Composers

Franz Liszt

Piano
Voice
Organ
Orchestra
Mixed chorus
Men's chorus
Pump organ
Alto
Tenor
Baritone
Song
Religious music
Piece
Dance
Lied
Marche
Hymn
Paraphrase
Sacred hymns
Choruses
by popularity

#

12 Grand Studies12 Lieder von Franz Schubert, S.55812 Songs2 Episoden aus Lenau's Faust, S.1102 Kirchenhymnen, S.6692 Lieder von Robert Schumann, S.5672 Polonaises, S.2232 Stücke aus Tannhäuser und Lohengrin, S.4452 Transcriptions d'après Rossini, S.5532 Ungarische Werbungstänze, S.2412 Vortragsstücke, S.2682 Waltzes, S.126b3 Album Leaves 'Magyar', S.164e3 Caprices-Valses, S.2143 Chansons, S.510a3 Lieder aus Schillers "Wilhelm Tell", S.2923 Märsche von Franz Schubert, S.4263 Morceaux suisses, S.156a3 Sonetti del Petrarca, S.2704 Lieder von Franz Schubert, S.3755 Choruses with French texts, S.185 Klavierstücke, S.1925 Ungarische Volkslieder, S.2456 Melodien von Franz Schubert, S.5636 Polish Songs, S.4808 Variations, S.148

A

A magyarok Istene, S.339Abschied, S.251Album d'un voyageur, S.156Albumblatt in E major, S.164Albumblatt in Walzerform, S.166Album-Leaf 'B.A.C.H Fragment', S.166tAlbum-Leaf 'Berlin Preludio', S.164gAlbum-Leaf 'Braunschweig Prélude', S.166fAlbum-Leaf 'Fuga sur Danse Macabre', S.555bisAlbum-Leaf 'Fugue chromatique' - Allegro in G minor, S.167jAlbum-Leaf in A major 'Friska', S.166kAlbum-Leaf in E-flat major, S.167kAlbum-Leaf 'Introduction to the Grande Étude de Paganini No.6', S.141/6bisAlbum-Leaf 'Lyon Prélude', S.166dAlbum-Leaf 'Prélude Omnitonique", S.166eAlbum-Leaf 'Preludio', S.164jAlbum-Leaf 'Quasti Mazurek in C major', S.163eAlbum-Leaf 'Serenade', S.166gAlbum-Leaf, S.164dAlbum-Leaf, S.167hAllegro di bravura, S.151Allegro Maestoso, S.692cAlleluja, S.183/1Alte deutsche geistliche Weisen, S.50Am Grabe Richard Wagners, S.135Am stillen Herd, S.448An den heiligen Franziskus von Paula, S.28An die Künstler, S.70An Edlitam, S.333Andante Finale und Marsch aus der Oper König Alfred, S.421Andantino espressivo, S.189aAndantino pour Emile et Charlotte Loudon, S.163a/2Anfangs wollt' ich fast verzagen, S.311Angiolin dal biondo crin, S.269Anima Christi sanctifica me, S.46Années de pèlerinageAnnées de pèlerinage II, S.161Années de pèlerinage II, Supplément, S.162Années de pèlerinage III, S.163Apparitions, S.155Aus der Musik von Eduard Lassen, S.496Aus der Ungarischen Krönungsmesse, S.381Aus Lohengrin, S.446Ave Maria d'Arcadelt, S.183/2Ave Maria I, S.20Ave Maria II, S.38Ave Maria III, S.60Ave Maria IV, S.341Ave maris stella, S.34Ave verum corpus, S.44

B

Bagatelle sans tonalitéBallade aus dem Fliegenden Holländer, S.441Ballade No. 1Ballade No.2, S.171Beethovens Lieder von Goethe, S.468Bénédiction et serment, S.396Berceuse, S.174Bist du, S.277Blume und Duft, S.324Buch der LiederBuch der Lieder I, S.531Buch der Lieder II, S.535–540Bülow-Marsch, S.230

C

Cantantibus organis, S.7Cantico del sol di Francesco d'Assisi, S.4Canzone Napolitana, S.248Capriccio alla turca sur des motifs de Beethoven, S.388Carrousel de Madame Pelet-Narbonne, S.214aChanson bohémienne, S.250/2Chanson du Béarn, S.236/2Chöre zu Herders Entfesseltem Prometheus, S.69ChristusChristus ist geboren, S.31Christus ist geboren, S.32Comment disaient-ils, S.276Concert Paraphrase on Mendelssohn's 'Sommernachtstraum', S.410Concerto pathétiqueConsolations and Liebesträume for the PianoConsolations, S.172Crux!, S.35CsárdásCsárdás macabre, S.224

D

Dances for Piano SoloDante SymphonyDanza sacra e duetto finale d'Aida, S.436Das deutsche Vaterland II, S.74/2Dem Andenken PetőfisDer blinde Sänger, S.350Der du von dem Himmel bist, S.279Der Glückliche, S.334Der Herr bewahret die Seelen seiner Heiligen, S.48Der traurige Mönch, S.348Des Bohémiens et de leur musique en HongrieDes Tages laute Stimmen schweigen, S.337Des toten Dichters Liebe, S.349Deutsche Kirchenlieder, S.669aDeux légendesDie drei Zigeuner, S.320Die drei Zigeuner, S.383Die Fischerstochter, S.325Die Glocken des Strassburger Münsters, S.6Die heilige Cäcilia, S.5Die Ideale, S.106Die Legende von der Heiligen Elisabeth, S.2Die Loreley, S.273Die Macht der Musik, S.302Die Seligkeiten, S.25Die stille Wasserrose, S.321Die tote Nachtigall, S.291Die Vätergruft, S.281Die Zelle in Nonnenwerth, S.274Do Not Reproach Me, S.340aDomine salvum fac regem, S.23Don Sanche, S.1Du bist wie eine Blume, S.287

E

Early and Late Piano WorksEin Fichtenbaum steht einsam I, S.309Ein Fichtenbaum steht einsam II, S.309bisEinsam bin ich, nicht allein, S.453Einst, S.332Elegy No.1, S.196Elegy No.2, S.197En rêve, S.207Enfant, si j'étais roi, S.283Epithalam, S.129Es muss ein Wunderbares sein, S.314Es rauschen die Winde, S.294Es war ein König in Thule, S.278

