Franz Liszt Douze Grandes Études Vidéos
Dernière mise à jour
2024-04-23
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Franz Liszt Weber Leslie Howard 1988
0:00 - C major, S.137/1 1:04 - A minor, S.137/2 3:48 - F major, S.137/3 9:18 - D minor, S.137/4 (Wenbin Jin) 15:01 - B flat major, S.137/5 18:57 - G minor, S.137/6 24:48 - E flat major, S.137/7 30:19 - "Pandaemonium" C minor, S.137/8 37:09 - A flat major, S.137/9 47:45 - F minor, S.137/10 53:08 - D flat major, S.137/11 1:05:26 - B flat minor, S.137/12 I felt compelled to make this score video as the video of Wenbin Jin’s Naxos album has multiple irritating editing errors, uses an obsolete non-urtext edition, and Jin’s recording is sometimes hesitant and always earthbound. Janice Weber’s recording from 1988 even antedates Leslie Howard’s, and it is played confidently, smoothly, and with such zest and elan. I hope you enjoy this video of an underplayed and wickedly difficult set by Liszt. Pf: Janice Weber
Franz Liszt Carl Czerny Ferruccio Busoni Wilde Sergei Lyapunov 1826 1837 1852 1897 1905
The Transcendental Études (French: Études d'exécution transcendante), S.139, are a series of twelve compositions for piano by Franz Liszt. They were published in 1852 as a revision of an 1837 series, which in turn were the elaboration of a set of studies written in 1826 The composition of the Transcendental Études began in 1826, when 15-year-old Liszt wrote a set of youthful and far less technically demanding exercises called the Étude en douze exercices (Study in twelve exercises), S.136. Liszt then elaborated on these pieces considerably, and the far more technically difficult exercises called the Douze Grandes Études (Twelve Grand Studies), S.137 were then published in 1837. The Transcendental Études are revisions of his Douze Grandes Études. This third and final version was published in 1852 and dedicated to Carl Czerny, Liszt's piano teacher, and himself a prolific composer of études. The set included simplifications, for the most part: in addition to many other reductions, Liszt removed all stretches of greater than a tenth, making the pieces more suitable for pianists with smaller hands. However, some actually regard the fourth étude of the final set, Mazeppa, more demanding than its 1837 version, since it very frequently alters and crosses the hand to create a "galloping" effect. When revising the 1837 set of études, Liszt added programmatic titles in French and German to all but the Études Nos. 2 and 10. Editor Ferruccio Busoni later gave the names Fusées (Rockets) to the Étude No. 2, and Appassionata to the Étude No. 10; however, Busoni's titles are not commonly used. For example, music publisher G. Henle Verlag refers to these two by their tempo indications, molto vivace and allegro agitato molto, respectively.[1] Henle ranks No. 4 (Mazeppa), No. 5 (Feux follets), No. 8 (Wilde Jagd), No. 10 (Appassionata) and No. 12 (Chasse-neige) as the most difficult études of the set at difficulty 9 out of 9, according to the editor Henle's scale. The lowest difficulty is given to No. 3 (Paysage) at 6 out of 9.[1] Liszt's original idea was to write 24 études, one in each of the 24 major and minor keys. He completed only half of this project, using the neutral and flat key signatures. In 1897–1905 the Russian composer Sergei Lyapunov wrote his own set of Douze études d'exécution transcendante, Op. 11, choosing only those keys that Liszt had omitted, namely the sharp keys, to "complete" the full set of 24.[2] Lyapunov's set of études was dedicated to the memory of Liszt, and the final étude was titled Élégie en mémoire de Franz Liszt.
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