszt's ''Gnomenreigen'': "There you go, mixing salad again." Liszt also wanted to avoid creating carbon copies of himself, believed instead in preserving his pupils' artistic individuality. This was in contrast to his contemporaries, who focused on drilling students in a uniform approach.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§23}}

Liszt did not charge for lessons.{{sfn|Walker|1973|p=94}} He was troubled when German newspapers revealed that pedagogue [[Theodor Kullak]] had earned more than one million marks from teaching: "As an artist, you do not rake in a million marks without performing some sacrifice on the altar of Art".{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§23}} He wrote an open letter to Kullak's sons, published in the ''[[Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung]]'', urging them to create an endowment for needy musicians, as Liszt himself frequently did.{{sfn|Eckhardt|Mueller|Walker|2001|loc=§23}}

==References==
=== Notes ===
{{Reflist|group=n}}

===Citations===
{{reflist|20em}}

=== Sources ===
{{refbegin}}
* {{cite web |title=Ferenc Erkel, the Director of the Academy of Music |url=https://lisztmuseum.hu/previous_exhibitions/ferenc-erkel-the-director-of-the-academy-of-music-119937 |website=Liszt Museum |publisher=Liszt Academy |access-date=2 September 2023 |ref={{harvid|Liszt Museum|n.d.}}}}
* {{cite book |last1=de Beer |first1=Willem |title=Diabelli's Vaterländischer Künstlerverein Part II as a representation of the development of the waltz within the socio-political context of Vienna ca. 1820 |date=2008 |publisher=University of Pretoria |location=Pretoria |url=https://repository.up.ac.za/bitstream/handle/2263/67984/DeBeer_Diabelli_2018.pdf}}
* {{cite book |last1=Bloom |first1=Peter |date=1998 |title=The Life of Berlioz |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge |isbn=0521480914 |ol=344098M}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Bloom |first1=Peter |date=2013 |title=Berlioz and Liszt 'in the Locker Room' |journal=Studia Musicologica |volume=54 |issue=1 |pages=75–85 |doi=10.1556/smus.54.2013.1.6 |issn=1788-6244 |jstor=43289705 }}
* {{cite book |last1=Bonds |first1=Mark Evan |title=Absolute Music: The History of an Idea |date=2014 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford |ol=26883046M}}
* {{cite web |last1=Botstein |first1=Leon |author-link=Leon Botstein |title=What Makes Franz Liszt Still Important? |url=https://publicdomainreview.org/essay/what-makes-franz-liszt-still-important |website=The Public Domain Review |access-date=19 January 2024 |language=en |date=17 October 2011}}
* {{cite book|last=Burger|first=Ernst|author-link=Ernst Burger (musicologist)|title=Franz Liszt, Eine Lebenschronik in Bildern und Dokumenten|publisher=List|location=Munich|year=1986|oclc=924748359}}
* {{cite web|last=Burton-Hill|first=Clemency|authorlink=Clemency Burton-Hill|url=http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/20160817-franz-liszt-the-worlds-first-musical-superstar|title=Forget the Beatles – Liszt was music's first 'superstar'|publisher=BBC|date=17 August 2016|access-date=19 January 2024}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Cook |first1=Nicholas |title=Liszt{{snd}}100 Years On |journal=The Musical Times |date=1986 |volume=127 |issue=1720 |pages=372–376 |doi=10.2307/965235 |jstor=965235 |issn=0027-4666}}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Cormac |editor1-first=Joanne |title=Liszt In Context |date=2021 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge |isbn=9781108378253 |doi=10.1017/9781108378253}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Bertagnolli|2021}}|reference=Bertagnolli, Paul, "Liszt's Teachers". In {{harvnb|Cormac|2021|pp=10-19}}}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Celenza|2021}}|reference=Celenza, Anna Harwell, "Italy". In {{harvnb|Cormac|2021|pp=29-37}}}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Cormac|2021b}}|reference=Cormac, Joanne, "Weimar". In {{harvnb|Cormac|2021|pp=58-65}}}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Deaville|2021}}|reference=Deaville, James, "The New German School". In {{harvnb|Cormac|2021|pp=48-57}}}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Hooker|2021}}|reference=Hooker, Lynn M., "Liszt in Hungary". In {{harvnb|Cormac|2021|pp=74-82}}}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Loya|2021}}|reference=Loya, Shay, "Lateness in Context". In {{harvnb|Cormac|2021|pp=271-281}}}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Trippett|2021}}|reference=Trippett, David, "Liszt and Wagner". In {{harvnb|Cormac|2021|pp=38–47}}}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Whitelaw|2021}}|reference=Whitelaw, Bryan A., "Paris". In {{harvnb|Cormac|2021|pp=20-28}}}}
* {{cite magazine|last1=Davis|first1=Peter G.|author-link=Peter G. Davis|title=Hit Liszt|magazine=[[New York (magazine)|New York]]|date=16 March 1987|pages=68,73|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dOQCAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA68|access-date=19 January 2024}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Davison |first1=Alan |title=Franz Liszt and the Development of 19th-Century Pianism |journal=The Musical Times |date=Autumn 2006 |volume=147 |issue=1896 |pages=33–43 |doi=10.2307/25434402 |jstor=25434402}}
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* {{cite journal |last1=Eckhardt |first1=Mária |title=Liszt à Marseille |journal=Studia Musicologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae |date=1982 |volume=24 |issue=1/2 |pages=163–197 |doi=10.2307/901828 |jstor=901828 |issn=0039-3266}}
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* {{cite encyclopedia |author-last1=Engel |author-first1=Carl |author-last2=Siegmeister |author-first2=Elie |editor-last1=Siegmeister |editor-first1=Elie |encyclopedia=The New Music Lover's Handbook |title=Franz Liszt |date=1973 |pages=220–222 |publisher=Harvey House |location=Irvington-on-Hudson |ol=5447957M}}
* {{cite book |editor-last=Esteban |editor-first=Julio |title=Liszt – Technical Exercises (Complete) |date=1971 |publisher=Alfred Music Publishing |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A4OVdTt3UMsC |via=Google Books |isbn=978-0-7390-2212-2}}
* {{cite book |last1=Fend |first1=Michael |last2=Noiray |first2=Michel |title=Musical Education in Europe (1770–1914): Compositional, Institutional, and Political Challenges |date=2005 |volume=2 |publisher=Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag |location=Berlin}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Forte |first1=Allen |title=Liszt's Experimental Idiom and Music of the Early Twentieth Century |journal=19th-Century Music |date=1987 |volume=10 |issue=3 |pages=209–228 |doi=10.2307/746436 |jstor=746436}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Francis |first1=Suzanne Marie |title=Liszt at the Piano: The Impact of Iconography on mid-Nineteenth Century Musicology |journal=Studia Musicologica |date=June 2014 |volume=55 |issue=1–2 |pages=131–144 |doi=10.1556/6.2014.55.1-2.9 |jstor=24898486}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Friedheim |first1=Philip |title=The Piano Transcriptions of Franz Liszt |journal=Studies in Romanticism |date=1962 |volume=1 |issue=2 |pages=83–96 |doi=10.2307/25599545 |jstor=25599545}}
* {{citation |last=Gárdonyi |first=Zoltán |title=The Organ Music of Liszt |journal=The New Hungarian Quarterly |issue=Winter 1985 |date=1985 |url=http://www.gardonyi.de/zg_the_organ_music_of_liszt.pdf}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last1=Gilliam |first1=Bryan |last2=Youmans |first2=Charles |title=Strauss, Richard (Georg) |encyclopedia=Grove Music Online |year=2010 |doi=10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.40117 |url=https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/display/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000040117 |url-access=subscription}} {{Grove Music subscription|sentence=yes}}
* {{cite book |last1=Grey |first1=Thomas Spencer |title=The Cambridge Companion to Wagner |date=2008 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=New York |isbn=9780521642996 |ol=10436070M}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Gould |first1=John |title=What Did They Play?: The Changing Repertoire of the Piano Recital from the Beginnings to 1980 |journal=The Musical Times |date=2005 |volume=146 |issue=1893 |pages=61–76 |doi=10.2307/30044125 |jstor=30044125}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last1=Grey |first1=Thomas S. |title=New German School |encyclopedia=[[Grove Music Online]] |year=2001 |doi=10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.40621 |url=https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/display/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000040621 |url-access=subscription}} {{Grove Music subscription|sentence=yes}}
* {{cite book |last1=Hall-Swadley |first1=Janita R. |last2=Liszt |first2=Franz |editor1-last=Hall-Swadley |editor1-first=Janita R. |translator-last=Hall-Swadley |translator-first=Janita R. |title=The Collected Writings of Franz Liszt |volume=1: F. Chopin |date=2011 |publisher=Scarecrow |location=Plymouth |ol=OL25076988M}}