F

Fantaisie romantique sur deux mélodies suisses, S.157Fantaisie sur des motifs de La pastorella dell'Alpi e Li marinari des Soirées musicales, S.423Fantaisie sur des motifs favoris de l'opéra 'La sonnambula', S.393Fantaisie sur l'opéra hongroise Szép Ilonka, S.417Fantasie über Motive aus Beethovens Ruinen von Athen, S.122Fantasy and Fugue on the chorale "Ad nos, ad salutarem undam"Fantasy and Fugue on the Theme B-A-C-HFantasy on Themes from Mozart's Figaro and Don GiovanniFaribolo Pasteur, S.236/1Faust SymphonyFeierlicher Marsch zum heiligen Gral aus Parsifal, S.450Festgesang, S.26Festklänge, S.101Festmarsch nach Motiven von E.H.z.S.-C.-G., S.116Festmarsch zur Goethe-Jubiläumfeier, S.115Festmarsch zur Säcularfeier von Goethes Geburtstag, S.227Festpolonaise, S.230aFestvorspiel, S.226Feuilles d'album, S.165Franz Liszt's BriefeFranz Liszts Briefe an Carl GilleFranz Schuberts geistliche Lieder, S.562Freudvoll und leidvoll I, S.280Freudvoll und leidvoll II, S.280bis

G

Galop de bal, S.220Galop in A minor, S.218Gastibelza, S.286Gaudeamus igitur, S.240Gaudeamus igitur, S71aGebet, S.331Geharnischte Lieder, S.511Gestorben war ich, S.308Glanes de WoroninceGo Not, Happy Day, S.335God Save the Queen, S.235Grand duo concertant sur le 'Le marin', S.128Grand galop chromatiqueGrande étude de perfectionnementGrande fantaisie de bravoure sur La clochette, S.420Grande fantaisie sur des motifs de La serenata e L'orgia des Soirées musicales, S.422Grande fantaisie sur des motifs de Niobe, S.419Grande fantaisie sur la tyrolienne de l'opéra La fiancée de Auber, S.385Grande paraphrase de la Marche pour le Sultan Abdul-Medjid Khan, S.403Grande valse di bravura, S.209Grandes études de PaganiniGrandes études, S.137Grosse Konzertfantasie über spanische Weisen, S.253Grosses Konzertsolo, S.176

H

Halloh!, S.404Hamlet, S.104Harmonies poétiques et religieusesHarmonies poétiques et religieuses I, S.154Héroïde funèbre, S.102Heroischer Marsch in ungarischem Stil, S.231Hexaméron, S.392Historische ungarische Bildnisse, S.205Hohe Liebe, S.307Huldigungsmarsch, S.228Hungaria, S.103Hungarian FantasyHungarian RhapsodiesHungarian Rhapsody No. 1Hungarian Rhapsody No. 10Hungarian Rhapsody No. 11Hungarian Rhapsody No. 12Hungarian Rhapsody No. 13Hungarian Rhapsody No. 14Hungarian Rhapsody No. 15Hungarian Rhapsody No. 16Hungarian Rhapsody No. 17Hungarian Rhapsody No. 18Hungarian Rhapsody No. 19Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2Hungarian Rhapsody No. 3Hungarian Rhapsody No. 4Hungarian Rhapsody No. 5Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6Hungarian Rhapsody No. 7Hungarian Rhapsody No. 8Hungarian Rhapsody No. 9Hunnenschlacht, S.105Hussitenlied, S.234Hymne de la nuit, S.173a/1Hymne de l'enfant à son réveil, S.19Hymne du matin, S.173a/2

I

Ich liebe dich, S.315Ich möchte hingehn, S.296Ich scheide, S.319Ihr Glocken von Marling, S.328Il m'aimait tant, S.271Illustrations de l'opéra L'Africaine, S.415Illustrations du Prophète, S.414Im Rhein, im schönen Strome, S.272Impromptu brillant sur des thèmes de Rossini et Spontini, S.150Impromptu, S.191In domum Domini ibimus, S.57In festo transfigurationis Domini nostri Jesu Christi, S.188In Liebeslust, S.318Inno a Maria Vergine, S.39Introduction et Polonaise de l'opéra 'I puritani', S.391Invocation, S.172cIsten veled, S.299

J

J'ai perdu ma force et ma vie, S.327Jeanne d'Arc au bûcher, S.293Jugendglück, S.323

K

Klavierstück aus der Bonner Beethoven-Kantate, S.507Klavierstück in E-flat minor, S.692nKlavierstück, S.193Kling leise, mein Lied, S.301Künstlerfestzug zur Schillerfeier 1859, S.114

L

La cloche sonne, S.238La lugubre gondolaLa Marseillaise, S.237La notte, S.112/2La perla, S.326La romanesca, S.252aLa tombe et la rose, S.285Ländler in A-flat major, S.211Lasst mich ruhen, S.317Le crucifix, S.342Le rossignol, S.250/1Le triomphe funèbre du Tasse, S.112/3Le vieux vagabond, S.304Lenore, S.346Les adieux, S.409Les morts, S.112/1Les préludes, S.97Les Sabéennes, S.408Leyer und Schwerdt, S.452L'Idée fixe, S.395L'idée fixe, S.470a/1Liebesträume

M

Magyar dalok, S.242Magyar király-dal, S.340Magyar rapszódiák, S.242Malédiction, S.121Marche de Rákóczy, S.244cMarche et Cavatine de Lucie de Lammermoor, S.398Marche funèbre de Dom Sébastien de Donizetti, S.402Marche funèbre, S.226aMarche héroïque, S.510Marche hongroise de Szabady, S.572Marche hongroise, S.233bMariengarten, S.62MazeppaMazeppa, S.138Mazurka brillante, S.221Mélodies hongroises d'après Franz Schubert, S.425Mendelssohns Lieder, S.547Mephisto PolkaMephisto Waltz No.1, S.514Mephisto Waltz No.2, S.515Mephisto Waltz No.3, S.216Mephisto Waltz No.4, S.216bMignons Lied, S.275Mihi autem adhaerere, S.37Miserere du Trovatore, S.433Missa choralis, S.10Missa pro organo lectarum celebrationi missarum adjumento inserviens, S.264Missa quattuor vocum ad aequales, S.8Missa Solennis, S.9Morceau de salon, S.142Morgens steh ich auf und frage, S.290Mosonyis Grabgeleit, S.194Müllerlieder von Franz Schubert, S.565Muttergottes-Sträusslein zum Mai-Monate, S.316

N

Nimm einen Strahl der Sonne, S.310Nuages grisNuits d'été à Pausilippe, S.399Nun danket alle Gott, S.61

O

O du mein holder Abendstern, S.444O heilige Nacht, S.49O lieb so lang du lieben kannst, S.298O Meer im Abendstrahl, S.344O Roma nobilis, S.54O sacrum convivium, S.58O salutaris hostia I, S.40O salutaris hostia II, S.43Oh! quand je dors, S.282Ora pro nobis, S.262OrgelkompositionenOrpheus, S.98Ossa arida, S.55Ouvertüre zu Tannhäuser, S.442

P

Paraphrase de concert sur Ernani II, S.432Paraphrase de concert sur Rigoletto, S.434Pater noster I, S.21Pater noster II, S.29Pater noster III, S.41Pater noster IV, S.22Pax vobiscum!, S.64Pensées, S.168bPetite valse favorite, S.212Phantasiestück über Motive aus 'Rienzi', S.439Piano Concerto No. 1Piano Concerto No. 2Piano Sonata in B minorPilgerchor aus Tannhäuser, S.443Pio IX, S.261Polonaises de l'oratorio St. Stanislaus, S.519Prélude à la Polka d'Alexandre Porfiryevitch Borodine, S.207aPreludes and Fugues by J.S. Bach, S.462Préludes et Harmonies poétiques et religieuses, S.171dPro Papa, S.59PrometheusPsalm 129, S.16Psalm 13, S.13Psalm 137, S.17Psalm 23, S.15

Q

Qui Mariam absolvisti, S.65Qui seminant in lacrimis, S.63

R

R.W. - Venezia, S.201Rákóczi-Marsch, S.117RapsodieReceuillement, S.204Réminiscences de Don JuanRéminiscences de La juive, S.409aRéminiscences de Lucia di Lammermoor, S.397Réminiscences de Lucrezia Borgia, S.400Réminiscences de Norma, S.394Réminiscences de 'Robert le diable', S.413Réminiscences des Huguenots, S.412Réminiscences des Puritains de Bellini, S.390Requiem für die Orgel, S.266Requiem, S.12Resignazione, S.187a/bResponsorien und Antiphonen, S.30Rhapsodie espagnoleRomance oubliée, S.527Romance, S.169Romancero espagnol, S.695cRondeau fantastique sur un thème espagnol, S.252Rondo di bravura, S.152Rosario, S.56Russischer Galop, S.478

S

Salve Polonia, S.113/2Salve ReginaSancta Caecilia, S.343Sancta Dorothea, S.187Sankt Christoph, S.47Sarabande and Chaconne from Handel's AlmiraScherzo in G minor, S.153Scherzo und Marsch, S.177Schlaflos! Frage und Antwort, S.203Schlummerlied mit Arabesken, S.454Schubert's Impromptus, S.565bSchwebe, schwebe, blaues Auge, S.305Seconde marche hongroise, S.232Sei still, S.330Septem sacramenta, S.52Siegesmarsch, S.233aS'il est un charmant gazon, S.284Slavimo slavno, Slaveni!, S.33Soirées de Vienne, S.427Soirées italiennes, S.411Soirées musicales de Rossini, S.424Spinnerlied aus dem Fliegenden Holländer, S.440Stabat Mater, S.172bSymphonic poemsSymphonische Dichtungen für das Pianoforte zu vier HändenSymphonische Dichtungen für zwei PianoforteSzózat und Hymnus, S.353

T

Tantum ergo, S.42Tarantelle di bravura d'après la tarantelle de La muette de Portici, S.386Tasso: Lamento e Trionfo, S.96Te Deum I, S.24Te Deum II, S.27Technische Studien, S.146Three Concert ÉtudesToccata, S.197aTotentanzTranscendental ÉtudesTrauervorspiel und Trauermarsch, S.206Two Concert ÉtudesTyrolean Melody, S.385a

U

Un portrait en musique, S.190Und sprich, S.329Und wir dachten der Toten, S.338Ungarische Krönungsmesse, S.11Ungarische Nationalmelodien, S.243Ungarischer Geschwindmarsch, S.233Ungarischer Marsch zur Krönungsfeier in Ofen-Pest am 8. Juni 1867, S.118Ungarischer Romanzero, S.241aUngarischer Sturmmarsch, S.119Unstern, S.208Urbi et Orbi, S.184

V

Valse de concert, S.430Valse mélancolique, S.210Valse-ImpromptuValses oubliées, S.215Variation on a Waltz by DiabelliVariationen über das Motiv von Bach, S.180Variations brillantes sur un thème de Rossini, S.149Venezia e Napoli, S.159Vereins-Lied, S.90/1Vergiftet sind meine Lieder, S.289Verlassen, S.336Vexilla regis prodeunt, S.185Via crucisVive Henri IV, S.239Vom Fels zum Meer!, S.229Von der Wiege bis zum Grabe, S.107

W

Wagner-Liszt AlbumWalhall aus Der Ring des Nibelungen, S.449Wartburg-Lieder, S.345Was Liebe sei, S.288WeihnachtsbaumWeimars Toten, S.303Weimars Volkslied, S.313Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen, S.179Wer nie sein Brot mit Tränen aß, S.297Wie singt die Lerche schön, S.312Wieder möcht ich dir begegnen, S.322Wiegenlied, S.198Wir sind nicht Mumien, S.90/3Wo weilt er?, S.295

À

À la Chapelle Sixtine, S.461

É

Élégie sur des motifs du Prince Louis Ferdinand de Prusse, S.168Étude en douze exercices, S.136Études d'exécution transcendante d'après Paganini, S.140