* {{cite book |last1=Hall-Swadley |first1=Janita R. |last2=Liszt |first2=Franz |editor1-last=Hall-Swadley |editor1-first=Janita R. |translator-last=Hall-Swadley |translator-first=Janita R. |title=The Collected Writings of Franz Liszt |volume=2: Essays and Letters of a Traveling Bachelor of Music |date=2012 |publisher=Scarecrow |location=Plymouth}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Saffle|2012}}|reference=Saffle, Michael, "Foreword". In {{harvnb|Hall-Swadley|Liszt|2012|pp=xiii-xxii}}}}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Hamilton |editor1-first=Kenneth |title=The Cambridge Companion to Liszt |date=2005 |publisher=Cambridge University press |location=Cambridge |isbn=0521622042 |ol=19319043M}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Baker|2005}}|reference=Baker, James M., "Liszt's Late Piano Works: A Survey". In {{harvnb|Hamilton|2005|pp=86-119}}}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Deaville|2005}}|reference=Deaville, James, "Liszt and the Twentieth Century". In {{harvnb|Hamilton|2005|pp=28-56}}}}
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* {{cite book|last=Hilmes|first=Oliver|author-link=Oliver Hilmes|title=Franz Liszt: Musician, Celebrity, Superstar|publisher=Yale University Press|location=London|year=2016|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ing8DAAAQBAJ|isbn=978-0-300-21946-3|translator-last1=Spencer|translator-first1=Stewart|ol=OL26316088M}}
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** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Hamilton|2002}}|reference=Hamilton, Kenneth, "Liszt, Franz". In {{harvnb|Latham|2002|pp=698-701}}}}
** {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Warrack|2002}}|reference=Warrack, John, "New German School". In {{harvnb|Latham|2002|p=834}}}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Keeling |first1=Geraldine |title=Concert Announcements, Programs and Reviews as Evidence for First or Early Performances by Liszt of His Keyboard Works to 1847 |journal=Studia Musicologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae |date=1992 |volume=34 |issue=3/4 |pages=397–404 |doi=10.2307/902290 |jstor=902290}}
* {{cite book |last=Liszt |first=Franz |year=2021 |orig-year=1894 |title=Letters of Franz Liszt |volume=1 |editor-last=La Mara |editor-link=Ida Marie Lipsius |translator-last=Bache |translator-first=Constance |translator-link=Constance Bache |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/3689}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last1=Macdonald |first1=Hugh |title=Symphonic poem |encyclopedia=[[Grove Music Online]] |year=2001 |url=https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/display/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000027250 |url-access=subscription |doi=10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.27250}} {{Grove Music subscription|sentence=yes}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last1=Macdonald |first1=Hugh |title=Berlioz, (Louis-)Hector |encyclopedia=[[Grove Music Online]] |year=2005 |url=https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/display/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000051424 |url-access=subscription |doi=10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.51424}} {{Grove Music subscription|sentence=yes}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last1=Millington |first1=Barry |last2=Deathridge |first2=John |last3=Dahlhaus |first3=Carl |last4=Bailey |first4=Robert |title=Wagner, (Wilhelm) Richard |encyclopedia=[[Grove Music Online]] |year=2009 |doi=10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.6002278269 |url=https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/display/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-6002278269 |url-access=subscription}} {{Grove Music subscription|sentence=yes}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Mishra |first1=Jennifer |title=Playing from Memory: Development of a 19th-century performance practice |journal=American Music Teacher |date=June–July 2016 |volume=65 |issue=6 |pages=12–16 |jstor=26385978}}
* {{cite interview |last1=Negus |first1=Anthony |last2=Hamilton |first2=Kenneth |author-link1=Anthony Negus |author-link2=Kenneth Hamilton |interviewer=Sophie Rashbrook |title=Richard Wagner and Franz Liszt |type=none |work=The Longborough Podcast |date=March 2021 |publisher=[[Longborough Festival Opera]] |url=https://lfo.org.uk/our-story/podcast/episode-5 |access-date=19 February 2024}}
* {{cite book |last1=Pesce |first1=Dolores |title=Liszt's Final Decade |date=2014 |publisher=University of Rochester Press |location=Rochester, NY |isbn=9781580464840 |ol=26185377M}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last1=Pesce |first1=Dolores |last2=Eckhardt |first2=Maria |last3=Mueller |first3=Rena Charnin |title=Liszt, Franz [Ferenc] |encyclopedia=[[Grove Music Online]] |year=2023 |doi=10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.48265 |url=https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/display/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000048265 |url-access=subscription}} {{Grove Music subscription|sentence=yes}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Piotrowska |first1=Anna G. |title=Liszt and the issue of so called Gypsy music |journal=Interdisciplinary Studies in Musicology |date=2013 |volume=13 |pages=127–140 |url=https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/162598946.pdf |access-date=17 February 2024}}
* {{cite book |editor1-last=Pocknell |editor1-first=Pauline |title=Franz Liszt and Agnes Street-Klindworth: A Correspondence, 1854–1886 |date=2000 |publisher=Pendragon |location=Hillsdale |isbn=9781576470060 |ol=12238972M}}
* {{cite web |last=Predota |first=Georg |date=2019-02-14 |title=When Liszt Visited Istanbul |url=https://interlude.hk/franz-liszt-istanbul/ |access-date=2024-02-09 |website=Interlude |language=en-US}}
* {{cite book |last=Ramann |first=Lina |author-link=Lina Ramann |title=Franz Liszt, Artist and Man: 1811{{ndash}}1840 |year=1882 |translator-last=Cowdery |translator-first=E. |publisher=W. H. Allen & Co. |location=London |ol=7103128M}}
* {{Cite news |last=Rosen |first=Charles |author-link=Charles Rosen |url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2012/02/23/super-power-franz-liszt/ |title=The Super Power of Franz Liszt |date=23 February 2012 |work=[[The New York Review of Books]] |access-date=11 March 2018 |url-access=subscription}}
* {{cite book |last1=Schmalhausen |first1=Lina |editor1-last=Walker |editor1-first=Alan |title=The Death of Franz Liszt: based on the unpublished diary of his pupil Lina Schmalhausen |date=2002 |publisher=Cornell University Press |location=Ithaca |isbn=9780801440762 |ol=17068266M}}
* {{cite web |last1=Schwarm |first1=Betsy |title=Transcendental Études |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Transcendental-Etudes |website=Britannica |access-date=23 January 2024 |language=en |date=3 November 2016}}
* {{cite book |last1=Searle |first1=Humphrey |title=The Music of Liszt |publisher=Williams & Norgate |location=London |year=1954 |ol=6157654M}}
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Searle |first=Humphrey |editor-last=Sadie |editor-first=Stanley |encyclopedia=The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians |title=Liszt, Franz |year=1995 |publisher=Macmillan |location=London |volume=11 |pages=28–74 |ol=18342085M}}
* {{cite web |last1=Searle |first1=Humphrey |title=Franz Liszt |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Franz-Liszt |website=Britannica |access-date=23 January 2024 |language=en |date=18 October 2023}}
* {{cite book |last1=Sitwell |first1=Sacheverell |title=Liszt |date=1967 |publisher=Dover |location=New York |edition=revised |ol=21091397M}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Suttoni |first1=Charles |title=Franz Liszt's Published Correspondence: An Annotated Bibliography |journal=Fontes Artis Musicae |date=1979 |volume=26 |issue=3 |pages=191–234 |issn=0015-6191 |jstor=23505430 }}
* {{cite journal |last1=Szilasi |first1=Alex |title=Liszt on Chopin, Chopin on Liszt |journal=Hungarian Review |date=5 January 2011 |volume=2 |issue=1 |url=https://hungarianreview.com/article/liszt_on_chopin/ |access-date=6 February 2024}}
* {{cite book |last1=Walker |first1=Alan |date=1970 |author-link=Alan Walker (musicologist) |editor1-last=Walker |editor1-first=Alan |title=Franz Liszt: The Man And His Music |publisher=Taplinger |location=New York |pages=350–364 |chapter=Liszt and the Twentieth Century |ol=26352341M}}
* {{cite book |last1=Walker |first1=Alan |date=1973 |title=The Great Composers: Liszt |publisher=T. Y. Crowell Co. |location=New York |isbn=9780690496994 |ol=21091256M}}
* {{cite book | last=Walker |first=Alan |year=1987 |title=Franz Liszt, The Virtuoso Years, 1811–1847 |edition=revised |publisher=Cornell University Press|isbn=0801494214|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lCw4cxHmpgYC|ol=OL2394803M}}
* {{cite book |last=Walker |first=Alan |date=1987b |title=Franz Liszt: The Weimar Years, 1848–1861 |publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=978-0-8014-9721-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yNhQhSgRlWIC}}
* {{cite book|last=Walker|first=Alan |year=1997 |title=Franz Liszt, The Final Years, 1861–1886 |publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=0801484537 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=beP86q3iO6MC}}
* {{cite interview |last=Walker |first=Alan |date=1 November 2011b |interviewer=Helen Smith Tarchalski |title=The World Around Us: Counterpoint |type= |work=Clavier Companion |pages=32-35 }}
* {{cite book|last=Watson|first=Derek|author-link=Derek Watson (actor and musicologist)|title=Liszt|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|year=2000|orig-year=1989|isbn=978-0-02-872705-9|ol=24861665M}}
{{Refend}}