Ü

Über allen Gipfeln ist Ruh, S.306
Wikipedia
Franz Liszt (German: [ˈlɪst]; Hungarian: Liszt Ferencz, in modern usage Liszt Ferenc [ˈlist ˈfɛrɛnt͡s]; 22 October 1811 – 31 July 1886) was a Hungarian composer, virtuoso pianist, conductor, music teacher, arranger, and organist of the Romantic era. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest pianists of all time. He was also a writer, philanthropist, Hungarian nationalist, and Franciscan tertiary.
Liszt gained renown in Europe during the early nineteenth century for his prodigious virtuosic skill as a pianist. He was a friend, musical promoter and benefactor to many composers of his time, including Frédéric Chopin, Charles-Valentin Alkan, Richard Wagner, Hector Berlioz, Robert Schumann, Clara Schumann, Camille Saint-Saëns, Edvard Grieg, Ole Bull, Joachim Raff, Mikhail Glinka, and Alexander Borodin.
A prolific composer, Liszt was one of the most prominent representatives of the New German School (German: Neudeutsche Schule). 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 symphonic poem, developing thematic transformation as part of his experiments in musical form, and radical innovations in harmony.
Franz Liszt was born to Anna Liszt (née Maria Anna Lager) and Adam Liszt on 22 October 1811, in the village of Doborján (German: Raiding) in Sopron County, in the Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire. Liszt's father played the piano, violin, cello, and guitar. He had been in the service of Prince Nikolaus II Esterházy and knew Haydn, Hummel, and Beethoven personally. At age six, Franz began listening attentively to his father's piano playing. Adam began teaching him the piano at age seven, and Franz began composing in an elementary manner when he was eight. He appeared in concerts at Sopron and Pressburg (Hungarian: Pozsony, present-day Bratislava, Slovakia) in October and November 1820 at age 9. After the concerts, a group of wealthy sponsors offered to finance Franz's musical education in Vienna.
There, Liszt received piano lessons from Carl Czerny, who in his own youth had been a student of Beethoven and Hummel. He also received lessons in composition from Ferdinando Paer and Antonio Salieri, who was then the music director of the Viennese court. Liszt's public debut in Vienna on 1 December 1822, at a concert at the "Landständischer Saal", was a great success. He was greeted in Austrian and Hungarian aristocratic circles and also met Beethoven and Schubert. In spring 1823, when his one-year leave of absence came to an end, Adam Liszt asked Prince Esterházy in vain for two more years. Adam Liszt, therefore, took his leave of the Prince's services. At the end of April 1823, the family returned to Hungary for the last time. At the end of May 1823, the family went to Vienna again.
Towards the end of 1823 or early 1824, Liszt's first composition to be published, his Variation on a Waltz by Diabelli (now S. 147), appeared as Variation 24 in Part II of Vaterländischer Künstlerverein. This anthology, commissioned by Anton Diabelli, includes 50 variations on his waltz by 50 different composers (Part II), 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, Op. 120. Liszt's inclusion in the Diabelli project—he was described in it as "an 11-year-old boy, born in Hungary"—was almost certainly at the instigation of Czerny, his teacher, and also a participant. Liszt was the only child composer in the anthology.
After his father's death in 1827, Liszt moved to Paris; for the next five years, he was to live with his mother in a small apartment. He gave up touring. To earn money, Liszt gave lessons in piano playing and composition, often from early morning until late at night. His students were scattered across the city and he often had to cover long distances. Because of this, he kept uncertain hours and also took up smoking and drinking—all habits he would continue throughout his life.
The following year, he 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. 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 pessimism. He again stated a wish to join the Church but was dissuaded this time by his mother. He had many discussions with the Abbé de Lamennais, who acted as his spiritual father, and also with Chrétien Urhan, a German-born violinist who introduced him to the Saint-Simonists. Urhan also wrote music that was anti-classical and highly subjective, with titles such as Elle et moi, La Salvation angélique and Les Regrets, and may have whetted the young Liszt's taste for musical romanticism. Equally important for Liszt was Urhan's earnest championship of Schubert, which may have stimulated his own lifelong devotion to that composer's music.
During this period, Liszt read widely to overcome his lack of general education, and he soon came into contact with many of the leading authors and artists of his day, including Victor Hugo, Alphonse de Lamartine and Heinrich Heine. He composed practically nothing in these years. Nevertheless, the July Revolution of 1830 inspired him to sketch a Revolutionary Symphony based on the events of the "three glorious days," and he took a greater interest in events surrounding him. He 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, especially later when he was writing for orchestra. He also inherited from Berlioz the diabolic quality of many of his works.
After attending a charity concert on 20 April 1832, for the victims of the Parisian cholera epidemic, organized by Niccolò Paganini, Liszt became determined to become as great a virtuoso on the piano as Paganini was on the violin. Paris in the 1830s had become the nexus for pianistic activities, with dozens of pianists dedicated to perfection at the keyboard. Some, such as Sigismond Thalberg and Alexander Dreyschock, focused on specific aspects of technique, e.g. the "three-hand effect" and octaves, respectively. While it has since been referred to as the "flying trapeze" school of piano playing, this generation also solved some of the most intractable problems of piano technique, raising the general level of performance to previously unimagined heights. Liszt's strength and ability to stand out in this company was in mastering all the aspects of piano technique cultivated singly and assiduously by his rivals.
In 1833, he made transcriptions of several works by Berlioz including the Symphonie fantastique. His chief motive in doing so, especially with the Symphonie, was to help the poverty-stricken Berlioz, whose symphony remained unknown and unpublished. Liszt bore the expense of publishing the transcription himself and played it many times to help popularize the original score. He was also forming a friendship with a third composer who influenced him, Frédéric Chopin; under his influence, Liszt's poetic and romantic side began to develop.
In 1833, Liszt began his relationship with the Countess Marie d'Agoult. In addition to this, at the end of April 1834, he made the acquaintance of Felicité de Lamennais. Under the influence of both, Liszt's creative output exploded.
In 1835, the countess left her husband and family to join Liszt in Geneva; Liszt's daughter with the countess, Blandine, was born there on 18 December. Liszt taught at the newly founded Geneva Conservatory, wrote a manual of piano technique (later lost) and contributed essays for the Paris Revue et gazette musicale. In these essays, he argued for the raising of the artist from the status of a servant to a respected member of the community.
For the next four years, Liszt and the countess lived together, mainly in Switzerland and Italy, where their daughter, Cosima, was born in Como, with occasional visits to Paris. On 9 May 1839, Liszt's and the countess's only son, Daniel, was born, but 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. Doing so meant returning to the life of a touring virtuoso The countess returned to Paris with the children, while Liszt gave six concerts in Vienna, then toured Hungary.
For the next eight years Liszt continued to tour Europe, spending holidays with the countess and their children on the island of Nonnenwerth on the Rhine in the summers of 1841 and 1843. In spring 1844, the couple finally separated. This was Liszt's most brilliant period as a concert pianist. Honors were showered on him and he met with adulation wherever he went. Liszt wrote his Three Concert Études between 1845 and 1849. Since he often appeared three or four times a week in concert, it could be safe to assume that he appeared in public well over a thousand times during this eight-year period. 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.
During his virtuoso heyday, Liszt was described by the writer Hans Christian Andersen as a "slim young man...[with] dark hair hung around his pale face". He was seen as handsome by many, with the German poet Heinrich Heine writing concerning his showmanship during concerts: "How powerful, how shattering was his mere physical appearance".
In 1841, Franz Liszt was admitted to the Freemason's lodge "Unity" "Zur Einigkeit", in Frankfurt am Main. He was promoted to the second degree and elected master as a member of the lodge "Zur Eintracht", in Berlin. From 1845, he was also an honorary member of the lodge "Modestia cum Libertate" at Zürich and in 1870 of the lodge in Pest (Budapest-Hungary). After 1842, "Lisztomania"—coined by 19th-century German poet and Liszt's contemporary, Heinrich Heine—swept across Europe. The reception that Liszt enjoyed, as a result, can be described only as hysterical. Women fought over his silk handkerchiefs and velvet gloves, which they ripped to shreds as souvenirs. This atmosphere was fuelled in great part by the artist's mesmeric personality and stage presence. Many witnesses later testified that Liszt's playing raised the mood of audiences to a level of mystical ecstasy.
On 14 March 1842, Liszt received an honorary doctorate from the University of Königsberg—an honor unprecedented at the time and an especially important one from the perspective of the German tradition. Liszt never used 'Dr. Liszt' or 'Dr. Franz Liszt' publicly. Ferdinand Hiller, a rival of Liszt at the time, was allegedly highly jealous of the decision made by the university.
Adding to his reputation was the fact that Liszt gave away much of his proceeds to charity and humanitarian causes in his whole life. In fact, Liszt had made so much money by his mid-forties that virtually all his performing fees after 1857 went to charity. While his work for the Beethoven monument and the Hungarian National School of Music is well known, he also gave generously to the building fund of Cologne Cathedral, the establishment of a Gymnasium at Dortmund, and the construction of the Leopold Church in Pest. There were also private donations to hospitals, schools, and charitable organizations such as the Leipzig Musicians Pension Fund. When he found out about the Great Fire of Hamburg, which raged for three days during May 1842 and destroyed much of the city, he gave concerts in aid of the thousands of homeless there.
In February 1847, Liszt played in Kiev. There he met the Polish Princess Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein, who was to become one of the most significant people in the rest of his life. She persuaded him to concentrate on composition, which meant giving up his career as a traveling virtuoso. After a tour of the Balkans, Turkey, and Russia that summer, Liszt gave his final concert for pay at Yelisavetgrad in September. He spent the winter with the princess at her estate in Woronince. By retiring from the concert platform at 35, while still at the height of his powers, Liszt succeeded in keeping the legend of his playing untarnished.
The following year, Liszt took up a long-standing invitation of Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia to settle at Weimar, where he had been appointed Kapellmeister Extraordinaire in 1842, remaining there until 1861. During this period he acted as conductor at court concerts and on special occasions at the theatre. He gave lessons to a number of pianists, including the great virtuoso Hans von Bülow, who married Liszt's daughter Cosima in 1857 (years later, she would marry Richard Wagner). He also wrote articles championing Berlioz and Wagner. Finally, Liszt had ample time to compose and during the next 12 years revised or produced those orchestral and choral pieces upon which his reputation as a composer mainly rested.
During those twelve years, he also helped raise the profile of the exiled Wagner by conducting the overtures of his operas in concert, Liszt and Wagner would have a profound friendship that lasted until Wagner's death in Venice in 1883.
Princess Carolyne lived with Liszt during his years in Weimar. She eventually wished to marry Liszt, but since she had been previously married and her husband, Russian military officer Prince Nikolaus zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Ludwigsburg (1812–1864), was still alive, she had to convince the Roman Catholic authorities that her marriage to him had been invalid. After huge efforts and a monstrously intricate process, she was temporarily successful (September 1860). It was planned that the couple would marry in Rome, on 22 October 1861, Liszt's 50th birthday. Although Liszt arrived in Rome on 21 October, the marriage was made impossible by a letter that had arrived the previous day to the Pope himself. It appears that both her husband and the Tsar of Russia had managed to quash permission for the marriage at the Vatican. The Russian government also impounded her several estates in the Polish Ukraine, which made her later marriage to anybody unfeasible.
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, and, on 11 September 1862, his 26-year-old daughter Blandine also died. In letters to friends, Liszt announced that he would retreat to a solitary living. He found it at the monastery Madonna del Rosario, just outside Rome, where on 20 June 1863, he took up quarters in a small, spartan apartment. He had on 23 June 1857, already joined the Third Order of Saint Francis.
On 25 April 1865, he received the tonsure at the hands of Cardinal Hohenlohe. On 31 July 1865, he 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.
On some occasions, Liszt took part in Rome's musical life. On 26 March 1863, at a concert at the Palazzo Altieri, he directed a programme of sacred music. The "Seligkeiten" of his Christus-Oratorio and his "Cantico del Sol di Francesco d'Assisi", as well as Haydn's Die Schöpfung and works by J. S. Bach, Beethoven, Jommelli, Mendelssohn, and Palestrina were performed. On 4 January 1866, Liszt directed the "Stabat mater" of his Christus-Oratorio, and, on 26 February 1866, his Dante Symphony. There were several further occasions of similar kind, but in comparison with the duration of Liszt's stay in Rome, they were exceptions.
In 1866, Liszt composed the Hungarian coronation ceremony for Franz Joseph and Elisabeth of Bavaria (Latin: Missa coronationalis). The Mass was first 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.
Liszt was invited back to Weimar in 1869 to give master classes in piano playing. Two years later, he was asked to do the same in Budapest at the Hungarian Music Academy. From then until the end of his life, he made regular journeys between Rome, Weimar, and Budapest, continuing what he called his "vie trifurquée" or tripartite existence. It is estimated that Liszt traveled at least 4,000 miles a year during this period in his life – an exceptional figure despite his advancing age and the rigors of road and rail in the 1870s.