== External links ==
{{Library resources box |about=yes |by=yes }}
<!--{{Archival records|title=Harry Rosenthal collection on Franz Liszt, 1829–1886|location= [[Library of Congress|Music Division, Library of Congress]]|description_URL=https://lccn.loc.gov/2006569278}}-->
* [https://www.americanlisztsociety.net/ American Liszt Society]
* {{BBC composer page|liszt|Liszt}}

:'''Scores'''
* {{IMSLP | id=Liszt%2C_Franz | cname=Franz Liszt}}
* {{ChoralWiki}}
* {{Musopen|franz-liszt}}

:'''Books'''
* {{Gutenberg author |id=1266| name=Franz Liszt}}
* {{Internet Archive author |search=( Liszt AND (Franz OR Ferenc OR Ferencz) )}}
* {{Librivox author |id=10429}}

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[[Category:Hungarian emigrants to Germany]]

Latest revision as of 23:17, 18 May 2024

Franz Liszt
Liszt in 1858
Born22 October 1811
Doborján, Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire
Died31 July 1886(1886-07-31) (aged 74)
Bayreuth, Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire
WorksList of compositions
Partners
Children3, including Cosima Wagner
Signature

Franz Liszt[n 1] (22 October 1811 – 31 July 1886) was a Hungarian composer, virtuoso pianist, conductor and teacher of the Romantic period. With a diverse body of work spanning more than six decades, he is considered to be one of the most prolific and influential composers of his era, and his piano works continue to be widely performed and recorded.[1][2][3]

Liszt gained renown during the 1830s for his skill as a pianist. Regarded as one of the greatest pianists of the time, he toured Europe during the 1830s and 1840s, often playing for charity. In these years, Liszt developed a reputation for his powerful performances as well as his physical attractiveness. In a phenomenon dubbed "Lisztomania", he rose to a degree of stardom and popularity among the public not experienced by the virtuosos who preceded him.

During this period and into his later life, Liszt was a friend, musical promoter and benefactor to many composers of his time, including Hector Berlioz, Frédéric Chopin, Robert Schumann, Clara Schumann and Richard Wagner, among others. Alongside Wagner, Liszt was one of the most prominent representatives of the New German School, a progressive group of composers involved in the "War of the Romantics" who developed ideas of programmatic music and harmonic experimentation.

Liszt taught piano performance to hundreds of students throughout his life, many of whom went on to become notable performers. He left behind an extensive and diverse body of work that influenced his forward-looking contemporaries and anticipated 20th-century ideas and trends. Among Liszt's musical contributions were the concept of the symphonic poem, innovations in thematic transformation and impressionism in music, and the invention of the masterclass as a method of teaching performance. In a radical departure from his earlier compositional styles, many of Liszt's later works also feature experiments in atonality, foreshadowing developments in 20th-century classical music.

Life[edit]

Early life[edit]

Franz Liszt's father Adam Liszt (left), and mother Anna Liszt (right)

Franz Liszt was born to Anna Liszt (née Maria Anna Lager)[4] and Adam Liszt on 22 October 1811, in the village of Doborján (German: Raiding) in Sopron County, in the Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire.[5][n 2] Liszt's father was a land steward in the service of Prince Nikolaus II Esterházy;[5] a keen amateur musician, he played the piano, cello, guitar and flute,[6][7] and knew Haydn and Hummel personally.[8] Franz began to improvise at the piano from before the age of five, and his father diligently encouraged his progress.[7] Franz also found exposure to music through attending Mass, as well as traveling Romani bands that toured the Hungarian countryside.[9] His first public concert was in Sopron in 1820 at the age of nine; its success led to further appearences in Pressburg and for Prince Nikolaus' court in Eisenstadt. The publicity led to a group of wealthy sponsors offering to finance Franz's musical education in Vienna.[10]

There, Liszt received piano lessons from Carl Czerny, who in his own youth had been a student of Beethoven and Hummel. Czerny, already extremely busy, had only begrudgingly agreed to hear Liszt play, and had initially refused to entertain the idea of regular lessons. Being so impressed by the initial audition, however, Czerny taught Liszt regularly, free of charge, for the next eighteen months, at which point he felt he had nothing more to teach.[11] Liszt remained grateful to his former teacher,[12] later dedicating to him the Transcendental Études on their 1830 republication.[13] Liszt also received lessons in composition from Antonio Salieri, the accomplished music director of the Viennese court who had previously taught Beethoven and Schubert.[14][15] Like Czerny, Salieri was highly impressed by Liszt's improvisation and sight-reading abilities.[15]

Liszt's public debut in Vienna on 1 December 1822 was a great success.[16] He was greeted in Austrian and Hungarian aristocratic circles and met Beethoven and Schubert.[17] To build on his son's success, Adam Liszt decided to take the family to Paris, the centre of the artistic world.[18] At Liszt's final Viennese concert on 13 April 1823, Beethoven was reputed to have walked onstage and kissed Liszt on the forehead, to signify a kind of artistic christening. There is debate, however, on the extent to which this story is apocryphal.[19][20] The family briefly returned to Hungary, and Liszt played a concert in traditional Hungarian dress, in order to emphasise his roots, in May 1823.[19]

In 1824 a piece Liszt had written at the age of 11 – his Variation on a Waltz by Diabelli (S. 147) – appeared in Part II of Vaterländischer Künstlerverein as his first published composition. This volume, commissioned by Anton Diabelli, includes 50 variations on his waltz by 50 different composers (Part I being taken up by Beethoven's 33 variations on the same theme, which are now separately better known simply as his Diabelli Variations).[21][22] Liszt was the youngest contributor to the project, described in it as "a boy of eleven years old";[23] Czerny was also a participant.[24]

Paris[edit]

Liszt in 1826 by Jean Vignaud [fr]

Having made significant sums from his concerts, Liszt and his family moved to Paris in 1823, with the hope of his attending the Conservatoire de Paris. The director Luigi Cherubini refused his entry, however, as the Conservatoire did not accept foreigners. Nevertheless, Liszt studied under Anton Reicha and Ferdinando Paer, and gave a series of highly successful concerts debuting on 8 March 1824. Paer was involved in the Parisian theatrical and operatic scene, and through his connections Liszt staged his only opera, Don Sanche, which premiered shortly before his fourteenth birthday. The premiere was warmly received, but the opera only ran for four performances, and is now obscure.[18] Accompanied by his father, Liszt toured France and England, where he played for King George IV.[25]

Adam Liszt died suddenly of typhoid fever in the summer of 1827, and for the next eight years Liszt continued to live in Paris with his mother.[18] He gave up touring, and in order to earn money, he gave lessons on piano and composition, often from early morning until late at night. His students were scattered across the city and he had to cover long distances. Because of this, he kept uncertain hours and also took up smoking and drinking, habits he would continue throughout his life.[26][27] During this period Liszt fell in love with one of his pupils, Caroline de Saint-Cricq, the daughter of Charles X's minister of commerce, Pierre de Saint-Cricq. Her father, however, insisted that the affair be broken off.[28]

Liszt fell very ill, to the extent that an obituary notice was printed in a Paris newspaper, and he underwent a long period of religious doubts and introspection. He stopped playing the piano and giving lessons, and developed an intense interest in religion, having many conversations with Abbé de Lamennais and Chrétien Urhan, a German-born violinist who introduced him to the Saint-Simonists. Lamennais dissuaded Liszt from becoming a monk or priest.[29] Urhan was an early champion of Schubert, inspiring Liszt's own lifelong love of Schubert's songs. Much of Urhan's emotive music which moved beyond the Classical paradigm, such as Elle et moi, La Salvation angélique and Les Regrets, may have helped to develop Liszt's taste and style.[30]

During this period Liszt came into contact with many of the leading authors and artists of his day, including Victor Hugo, Alphonse de Lamartine, George Sand and Alfred de Vigny. He composed practically nothing in the years between his father's death and the July Revolution of 1830, which inspired him to sketch a symphony based on the events of the "three glorious days" (this piece was left unfinished, and later reworked as Héroïde funèbre).[18] Liszt met Hector Berlioz on 4 December 1830, the day before the premiere of the Symphonie fantastique. Berlioz's music made a strong impression on Liszt, and the two quickly became friends.[31][32] Liszt also befriended Frédéric Chopin around this time.[33]

Niccolò Paganini (1828)

After attending a concert featuring Niccolò Paganini in April 1832,[34] Liszt resolved to become as great a virtuoso on the piano as Paganini was on the violin. He dramatically increased his practice, sometimes practising for up to fourteen hours a day, and in 1838 published the six Études d'exécution transcendante d'après Paganini (later revised as Grandes études de Paganini), aiming to represent Paganini's virtuosity on the keyboard.[35] The process of Liszt completely redeveloping his technique is often described as a direct result of attending Paganini's concert, but it is likely that he had already begun this work previously, during the period 1828–1832.[36]

"Years of Pilgrimage" and touring Europe[edit]