From the early 1860s, there were attempts to obtain a position for Liszt in Hungary. In 1871, the Hungarian Prime Minister Gyula Andrássy made a new attempt writing on 4 June 1871, to the Hungarian King (the Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph I), requesting an annual grant of 4,000 Gulden and the rank of a "Königlicher Rat" ("Crown Councillor") for Liszt, who in return would permanently settle in Budapest, directing the orchestra of the National Theatre as well as musical institutions.
The plan of the foundation of a Royal Academy was agreed upon by the Hungarian Parliament in 1872. In March 1875, Liszt was nominated as President. The Academy was officially opened on 14 November 1875 with Liszt's colleague Ferenc Erkel as director, Kornél Ábrányi and Robert Volkmann. Liszt himself came in March 1876 to give some lessons and a charity concert.
In spite of the conditions under which Liszt had been appointed as "Königlicher Rat", he neither directed the orchestra of the National Theatre nor permanently settled in Hungary. Typically, he would arrive in mid-winter in Budapest. After one or two concerts of his students, by the beginning of spring, he left. He never took part in the final examinations, which were in the summer of every year. Some of the pupils joined the lessons that Liszt gave in the summer in Weimar.
In 1873, on the occasion of Liszt's 50th anniversary as a performing artist, the city of Budapest instituted a "Franz Liszt Stiftung" ("Franz Liszt Foundation"), to provide stipends of 200 Gulden for three students of the Academy who had shown excellent abilities with regard to Hungarian music. Liszt alone decided the allocation of these stipends.
It was Liszt's habit to declare all students who took part in his lessons as his private students. In consequence, almost none of them paid any fees to the Academy. A ministerial order of 13 February 1884 decreed that all those who took part in Liszt's lessons had to pay an annual charge of 30 Gulden. In fact, the Academy was, in any case, a net gainer, since Liszt donated its revenue from his charity concerts.
Liszt fell down the stairs of a hotel in Weimar on 2 July 1881. Though friends and colleagues had noticed swelling in his feet and legs when he had arrived in Weimar the previous month (an indication of possible congestive heart failure), he had been in good health up to that point and was still fit and active. He was left immobilized for eight weeks after the accident and never fully recovered from it. A number of ailments manifested themselves—dropsy, asthma, insomnia, a cataract of the left eye and heart disease. The last-mentioned eventually contributed to Liszt's death. He became increasingly plagued by feelings of desolation, despair, and preoccupation with death—feelings that he expressed in his works from this period. As he told Lina Ramann, "I carry a deep sadness of the heart which must now and then break out in sound."_37-0" class="reference"[33]
On 13 January 1886, while Claude Debussy was staying at the Villa Medici in Rome, Liszt met him there with Paul Vidal and Victor Herbert. Liszt played Au bord d'une source from his 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." Debussy and Vidal performed their piano duet arrangement of Liszt's Faust Symphony; allegedly, Liszt fell asleep during this.
The composer Camille Saint-Saëns, an old friend, whom Liszt had once called "the greatest organist in the world", dedicated his Symphony No. 3 "Organ Symphony" to Liszt; it had premiered in London only a few weeks before the death of its dedicatee.
Liszt died in Bayreuth, Germany, on 31 July 1886, at the age of 74, officially as a result of pneumonia, which he may have contracted during the Bayreuth Festival hosted by his daughter Cosima. Questions have been posed as to whether medical malpractice played a part in his death. He was buried on 3 August 1886, in the municipal cemetery of Bayreuth against his wishes.
Many musicians consider Liszt to be the greatest pianist who ever lived. The critic Peter G. Davis has opined: "Perhaps [Liszt] was not the most transcendent virtuoso who ever lived, but his audiences thought he was."
There are few, if any, good sources that give an impression of how Liszt really sounded from the 1820s. Carl Czerny claimed Liszt was a natural who played according to feeling, and reviews of his concerts especially praise the brilliance, strength, and precision in his playing. At least one also mentions his ability to keep absolute tempo, which may be caused by his father's insistence on practicing with a metronome. His repertoire then consisted primarily of pieces in the style of the brilliant Viennese school, such as concertos by Hummel and works by his former teacher Czerny, and his concerts often included a chance for the boy to display his prowess in improvisation. Liszt possessed notable sight-reading skills.
Following the death of Liszt's father in 1827 and his hiatus from life as a touring virtuoso, Liszt's playing likely gradually developed a more personal style. One of the most detailed descriptions of his playing from that time comes from the winter of 1831–32 when he was earning a living primarily as a teacher in Paris. Among his pupils was Valerie Boissier, whose mother, Caroline, kept a careful diary of the lessons.:
M. Liszt's playing contains abandonment, a liberated feeling, but even when it becomes impetuous and energetic in his fortissimo, it is still without harshness and dryness. [...] [He] draws from the piano tones that are purer, mellower, and stronger than anyone has been able to do; his touch has an indescribable charm. [...] He is the enemy of affected, stilted, contorted expressions. Most of all, he wants truth in musical sentiment, and so he makes a psychological study of his emotions to convey them as they are. Thus, a strong expression is often followed by a sense of fatigue and dejection, a kind of coldness, because this is the way nature works.
Liszt was sometimes mocked in the press for facial expressions and gestures at the piano. Also noted were the extravagant liberties that he could take with the text of a score. Berlioz tells how Liszt would add cadenzas, tremolos, and trills when he played the first movement of Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata and created a dramatic scene by changing the tempo between Largo and Presto. In his Baccalaureus letter to George Sand from the beginning of 1837, Liszt admitted that he had done so to gain applause and promised to follow both the letter and the spirit of a score from then on. It has been debated to what extent he realized his promise, however. By July 1840, the British newspaper The Times could still report:
His performance commenced with Handel's Fugue in E minor, which was played by Liszt with avoidance of everything approaching meretricious ornament and indeed scarcely any additions, except a multitude of appropriate harmonies, casting a glow of color over the beauties of the composition and infusing into it a spirit which from no other hand it ever before received.
During his years as a traveling virtuoso, Liszt performed an enormous amount of music throughout Europe, but his core repertoire always centered on his own compositions, paraphrases, and transcriptions. Of Liszt's German concerts between 1840 and 1845, the five most frequently played pieces were the Grand galop chromatique, Schubert's Erlkönig (in Liszt's transcription), Réminiscences de Don Juan, Réminiscences de Robert le Diable, and Réminiscences de Lucia di Lammermoor. Among the works by other composers were Weber's Invitation to the Dance, Chopin mazurkas, études by composers like Ignaz Moscheles, Chopin, and Ferdinand Hiller, but also major works by Beethoven, Schumann, Weber, and Hummel and from time to time even selections from Bach, Handel, and Scarlatti.
Most of the concerts were shared with other artists and so Liszt also often accompanied singers, participated in chamber music, or performed works with an orchestra in addition to his own solo part. Frequently-played works include Weber's Konzertstück, Beethoven's Emperor Concerto, and Choral Fantasy, and Liszt's reworking of the Hexameron for piano and orchestra. His chamber music repertoire included Johann Nepomuk Hummel's Septet, Beethoven's Archduke Trio. and Kreutzer Sonata and a large selection of songs by composers like Gioachino Rossini, Gaetano Donizetti, Beethoven and especially Franz Schubert. At some concerts, Liszt could not find musicians to share the program with and so was among the first to give solo piano recitals in the modern sense of the word. The term was coined by the publisher Frederick Beale, who suggested it for Liszt's concert at the Hanover Square Rooms in London on 9 June 1840 even though Liszt had already given concerts all by himself by March 1839.
Among composer's pianos in Weimar were an Érard, the Alexandre "piano-organ", a Bechstein piano, the Beethoven's Broadwood grand and a Boisselot. It is known that Liszt was using Boisselot pianos in his Portugal tour and then later in 1847 in a tour to Kiev and Odessa. Liszt kept the piano at his Villa Altenburg residence in Weimar. This instrument is not in a playable condition now, and in 2011, at the order of Klassik Stiftung Weimar, a modern builder, Paul McNulty, made a copy of the Boisselot piano which is now on display next to the original Liszt's instrument.
Liszt was a prolific composer. He is best known for his piano music, but he also wrote for orchestra and for other ensembles, virtually always including keyboard. His piano works are often marked by their difficulty. Some of his works are programmatic, based on extra-musical inspirations such as poetry or art. Liszt is credited with the creation of the symphonic poem.
The largest and best-known portion of Liszt's music is his original piano work. His thoroughly revised masterwork, "Années de pèlerinage" ("Years of Pilgrimage") includes arguably his most provocative and stirring pieces. This set of three suites ranges from the virtuosity of the Suisse Orage (Storm) to the subtle and imaginative visualizations of artworks by Michelangelo and 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 di 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, and the level of technical difficulty which was present in much of his composition.
Liszt's piano works are usually divided into two categories. On the one hand, there are "original works", and on the other hand "transcriptions", "paraphrases" or "fantasies" on works by other composers. Examples for the first category are works such as the piece Harmonies poétiques et religieuses of May 1833 and the Piano Sonata in B minor (1853). Liszt's transcriptions of Schubert songs, his fantasies on operatic melodies and his piano arrangements of symphonies by Berlioz and Beethoven are examples from the second category. As a special case, Liszt also made piano arrangements of his own instrumental and vocal works. Examples of this kind are the arrangement of the second movement "Gretchen" of his Faust Symphony and the first "Mephisto Waltz" as well as the "Liebesträume No. 3" and the two volumes of his "Buch der Lieder".
Liszt wrote substantial quantities of piano transcriptions of a wide variety of music. Indeed, about half of his works are arrangements of music by other composers. He played many of them himself in celebrated performances. 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. The pianist Cyprien Katsaris has stated that he prefers Liszt's transcriptions of the symphonies to the originals, and Hans von Bülow admitted that Liszt's transcription of his Dante Sonett "Tanto gentile" was much more refined than the original he himself had composed. Liszt's transcriptions of Schubert songs, his fantasies on operatic melodies, and his piano arrangements of symphonies by Berlioz and Beethoven are other well-known examples of piano transcriptions.
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, some Chopin preludes, and excerpts of Bach's Cantata No. 21 and Wagner's Tannhäuser.
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 Prelude and Fugue on B-A-C-H—Liszt's "only important original organ works" and Derek Watson, writing in his 1989 Liszt, 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. Ad nos is an extended fantasia, Adagio, and fugue, lasting over half an hour, and the Prelude and Fugue on B-A-C-H include chromatic writing which sometimes removes the sense of tonality. 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. He also wrote a Requiem for organ solo, intended to be performed liturgically, along with the spoken Requiem Mass.
Franz Liszt composed about six dozen original songs with piano accompaniment. In most cases, the lyrics were in German or French, but there are also some songs in Italian and Hungarian and one song in English. Liszt began with the song "Angiolin dal biondo crin" in 1839, and, by 1844, had composed about two dozen songs. Some of them had been published as single pieces. In addition, there was an 1843–1844 series Buch der Lieder. The series had been projected for three volumes, consisting of six songs each, but only two volumes appeared.
Today, Liszt's songs are relatively obscure. The song "Ich möchte hingehn" is sometimes cited because of a single bar, which resembles the opening motif of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde. It is often claimed that Liszt wrote that motif ten years before Wagner started work on Tristan in 1857. The original version of "Ich möchte hingehn" was certainly composed in 1844 or 1845; however, there are four manuscripts, and only a single one, a copy by August Conradi, contains the bar with the Tristan motif. It is on a paste-over in Liszt's hand. Since in the second half of 1858 Liszt was preparing his songs for publication and he had at that time just received the first act of Wagner's Tristan, it is most likely that the version on the paste-over was a quotation from Wagner.
Liszt, in some of his works, supported the relatively new idea of program music—that is, music intended to evoke extra-musical ideas such as a depiction of a landscape, a poem, a particular character or personage. (By contrast, absolute music stands for itself and is intended to be appreciated without any particular reference to the outside world.)
Liszt's own point of view regarding program music can for the time of his youth be taken from the preface of the Album d'un voyageur (1837). According to this, a landscape could evoke a certain kind of mood. Since a piece of music could also evoke a mood, a mysterious resemblance with the landscape could be imagined. In this sense, the music would not paint the landscape, but it would match the landscape in a third category, the mood.
In July 1854, Liszt stated in his essay about Berlioz and Harold in Italy that not all music was program music. If in the heat of a debate, a person would go so far as to claim the contrary, it would be better to put all ideas of program music aside. But it would be possible to take means like harmony, modulation, rhythm, instrumentation, and others to let a musical motif endure a fate. In any case, a program should be added to a piece of music only if it was necessarily needed for an adequate understanding of that piece.
Still later, in a letter to Marie d'Agoult of 15 November 1864, Liszt wrote:
Without any reserve I completely subscribe to the rule of which you so kindly want to remind me, that those musical works which are in a general sense following a program must take effect on imagination and emotion, independent of any program. In other words: All beautiful music must be first-rate and always satisfy the absolute rules of music which are not to be violated or prescribed.