Affair with Countess Marie d'Agoult[edit]

Marie d'Agoult (1843)

In 1833, Liszt began a relationship with the Countess Marie d'Agoult, who was married to a French cavalry officer but living independently.[37] In order to escape scandal they moved to Geneva in 1835;[38] their daughter Blandine was born there on 18 December.[39] Liszt taught at the newly-founded Geneva Conservatoire and contributed essays for L'Artiste and the Revue et gazette musicale de Paris.[40][38]

For the next four years, Liszt and the countess lived together. In 1835 and 1836 they travelled around Switzerland, and from August 1837 until November 1839 they toured Italy. It was these travels that later inspired the composer to write his cycle of piano collections entitled Années de pèlerinage (Years of Pilgrimage).[41][42] Their daughter, Cosima, was born in Como on 24 December 1837, and their son Daniel on 9 May 1839 in Rome.[43]

That autumn relations between them became strained. Liszt heard that plans for a Beethoven Monument in Bonn were in danger of collapse for lack of funds and pledged his support, raising funds through concerts.[38] The countess returned to Paris with the children, while Liszt gave six concerts in Vienna, then toured Hungary.[26] Liszt would later spend holidays with Marie and their children on the island of Nonnenwerth on the Rhine in the summers of 1841 and 1843. In May 1844, the couple finally separated.[44]

The Ivory Duel[edit]

Sigismond Thalberg (1836)

Swiss pianist Sigismond Thalberg moved to Paris in 1835 after several successful years of touring. His concerts there were extremely well received, and Liszt, at the time living in Geneva, received news of them from his friends in Paris. In the autumn of 1836 Liszt published an unfavourable review of several of Thalberg's compositions in the Gazette musicale, calling them "boring" and "mediocre". A published exchange of views ensued between Liszt and Thalberg's supporter, the critic François-Joseph Fétis.[45]

Liszt heard Thalberg perform for the first time at the Paris Conservatoire in February 1837, and to settle the disagreement the two pianists each arranged a performance for the public to compare them the following month. Liszt performed his own Grande fantaisie sur des motifs de Niobe and Weber's Konzertstück in F minor. This was considered to be inconclusive, so the two agreed to perform at the same concert for comparison on 31 March, at the salon of the Princess of Belgiojoso, in aid of Italian refugees. Thalberg opened with his Fantasia on Rossini's "Moses", then Liszt performed his Niobe fantasy.[46]

The result of this "duel" is disputed. Critic Jules Janin's report in Journal des débats asserted that there was no clear winner: "Two victors and no vanquished; it is fitting to say with the poet 'et adhuc sub judice lis est". Belgiojoso declined to declare a winner, famously concluding that "Thalberg is the first pianist in the world – Liszt is unique."[38] The biographer Alan Walker, however, believes that "Liszt received the ovation of the evening and all doubts about his supremacy were dispelled. As for Thalberg, his humiliation was complete. He virtually disappeared from the concert platform after this date."[47]

Lisztomania[edit]

Earliest known photograph of Liszt (1843) by Hermann Biow

After his separation from Marie, Liszt continued to tour Europe. His concerts in Berlin in the winter of 1841–1842 marked the start of a period of immense public enthusiasm and popularity for his performances, dubbed "Lisztomania" by Heinrich Heine in 1844.[48] In a fashion that has been described as similar to "the mass hysteria associated with revivalist meetings or 20th-century rock stars", women fought over his cigar stubs and coffee dregs,[49] and his silk handkerchiefs and velvet gloves, which they ripped to shreds as souvenirs.[50] This atmosphere was fuelled in great part by the artist's mesmeric personality and stage presence: he was regarded as handsome,[51][52] and Heine wrote of his showmanship during concerts: "How powerful, how shattering was his mere physical appearance".[50][53]

It is estimated that Liszt appeared in public well over one thousand times during this eight-year period.[49] Moreover, his great fame as a pianist, which he would continue to enjoy long after he had officially retired from the concert stage, was based mainly on his accomplishments during this time.[54]

Adding to his reputation was that Liszt gave away much of the proceeds of his work to charity and humanitarian causes. He donated large sums to the building fund of Cologne Cathedral and St. Stephen's Basilica in Pest, and made private donations to public services such as hospitals and schools, as well as charitable organizations such as the Leipzig Musicians Pension Fund. After the Great Fire of Hamburg in May 1842, he gave concerts in aid of those left homeless.[55]

During a tour of Ukraine in 1847, Liszt played in Kiev, where he met the Polish Princess Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein. For some time he had been considering retiring from the life of a travelling virtuoso to concentrate on composition, and at this point he made the decision to take up a court position in Weimar. Having known Liszt for only a few weeks, Carolyne resolved to join him there.[56] After a tour of Turkey and Russia that summer,[57] Liszt gave the final paid concert of his career at Elizabetgrad in September,[58] then spent the winter with the princess at her estate in Woronińce.[59] By retiring from the concert platform at the age of 35, while still at the height of his powers, Liszt succeeded in keeping the legend of his playing untarnished.[60]

Weimar[edit]

Franz Liszt, portrait by Hungarian painter Miklós Barabás, 1847

In July 1848 Liszt settled in Weimar, where he had been appointed the honorary title of "Kapellmeister Extraordinaire" six years previously. He acted as the official court kapellmeister at the expense of Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia until 1859,[61] jointly with Hippolyte André Jean Baptiste Chélard until his retirement in 1852.[62] During this period Liszt acted as conductor at court concerts and on special occasions at the theatre, arranged several festivals celebrating the work of Berlioz and Wagner, and produced the premiere of Lohengrin.[63][64] He gave lessons to a number of pianists, including the great virtuoso Hans von Bülow, who married Liszt's daughter Cosima in 1857 (she would later marry Wagner).[65] Liszt's work during this period made Weimar a nexus for modern music.[62]

As kapellmeister Liszt was required to submit every programme to the court Intendant for prior approval. This did not cause large problems until the appointment of Franz von Dingelstedt in 1857, who reduced the number of music productions, rejected Liszt's choices of repertoire, and even organised a demonstration against Liszt's 1858 premiere of Der Barbier von Bagdad.[62][66] Faced with this opposition, Liszt resigned in 1858.[66]

At first, after arriving in Weimar, Princess Carolyne lived apart from Liszt, in order to avoid suspicions of impropriety. She wished eventually to marry Liszt, but since her husband, Russian military officer Prince Nicholas von Sayn-Wittgenstein, was still alive, she had to convince the Roman Catholic authorities that her marriage to him had been invalid. Her appeal to the Archbishop of St Petersburg for an annulment, lodged before leaving Russia, was ultimately unsuccessful, and the couple abandoned pretence and began to live together in the autumn of 1848.[67]

Nicholas was aware that the couple's marriage had effectively ended, and Carolyne and Nicholas reached an agreement to annul in 1850 whereby the prince would receive some of Carolyne's estates. However, this arrangement was struck down in 1851 by the consistory court of Zhytomyr.[68] Throughout the decade the couple would continue to negotiate through the complex situation.[69]

The New German School and the War of the Romantics[edit]

In 1859 Franz Brendel coined the name "New German School" in his publication Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, to refer to the musicians associated with Liszt while he was in Weimar. The most prominent members other than Liszt were Wagner and Berlioz (although Wagner rejected the label), and the group also included Peter Cornelius, Hans von Bülow and Joachim Raff. The School was a loose confederation of progressive composers, mainly grouped together as a challenge to supposed conservatives such as Mendelssohn and Brahms, and so the term is considered to be of limited use in describing a particular movement or set of unified principles.[70] What commonalities the composers had were around the development of programmatic music, harmonic experimentation, wide-ranging modulation and formal innovations such as the use of leitmotifs and thematic transformation.[71][72]

The disagreements between the two factions is often described as the "War of the Romantics". The "war" was largely carried out through articles, essays and reviews. Each side claimed Beethoven as its predecessor. A number of festivals were arranged to showcase the music of the New German School, notably in Leipzig in 1859 and Weimar in 1861. The Allgemeine Deutsche Musikverein, intrinsically linked to the School, was founded at this time, with Liszt becoming its honorary president in 1873. However, as most of Liszt's work from the 1860s and 1870s received little attention, and Brendel and Berlioz died in the late 1860s, the focus of the progressive movement in music moved to Bayreuth with Wagner in the 1870s, who definitively moved on from the School and the Neue Zeitschrift.[72]

Rome[edit]

Liszt, photo (mirror-imaged) by Franz Hanfstaengl, June 1870

After a visit to Rome and an audience with Pope Pius IX in 1860, Carolyne finally secured an annulment.[73] It was planned that she and Liszt would marry in Rome, on 22 October 1861, Liszt's 50th birthday. Liszt arrived in Rome on 21 October, but a Vatican official had arrived the previous day in order to stop the marriage. This was a result of the machinations of Cardinal Hohenlohe, who wanted to protect a complex inheritance agreement brokered by Tsar Alexander II. Carolyne subsequently gave up all attempts to marry Liszt, even after her husband's death in 1864;[74][75] she became a recluse, working for the rest of her life on a long work critical of the Catholic Church.[76]

The 1860s were a period of great sadness in Liszt's private life. On 13 December 1859, he lost his 20-year-old son Daniel to an unknown illness.[77] On 11 September 1862 his 26-year-old daughter Blandine also died, having contracted sepsis after surgery on a breast growth which developed shortly after giving birth to a son she named in memory of Daniel.[78] In letters to friends, Liszt announced that he would retreat to a solitary living.[79]

He moved to the monastery Madonna del Rosario, just outside Rome, where on 20 June 1863 he took up quarters in a small, spartan apartment.[79] He had a piano in his cell, and he continued to compose.[80] He had already joined the Third Order of Saint Francis previously, on 23 June 1857.[81] On 25 April 1865 he received the tonsure at the hands of Cardinal Hohenlohe, who had previously worked against Carolyne's efforts to secure an annulment; the two men became close friends.[82][83] On 31 July 1865 Liszt received the four minor orders of porter, lector, exorcist and acolyte. After this ordination he was often called "Abbé Liszt". On 14 August 1879, he was made an honorary canon of Albano.[84]

In 1867 Liszt was commissioned to write a piece for the coronation ceremony of Franz Joseph and Elisabeth of Bavaria, and he travelled to Budapest to conduct it.[85] The Hungarian Coronation Mass was performed on 8 June 1867, at the coronation ceremony in the Matthias Church by Buda Castle in a six-section form. After the first performance, the Offertory was added and, two years later, the Gradual.[86]

"Tripartite existence"[edit]

Liszt Ferenc Academy of Music in Budapest

Grand Duke Charles Alexander had been attempting to arrange Liszt's return to Weimar ever since he'd left, and in January 1869 Liszt agreed to a residency to give masterclasses in piano playing.[87][88] He was based in the Hofgärtnerei (court gardener's house), where he taught for the next seventeen years.[89] From 1872 until the end of his life, Liszt made regular journeys between Rome, Weimar and Budapest, continuing what he called his vie trifurquée ("tripartite existence").[90] It is estimated that he traveled at least 4,000 miles a year during this period in his life – an exceptional figure given his advancing age and the rigors of road and rail in the 1870s.[91]

Liszt's time in Budapest was the result of efforts from the Hungarian government in attracting him to work there.[90] The plan of the foundation of the Royal Academy of Music was agreed upon by the Hungarian Parliament in 1873, and in March 1875 Liszt was nominated its president.[92] The academy was officially opened on 14 November 1875 with Liszt's colleague Ferenc Erkel as director and Kornél Ábrányi and Robert Volkmann on the staff.[93] Liszt himself only arrived to deliver lessons in March 1876.[94] From 1881 when in Budapest he would stay in an apartment in the Academy, where he taught pupils in much the same way as he did in Weimar.[95] In 1925 the institution was renamed in honour of Liszt.[96]

Final years[edit]

Liszt in March 1886, four months before his death, photographed by Nadar

Liszt fell down a flight of stairs at the Hofgärtnerei in July 1881, and remained bedridden for several weeks after this accident.[97] He had been in good health up to that point,[98] but a number of ailments subsequently manifested, such as a cataract in the left eye, dental issues and fatigue.[99][98] Since around 1877 he had become increasingly plagued by feelings of desolation, despair and preoccupation with death—feelings that he expressed in his works from this period.[100] As he told Lina Ramann, "I carry a deep sadness of the heart which must now and then break out in sound."[101]

On 13 January 1886, while Claude Debussy was staying at the Villa Medici in Rome, Liszt met him there with Paul Vidal and Ernest Hébert, director of the French Academy. Liszt played "Au bord d'une source" from Années de pèlerinage, as well as his arrangement of Schubert's Ave Maria for the musicians. Debussy in later years described Liszt's pedalling as "like a form of breathing."[102]

Liszt travelled to Bayreuth in the summer of 1886. This was in order to support his daughter Cosima, who was running the festival but struggling to generate sufficient interest.[103] The festival was dedicated to the works of her husband Richard Wagner, and had opened ten years previously; Wagner had died in 1883.[104] Already frail, in his final week of life Liszt's health deteriorated further, as he experienced a fever, cough and delirium.[105] He died during the festival, near midnight on 31 July 1886, at the age of 74—officially as a result of pneumonia, which he had contracted prior to arriving in Bayreuth, although the true cause of death may have been a heart attack.[106][107] He was buried on 3 August 1886, in the municipal cemetery of Bayreuth [de], according to Cosima's wishes; despite controversy over this as his final resting place, Liszt's body was never moved.[108]

Relationships with other composers[edit]

Hector Berlioz[edit]

Berlioz (standing, left) listening to Liszt play the piano (1846).

Berlioz and Liszt first met on 4 December 1830, the day before the premiere of Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique.[109] The two quickly became very close friends, exchanging intimate letters on their respective love lives, which also reveal that Liszt was aware of Berlioz's fixation on suicide.[32][110] Liszt acted as a witness at Berlioz's wedding to Harriet Smithson in 1833, despite cautioning Berlioz against it, and they worked together at several concerts over the following three years, and again in 1841 and 1844.[111][112] In Weimar the two composers revised Benvenuto Cellini, and Liszt organised a "Berlioz Week", which included Roméo et Juliette and part of La damnation de Faust, later dedicated to Liszt (in return, Liszt dedicated his Faust Symphony to Berlioz).[113]

The orchestration of Berlioz had an influence on Liszt, especially with regards to his symphonic poems. Berlioz saw orchestration as part of the compositional process, rather than a final task to undertake after the music had already been written.[31] Berlioz joined Liszt and Wagner as a figurehead of the New German School, but an unwilling one, as he was unconvinced by Wagner's ideas about the "music of the future".[114]

Frédéric Chopin[edit]

Chopin and Liszt first met in the early 1830s, both moving in the same circles of artists residing in Paris.[33] Liszt attended Chopin's first Paris performance at the Salle Pleyel on 26 February 1832, which he admired greatly, and by mid-1833 the two had become close friends. They performed together a number of times, often for charity, and since Chopin only performed in public about 12 times, these events comprise a large proportion of his total appearances.[115]

Their relationship cooled in the early 1840s, and several reasons have been suggested for this, including that Marie d'Agoult was infatuated with Chopin, or Liszt with George Sand, or that Liszt used Chopin's home for a rendezvous with Marie Pleyel, the wife of Chopin's friend Camille. The two musicians had very different personalities, with Liszt being extroverted and outgoing while Chopin was more introverted and reflective, so it is possible that the two never had an extremely close friendship to begin with, and the fact that they did not live physically close together would have been another barrier. On the topic, Liszt commented to Chopin's biographer Frederick Niecks that Marie d'Agoult and George Sand had frequently disagreed, and the musicians had felt obliged to side with their respective partners.[116] Alex Szilasi suggests that Chopin took offence at an equivocal 1841 review by Liszt, and was perhaps jealous of Liszt's popularity, while Liszt in turn may have been jealous of Chopin's reputation as a serious composer.[117]

Very shortly after Chopin's death in 1849, Liszt had a monument erected in his memory and began to write a biography.[117] Chopin's relatives and friends found the timing of this insensitive, and many declined to help with Liszt's enquiries.[118]

Scholars disagree on the extent to which Chopin and Liszt influenced each others' compositions. Charles Rosen identifies similarities between Chopin's Étude Op. 10, No. 9 and the early version of Liszt's Transcendental Étude No. 10, but Alan Walker argues that no such connection exists. Stylistic similarities between other studies, Chopin's Nocturnes and Liszt's Consolations, and even an influence on the ornamentation and fingering of Liszt's works, have been proposed.[119]

Robert and Clara Schumann[edit]

In 1837 Liszt wrote a positive review of Robert Schumann's Impromptus and piano sonatas no. 1 and no. 3. The two began to correspond from this time, and the following year he met Schumann's fiancée Clara Wieck, to whom he dedicated the early version of Grandes études de Paganini. Schumann in turn dedicated Fantasie in C to Liszt. The two met for the first time in Dresden in 1840.[120]

Schumann resigned as editor of the music journal Neue Zeitschrift für Musik in 1844, ten years after founding it.[120] The journal was taken over the following year by Franz Brendel, who used it to publicise and support Liszt's New German School, to Schumann's chagrin.[121] In 1848 Liszt attended a performance of the Piano Trio No. 1 being held in his honour in the Schumanns' home. Liszt arrived two hours late with Wagner (who had not been invited), derided the piece, and spoke ill of the recently-deceased Mendelssohn. This upset the Schumanns, and Robert physically assaulted Liszt.[122]

The relationship between Liszt and the couple remained frosty. Liszt dedicated his 1854 piano sonata to Robert, who had by that point been committed to a mental institution in Endenich. Clara asked for Liszt's help that year in finding a performance venue in order to earn an income. Liszt arranged an all-Schumann concert with Clara as the star performer, and published an extremely positive review, but Clara did not express any gratitude. In a posthumous edition of Robert's works, Clara changed the dedication of the Fantasie from Liszt to herself. After Liszt's death, she wrote in her diary "He was an eminent keyboard virtuoso but a dangerous example for the young. ... As a composer he was terrible."[123]

Richard Wagner[edit]

Wagner first met Liszt in Paris in 1841,[124][125] while living in poverty after fleeing Riga to escape creditors.[126][127] Liszt was at this point a famous pianist, whereas Wagner was unknown; unlike Wagner, Liszt did not remember the meeting. In 1844 Liszt attended a performance of Wagner's first major success, the opera Rienzi, in Dresden.[126][124] The two met in Berlin at the instigation of Wilhelmine Schröder-Devrient, and Wagner later sent Liszt the scores of Rienzi and Tannhäuser in an attempt to elicit approval.[124] Liszt settled in Weimar in 1848, and the two grew close, Wagner still being located in Dresden.[126] Wagner wrote to Liszt a number of times soliciting financial help.[124]

In 1849 Liszt sheltered Wagner after the latter's involvement in the failed May Uprising in Dresden.[128] Liszt arranged a false passport and lent Wagner money to allow him to escape Germany for Switzerland, and for the next ten years continued to send money and visit, as well as petition officials for a pardon which eventually came in 1860.[64]

To publicise Wagner's music, Liszt staged Tannhäuser in 1849, for the first time outside Dresden, and published two transcriptions from it, writing to Wagner "Once and for all, number me in future among your most zealous and devoted admirers; near or far, count on me and make use of me."[124] In 1850 he arranged the premiere of Lohengrin, which Wagner dedicated to Liszt, and he also mounted performances of Der fliegende Holländer.[64] Liszt had intended to dedicate the 1857 Dante Symphony to Wagner, but upon being told this Wagner replied that, while a fine piece, he would prefer to receive money. Liszt was offended by this comment, and did not publish the dedication.[126]

Cosima and Richard Wagner at their home Wahnfried, with Liszt and Hans von Wolzogen (1880).

By 1864 Wagner had begun an affair with Liszt's daughter Cosima, who was married to Liszt's erstwhile pupil Hans von Bülow.[129] Liszt disapproved of the relationship and broke off contact with the couple for a number of years, only learning of their 1870 marriage from the newspapers.[74][130] Nevertheless the relationship recovered: Liszt contributed financially to the building of the Bayreuth Festspielhaus in 1871, and he began to correspond with Wagner and Cosima again, frequently visiting their home Wahnfried.[130][131] Liszt died in 1886 while at the latest incarnation of the Bayreuth Festival, dedicated to Wagner's work, Wagner having died three years previously.[132][133]

Similarities have been suggested between Wagner's Faust Overture and Liszt's Faust Symphony, but Liszt claimed that the likenesses of the themes were coincidental.[126] Scholars also note a similarity between the opening of Liszt's song "Lorelei" and the famous "Tristan chord" from the opening of Wagner's later opera Tristan und Isolde, although there is no consensus on whether Wagner was influenced by the song.[126] There are similarities in their musical languages, however, and Wagner once even commented to Cosima that he was looking at The Bells of the Strasbourg Cathedral to ensure he hadn't overtly plagiarised the work, the opening theme of Parsifal being very similar to that cantata.[126] Both composers were also prominent members of the New German School.[64]

Pianist[edit]

At his performing peak Liszt was considered the greatest pianist of his time, and was perhaps one of the greatest who ever lived.[52][134] His popularity during the "Lisztomania" period of the 1840s was unrivalled, and the critic Peter G. Davis has written that "Perhaps [Liszt] was not the most transcendent virtuoso who ever lived, but his audiences thought he was, and no pianist since has seriously challenged the legend."[135][136]

Performing style[edit]

Franz Liszt Fantasizing at the Piano (1840), by Danhauser. The imagined gathering shows seated Alexandre Dumas, George Sand, Liszt, and Marie d'Agoult; standing Victor Hugo, Niccolò Paganini, and Gioachino Rossini; with a bust of Beethoven looking on.[137]

Liszt's performance style changed throughout his life, in his interpretive decisions as well as his physicality (the young Liszt was extremely animated at the keyboard, but in old age he was very still).[138] No recordings of Liszt exist, so to get an impression of his style scholars must go by contemporary writings and the output of his pupils, while allowing for a certain amount of mythologising around his extraordinary talent.[139]

From a young age Liszt had displayed an aptitude for improvisation and sight reading. Czerny observed that Liszt was a natural who played according to feeling—"one saw that Nature herself had formed a pianist."[19] Liszt's fourteen months under Czerny solidified his technical skills as he enthusiastically studied exercises and works.[19] In later life, however, he would express the opinion that despite his work under Czerny his early training had been unfocused, and he had excelled mainly "by force of personality".[140] Reviews of his early concerts especially praise the brilliance, strength, and precision in his playing.[141] At least one also mentions his ability to keep absolute tempo.[142]

One of the most detailed descriptions of his playing from that time comes from the diary entries of Caroline Boissier-Butini, whose daughter Valerie was a pupil of Liszt's from 1831–1832, when he was earning a living primarily as a teacher in Paris:

Boissier records that Liszt did not keep his hands 'in a rounded position' nor were they 'altogether flat', but rather his fingers were 'so flexible as to possess no fixed position'. ... Mme Boissier writes that Liszt's 'hand is never unwieldy, for he moves it with grace according to his fancy', then she stresses that 'he does not play with his arms or shoulders'. In a later lesson, Liszt instructed Valerie to play 'without exception, entirely with a wrist action' ... without any interference by the arm ... Crucially, Liszt emphasised the role of the wrist, not the arm, in producing a full tone for individual notes, and did so not just in relation to octaves or chords.[143]

During his performance career Liszt took unusually bold liberties with the score, changing tempo and adding embellishment at will. In one instance he decided on "a sudden, drastic slowing down" while performing the Scherzo movement of Beethoven's Sixth Symphony.[144] In a regretful letter to George Sand from 1837 Liszt admitted that he made such decisions to gain public acclaim:

[I]n order to wring bravos from the public that is always slow, in its awesome simplicity, to comprehend beautiful things, I had no qualms about changing the tempos of the pieces or the composers' intentions. In my arrogance I even went so far as to add a host of rapid runs and cadenzas, which, by securing ignorant applause for me, sent me off in the wrong direction—one that I fortunately knew enough to abandon quickly. ... Now I no longer divorce a composition from the era in which it was written, and any claim to embellish or modernize the works of earlier periods seems just as absurd for a musician to make as it would be for an architect, for example, to place a Corinthian capital on the columns of an Egyptian temple.[145]

Despite his apparent contrition, however, Liszt did continue to make large interpretive changes while performing, although he would be more concerned with fidelity to the score and composer's intentions later in life. He would be more open to pupils revising his own compositions, and he himself often produced different versions of his works over the course of his lifetime.[146][2] This attitude was in keeping with the shift in audience preferences that began in the 1830s, which started to favour a faithfully-rendered memorised performance over the improvisation that Liszt employed in these years.[147]

Certain information about Liszt's style can be inferred from the writings of his many pupils. Musicologist Kenneth Hamilton identifies several themes which occurred through Liszt's teachings, including avoiding excessive sentimentality, imagining the orchestration of the piece, flexibility of tempo, and the importance of a sense of music.[148] Amy Fay studied under Liszt in his later life, 1869–1875, and her writings align with Boissier's four decades earlier. She also notes that Liszt kept his fingers close to the keyboard to achieve a better legato, and that Liszt discouraged unnecessary hand movements, in contrast to his flamboyant gestures during his prime. Notes by his pupil Pauline Fichtener in the 1870s again stress freedom and flexibility of the wrist.[149]

Concert repertoire[edit]

Liszt giving a concert for Emperor Franz Joseph I on a Bösendorfer piano

Up to 1840, most concerts featuring a solo pianist included other acts, such as an orchestra, singers and ballet.[150] The increasing prominence of the solo piano virtuoso in the 1830s led to other acts on the bill being described as "assistant artists", with Liszt declaring his pre-eminence in a letter to a friend dated June 1839: "Le concert, c'est moi".[151] Liszt is credited as the first pianist to give solo recitals in the modern sense of the word; the term was first applied to Liszt's concert at the Hanover Square Rooms in London on 9 June 1840.[49]

During his years as a traveling virtuoso Liszt performed an enormous amount of music, usually from memory.[152] He was the first to include the full range of repertoire, from J. S. Bach to Chopin.[49] His concerts included original compositions such as Grand galop chromatique, Fantaisie romantique sur deux mélodies suisses and Grande Valse di Bravura; and his transcriptions of Schubert's Schwanengesang, Symphonie Fantastique by Berlioz and Beethoven's sixth symphony.[153] Liszt would champion Beethoven's work throughout his life, and his concerts helped popularise the Hammerklavier sonata and Diabelli Variations.[49]

Instruments[edit]

One of Franz Liszt's pianos from his apartment in Budapest

After arriving in Paris in 1823, Sébastien Érard presented Liszt with a grand piano featuring his newly-patented double escapement mechanism, a key development in piano technology allowing for faster note repetition.[154] Among the composer's pianos in Weimar were an Érard, a Bechstein, the Beethovens' Broadwood grand and a Boisselot. It is known that Liszt was using Boisselot pianos in his Portugal tour[155] and then later in 1847 in a tour to Kiev and Odessa. Liszt kept the piano at his Villa Altenburg residence in Weimar.[156]

The earliest records of Liszt playing the organ date from 1836. He developed an interest in J. S. Bach's organ music in the early 1840s, probably due to Mendelssohn's influence. Later, Liszt commissioned a "piano-organ" from the Paris company Alexandre Père et Fils. The instrument was made in 1854 under Berlioz's supervision, using an 1853 Érard piano, and was a combination of piano and harmonium with three manuals and a pedal board.[157] The company called it a "Liszt piano-harmonium" and installed it in Villa Altenburg in July 1854;[158] the instrument is now exhibited in the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde collection in Vienna.[157]

Liszt owned two other organs which were installed later in his Budapest residence. The first was a "piano-orgue": this was a smaller version of Weimar's instrument, a combination of a 1864 Érard piano and a harmonium, with two independent manuals, the upper for the piano and lower for the harmonium, built again by Alexandre Père et Fils in 1865. The second was a "cabinet organ", a large concert harmonium built by the American company Mason & Hamlin and given to Liszt in 1877.[157]

Works[edit]

Liszt was a prolific composer. He is best known for his piano music, which forms the majority of his oeuvre, but he also wrote for orchestra and for other ensembles.[159][1] His piano works are often marked by their difficulty.[160][161] Some of his works are programmatic, based on extra-musical inspirations such as poetry or art.[162] Liszt is credited with the creation of the symphonic poem.[163]

Keyboard music[edit]

Piano[edit]

The best-known portion of Liszt's music is his original piano work. During the Weimar period he composed the first 15 Hungarian Rhapsodies, themselves revisions of his earlier Magyar Dalok/Rhapsódiák, which were influenced by the Romani bands he heard while visiting Hungary. Harmonies poétiques et religieuses, also the result of a long gestation, was published around the same time, and dedicated to Princess Carolyne.[164] Likewise, the six Grandes Études de Paganini were revised from an earlier 1840 edition and published in 1851; these include the famous piece La campanella.[165] Other notable pieces include the thoroughly revised collections of Années de pèlerinage ("Years of Pilgrimage"), inspired by his travels around Europe;[38] the Piano Sonata in B minor, which has been described as "one of the most original contributions to sonata form to come out of the 19th century";[166] and the Transcendental Études, which are stylistically varied, technically difficult, and have been described as "Liszt at his most Lisztian".[167][168]

Organ[edit]

Liszt wrote his two largest organ works between 1850 and 1855 while he was living in Weimar, a city with a long tradition of organ music, most notably that of J.S. Bach. Humphrey Searle calls these works – the Fantasy and Fugue on the chorale "Ad nos, ad salutarem undam" and the Fantasy and Fugue on the Theme B-A-C-H – Liszt's "only important original organ works";[169] Derek Watson considered them among the most significant organ works of the nineteenth century, heralding the work of such key organist-musicians as Reger, Franck and Saint-Saëns, among others.[170] Liszt also wrote the monumental set of variations on the first section of the second movement chorus from Bach's cantata Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen, BWV 12 (which Bach later reworked as the Crucifixus in the Mass in B minor), which he composed after the death of his daughter in 1862.[171] He also wrote a Requiem for organ solo, intended to be performed liturgically during the service of the spoken Requiem Mass.[169]

Transcriptions and paraphrases[edit]

Liszt coined the terms "transcription" and "paraphrase", the former being a faithful reproduction of the source material and the latter a more free reinterpretation.[172] He wrote substantial quantities of both over the course of his life, and they form a large proportion of his total output—up to half of his solo piano output from the 1830s and 1840s is transcription and paraphrase, and of his total output only approximately a third is completely original.[173][174] In the mid-19th century, orchestral performances were much less common than they are today and were not available at all outside major cities; thus, Liszt's transcriptions played a major role in popularising a wide array of music such as Beethoven's symphonies.[175] Liszt's transcriptions of Italian opera, Schubert songs and Beethoven symphonies are also significant indicators of his artistic development, the opera allowing him to improvise in concert and the Schubert and Beethoven influence indicating his compositional development towards the Germanic tradition. He also transcribed his own orchestral and choral music for piano in an attempt to make it better known.[173]

In addition to piano transcriptions, Liszt also transcribed about a dozen works for organ, such as Otto Nicolai's Ecclesiastical Festival Overture on the chorale "Ein feste Burg", Orlando di Lasso's motet Regina coeli and excerpts of Bach's Cantata No. 21 and Wagner's Tannhäuser.[176]

Songs[edit]

Today, Liszt's songs are relatively obscure.[177] There are 137 secular vocal pieces, 82 of which were original songs with piano accompaniment, mostly composed in the 1840s.[163] In most cases the lyrics are in German, but there are also some in Italian and French, three in Hungarian and one in each of Russian and English.[178] The influence of Italian opera can be seen in the songs' use of arioso and recitative styles.[163] While in Weimar Liszt coached the Court Opera singers, and several prominent musicians sang his songs, including Rosa and Hans von Milde.[177]

Program music[edit]

Liszt coined the term "program music" in an 1855 essay on Berlioz's Harold in Italy, referring to pieces which are "driven by an overarching poetic image or narrative"[179] (in the case of Harold in Italy, the piece "describes" the scenes witnessed by the character Harold as he travels through Italy).[180] This is presented in opposition to absolute music, which stands for itself and is intended to be appreciated without any particular reference to the outside world. This was not a new idea – such pieces had been written since the early 18th century, and Liszt himself had written works such as the early version of Années de pèlerinage which invoked his experiences travelling – but he presented the novel argument that program music was artistically superior, counter to the prevailing view that such work was unserious.[181] This developed into the idea that the historical development of music as an art form was destined to move from absolute to representational: Beethoven's symphonies had mostly been non-representational, but his ninth symphony had included some extramusical elements, and Berlioz had taken this further with Harold in Italy and Symphonie fantastique. Wagner saw these developments as a stepping stone to the all-encompassing Gesamtkunstwerk, and in this sense Liszt's programmatic works were part of his vision of the "Music of the Future".[182]

Die Hunnenschlacht, as painted by Wilhelm von Kaulbach, that in turn inspired one of Liszt's symphonic poems

Liszt's main contribution to program music was his thirteen symphonic poems, one-movement orchestral works in which some extramusical program or idea provides a narrative or illustrative element.[183] The first twelve of these were written between 1848 and 1858,[184] and the most well-known are Les préludes and Mazeppa.[185] The symphonic poems were poorly received by critics, especially in Weimar, where Liszt was residing at the time—they criticised Liszt's compositional style as well as the whole idea of program music as the future of music.[186]

Believing in the power of music to transcend people's typical quotidian existence, with his program music Liszt attempted to "elevate listeners to a higher realm of consciousness".[187] He argued that its purpose was less to do with depicting a specific scene or experience, and more about allowing the listener to reach a higher state of existence. Such music would act as a more direct method of communication than language, allowing people to share exactly their own experiences.[188] This view was endorsed by Franz Brendel, Wagner and Friedrich Theodor Vischer.[189]

Late works[edit]

Liszt's final period is considered to have started from about 1869,[190] during which he wrote a number of short and independent works, such as the collection Weihnachtsbaum and a piano version of Via crucis, although he did continue to write transcriptions and paraphrases as well as sacred vocal music.[191][192] Studies of his output from this period typically focus on pieces which display a willingness to push the boundaries of tonality and have an association with death and mourning, such as La lugubre gondola and Unstern!.[193] The morbid focus on loss may be ascribed to Liszt's mental state in his final decade, when he suffered episodes of depression.[194] Many of these pieces remained unpublished in Liszt's lifetime.[195]

Liszt's experimentation can be seen in his 1881 piece Nuages gris. Its key signature is G minor, but ends in an ambiguous tonality; its texture is generated by a collection of fragments rather than a distinct melody and harmony; and it uses chromaticism and dissonance such as the tritone.[196] Additional examples include Czardas macabre, which repeatedly uses a single melodic motif and rhythm accompanied dissonantly or with open fifths, and "Csárdás obstinée", which makes extensive use of false relations.[197] Some of his sacred vocal music also shows this type of experimentation, such as Via crucis, which contains some movements without key signatures and with ambiguous tonality.[198]

Writings[edit]

Liszt published a number of prose works and letters over the course of his life.[199] Many scholars have doubted that he was their sole author, suggesting that the writings ascribed to Liszt were written partly or solely by Countess Marie d'Agoult or Princess Carolyne, but there is no consensus on this matter.[200] It is known that the programs for some of his symphonic poems were ghost-written.[201]

One of Liszt's notable written works was his biography of Chopin, started less than a month after Chopin's funeral.[202] F. Chopin was serialised in the journal La France musicale [fr] in 1851 and published in book form the following year, having been edited by Carolyne.[203] The book was poorly received. Liszt had approached Chopin's sister Ludwika Jędrzejewicz and pupil Jane Stirling for information, but they had been uncooperative, finding the timing of his enquiries so soon after Chopin's death to be insensitive. As a result the work contained several factual inaccuracies.[204] Nevertheless George Sand, who features prominently in one of the chapters, admired the book.[205] English translations garnered attention in the USA and UK over the subsequent two decades, leading to a second edition in 1879.[206] Once again Liszt asked Carolyne to help, but her contribution was so extensive that Liszt considered it over-involvement,[207] going so far as to describe the book as having been "written by Carolyne".[117]

One significant essay by Liszt is "De la situation des artistes" ("On the situation of artists"), which was serialised in the Parisian Gazette musicale in 1835.[208] This work calls for the reform of theatres: Liszt perceived the physical buildings to be unsafe and unpleasant, and their managers to be incompetent. He argues that they would book the cheapest variety of acts without concern for artistic merit, leading to subpar concert experiences. Furthermore, owners would blacklist performers who had appeared at a rival venue. Liszt was also concerned about the lack of professionalism of educational institutions, which were run by unqualified teachers and charged high tuition. In his view, their courses lacked rigour, and had an undue preference for older music over that of living composers.[209]

During his Weimar years, Liszt wrote essays for audiences on Harold in Italy, Lohengrin and Alfonso und Estrella. In addition he wrote the book Des Bohémiens et de leur musique en Hongrie (translated as The Gypsy in Music) about the Romani and their influence on Hungarian folk music.[210] This work proved controversial in the country, with Hungarians disputing Liszt's assertion that Romani communities were responsible for a large contribution to the native music.[211] The second edition, published in 1881, contains antisemitic passages included by Princess Carolyne.[212]

Liszt also worked until at least 1885 on a treatise on modern harmony entitled Sketches for a Harmony of the Future. Arthur Friedheim, a pupil of Liszt's at the time, remembered seeing it among Liszt's papers at Weimar. Liszt told Friedheim that the time was not yet ripe to publish the manuscript.[213] This treatise has since been lost.[214]

Legacy[edit]

Compositions[edit]

Romantic music generally fell out of favour during the first half of the 20th century, as composers such as Stravinsky, Schoenberg and Bartók took the art form in new directions. Liszt's music seemed "flamboyant and excessive" in contrast with their leaner styles,[2] and his work had neither become part of the established canon nor received credit for being avant-garde.[215] His piano music received attention from few pianists during this period,[2] and only a few select popular pieces such as the Liebesträume and Hungarian Rhapsodies were published in collections.[215] Two notable champions were Ferruccio Busoni, who delivered all-Liszt recitals in Berlin in 1904–1905 and 1911, and Humphrey Searle, who organised concerts of Liszt's chamber and orchestral music in the 1930s and 1940s.[216] Of his orchestral works, only Les préludes and the Faust Symphony were performed regularly.[215]

During the Romantic Revival of the 1950s Liszt's works and writings received greater attention, and scholars now appreciate the wide range and originality of his compositions.[2] In the decades since, recordings of the vast majority of his output have become available, and a complete edition of scores is being published, to modernise the previous such collection published by Breitkopf & Härtel in 1907–1936.[216][217] Liszt competitions occur across the world, and Liszt societies promote his work.[217]

"The great artist's true significance was revealed to me at last. I came to recognize that, for the continued development of musical art, his compositions were more important than either Wagner's or Strauss's."

Béla Bartók on Liszt[218]

Scholar James Deaville writes that "few composers of the nineteenth century, except possibly Wagner, had the same influence upon succeeding generations as Liszt did. Indeed, one is hard-pressed to think of an innovative composer of the early twentieth century who was not influenced by Liszt's music, especially in its departures from traditional harmonies and novel approaches to form and formal unity".[219] Prokofiev admired Liszt's concertos, which influenced his own, and Stravinsky remarked that he had "admiration for the great Liszt whose immense talent in composition is underrated."[220] Liszt's piano music had a strong influence on the impressionistic music of Debussy and Ravel;[221] one example is Debussy's L'isle joyeuse, which has clear similarities with Les jeux d'eaux à la villa d'Este, a piece he heard Liszt perform in 1884.[222] Liszt also had a marked influence on early 20th-century Hungarian composers, especially Kodály with his Psalmus Hungaricus, Dohnányi in his second string quartet, and Bartók, who admired Liszt's works greatly.[223] Liszt's method of using Hungarian folk music in his compositions was developed further by these composers and their successors, who integrated such themes more subtly and valued the authenticity of the source material to a greater extent.[223]

It is now held that many of Liszt's late compositions, such as Nuages gris, Les jeux d'eaux à la villa d'Este and Czardas macabre, anticipated future developments. Their use of parallel fifths, the whole-tone scale, unresolved dissonances and parallel diminished and augmented triads, predates similar compositional techniques used by Ravel and Bartók.[224] Liszt also pioneered a tonal language of building chords in fourths, which was a technique later used by Schoenberg.[225] However, many of Liszt's late works were not available until the publication of José Vianna da Motta's final volume of Liszt's solo pieces in 1927, so much of his more radical experimentation cannot have influenced composers before then.[226][216]

Liszt's invention of the symphonic poem had an impact across Europe from the last years of his life through to the 1920s. His friend Saint-Saëns wrote Le Rouet d'Omphale in 1869 and La jeunesse d'Hercule in 1877; Smetana, another friend, wrote Má vlast in the 1870s. Franck, d'Indy, Dvořák and Debussy all wrote symphonic poems in the 1880s and 1890s.[216] Sibelius was introduced to the music of Liszt through his teacher Martin Wegelius, and the influence of Liszt's symphonic poems is seen in Sibelius' Kullervo and En saga.[227] Richard Strauss also wrote his notable collection of tone poems around this time, and these are similarly indebted to Liszt.[228][229]

Teaching[edit]

From 1827 until the last month of his life, Liszt gave lessons in composition and piano playing.[230][231] He wrote in 1829 that his schedule was "so full of lessons that each day, from half-past eight in the morning till 10 at night, I have scarcely breathing time".[232] Estimates of the total number of pupils he taught range as high as over 400, although some of these may only have had one lesson, or perhaps even none at all.[231]

In Weimar Liszt pioneered the concept of the masterclass, in which he would instruct each pupil in turn while the others observed. Students from this time included Karl Tausig, Hans von Bülow, Karl Klindworth and Hans Bronsart von Schellendorff. Members of these classes would also accompany Liszt to concerts and other events. In later years some in Weimar would criticise the masterclasses as a vanity club more interested in praising Liszt than in learning pianistic excellence, although Carl Lachmund commented that the success of many of its pupils, such as Arthur Friedheim, Moriz Rosenthal, Frederic Lamond and Alexander Siloti, proved the group's effectiveness.[231]

Liszt offered his students little technical advice, expecting them to "wash their dirty linen at home," as he phrased it. Instead, he focused on musical interpretation with a combination of anecdote, metaphor, and wit. He advised one student tapping out the opening chords of Beethoven's Waldstein Sonata, "Do not chop beefsteak for us." To another who blurred the rhythm in Liszt's Gnomenreigen: "There you go, mixing salad again." Liszt also wanted to avoid creating carbon copies of himself, believed instead in preserving his pupils' artistic individuality. This was in contrast to his contemporaries, who focused on drilling students in a uniform approach.[231]

Liszt did not charge for lessons.[98] He was troubled when German newspapers revealed that pedagogue Theodor Kullak had earned more than one million marks from teaching: "As an artist, you do not rake in a million marks without performing some sacrifice on the altar of Art".[231] He wrote an open letter to Kullak's sons, published in the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung, urging them to create an endowment for needy musicians, as Liszt himself frequently did.[231]

References[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ German: [ˈlɪst]; Hungarian: Liszt Ferencz, in modern usage Liszt Ferenc Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈlist ˈfɛrɛnt͡s]. Liszt's Hungarian passport spelled his given name as "Ferencz". An orthographic reform of the Hungarian language in 1922 (which was 36 years after Liszt's death) changed the letter "cz" to simply "c" in all words except surnames; this has led to Liszt's given name being rendered in modern Hungarian usage as "Ferenc". From 1859 to 1867 he was officially Franz Ritter von Liszt; he was created a Ritter (knight) by Emperor Francis Joseph I in 1859, but never used this title of nobility in public. The title was necessary to marry the Princess Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein without her losing her privileges, but after the marriage fell through, Liszt transferred the title to his uncle Eduard in 1867. Eduard's son was Franz von Liszt.
  2. ^ His birthplace is now a museum. Throughout his life, he claimed to be Magyar, rather than German, and referred to Hungary as his homeland. When later in his life he gave charity concerts in Hungary, he sometimes appeared wearing national dress.(Walker 1987, p. 48)

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Sources[edit]

External links[edit]

Scores
Books