A symphonic poem or tone poem is a piece of orchestral music in one movement in which some extramusical program provides a narrative or illustrative element. This program may come from a poem, a story or novel, a painting, or another source. The term was first applied by Liszt to his 13 one-movement orchestral works in this vein. They were not pure symphonic movements in the classical sense because they dealt with descriptive subjects taken from mythology, Romantic literature, recent history, or imaginative fantasy. In other words, these works were programmatic rather than abstract. The form was a direct product of Romanticism which encouraged literary, pictorial, and dramatic associations in music. It developed into an important form of program music in the second half of the 19th century.
The first 12 symphonic poems were composed in the decade 1848–58 (though some use material conceived earlier); one other, Von der Wiege bis zum Grabe (From the Cradle to the Grave), followed in 1882. Liszt's intent, according to Hugh MacDonald in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, was for these single-movement works "to display the traditional logic of symphonic thought." That logic, embodied in sonata form as musical development, was traditionally the unfolding of latent possibilities in given themes in rhythm, melody and harmony, either in part or in their entirety, as they were allowed to combine, separate and contrast with one another. To the resulting sense of struggle, Beethoven had added intensity of feeling and the involvement of his audiences in that feeling, beginning from the Eroica Symphony to use the elements of the craft of music—melody, bass, counterpoint, rhythm and harmony—in a new synthesis of elements toward this end.
Liszt attempted in the symphonic poem to extend this revitalization of the nature of musical discourse and add to it the Romantic ideal of reconciling classical formal principles to external literary concepts. To this end, he combined elements of overture and symphony with descriptive elements, approaching symphonic first movements in form and scale. While showing extremely creative amendments to sonata form, Liszt used compositional devices such as cyclic form, motifs and thematic transformation to lend these works added coherence. Their composition proved daunting, requiring a continual process of creative experimentation that included many stages of composition, rehearsal, and revision to reach a version where different parts of the musical form seemed balanced.
With some works from the end of the Weimar years, Liszt drifted more and more away from the musical taste of his time. An early example is the melodrama "Der traurige Mönch" ("The sad monk") after a poem by Nikolaus Lenau, composed at the beginning of October 1860. While in the 19th-century harmonies were usually considered as major or minor triads to which dissonances could be added, Liszt used the augmented triad as the central chord.
More examples can be found in the third volume of Liszt's Années de Pélerinage. "Les Jeux d'Eaux à la Villa d'Este" ("The Fountains of the Villa d'Este"), composed in September 1877, foreshadows the impressionism of pieces on similar subjects by Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel. Other pieces such as the "Marche funèbre, En mémoire de Maximilian I, Empereur du Mexique" ("Funeral march, In memory of Maximilian I, Emperor of Mexico") composed in 1867 are, however, without stylistic parallel in the 19th and 20th centuries.
At a later stage, Liszt experimented with "forbidden" things such as parallel 5ths in the "Csárdás macabre" and atonality in the Bagatelle sans tonalité ("Bagatelle without Tonality"). Pieces like the "2nd Mephisto-Waltz" are unconventional because of their numerous repetitions of short motives. Also showing experimental characteristics are the Via crucis of 1878, as well as Unstern!, Nuages gris, and the two works entitled La lugubre gondola of the 1880s.
Besides his musical works, Liszt wrote essays about many subjects. Most important for an understanding of his development is the article series "De la situation des artistes" ("On the situation of artists") which was published in the Parisian Gazette musicale in 1835. In winter 1835–36, during Liszt's stay in Geneva, about half a dozen further essays followed. One of them that was slated to be published under the pseudonym "Emm Prym" was about Liszt's own works. It was sent to Maurice Schlesinger, editor of the Gazette musicale. Schlesinger, however, following the advice of Berlioz, did not publish it. At the beginning of 1837, Liszt published a review of some piano works of Sigismond Thalberg. The review provoked a huge scandal. Liszt also published a series of writings titled "Baccalaureus letters", ending in 1841.
During the Weimar years, Liszt wrote a series of essays about operas, leading from Gluck to Wagner. Liszt also wrote essays about Berlioz and the symphony Harold in Italy, Robert and Clara Schumann, John Field's nocturnes, songs of Robert Franz, a planned Goethe foundation at Weimar, and other subjects. In addition to essays, Liszt wrote a biography of his fellow composer Frédéric Chopin, Life of Chopin, as well as a book about the Romanis (Gypsies) and their music in Hungary.
While all of those literary works were published under Liszt's name, it is not quite clear which parts of them he had written himself. It is known from his letters that during the time of his youth there had been a collaboration with Marie d'Agoult. During the Weimar years, it was Princess Wittgenstein who helped him. In most cases, the manuscripts have disappeared so that it is difficult to determine which of Liszt's literary works were actually works of his own. Until the end of his life, however, it was Liszt's point of view that it was he who was responsible for the contents of those literary works.
Liszt also worked until at least 1885 on a treatise for modern harmony. Pianist Arthur Friedheim, who also served as Liszt's personal secretary, remembered seeing it among Liszt's papers at Weimar. Liszt told Friedheim that the time was not yet ripe to publish the manuscript, titled Sketches for a Harmony of the Future. Unfortunately, this treatise has been lost.
Although there was a period in which many considered Liszt's works "flashy" or superficial, it is now held that many of Liszt's compositions such as Nuages gris, Les jeux d'eaux à la villa d'Este, etc., which contain parallel fifths, the whole-tone scale, parallel diminished and augmented triads, and unresolved dissonances, anticipated and influenced twentieth-century music like that of Debussy, Ravel and Béla Bartók.
From 1827 onwards, Liszt gave lessons in composition and piano playing. He wrote on 23 December 1829 that his schedule was so full of lessons that each day, from half-past eight in the morning till 10 at night, he had scarcely breathing time. Most of Liszt's students of this period were amateurs, but there were also some who made a professional career. An example of the former is Valérie Boissier, the later Comtesse de Gasparin. Examples of the latter are Julius Eichberg, Pierre Wolff, and Hermann Cohen. During winter 1835–36, they were Liszt's colleagues at the Conservatoire at Geneva. Wolff then went to Saint Petersburg.
During the years of his tours, Liszt gave only a few lessons, to students including Johann Nepumuk Dunkl and Wilhelm von Lenz. In spring 1844, in Dresden, Liszt met the young Hans von Bülow, his later son-in-law.
After Liszt settled in Weimar, his pupils steadily increased in number. By his death in 1886, there would have been several hundred people who in some sense could have been regarded as his students. August Göllerich published a voluminous catalogue of them. In a note he added the remark that he had taken the connotation of "student" in its widest sense. As a consequence, his catalog includes names of pianists, violinists, cellists, harpists, organists, composers, conductors, singers, and even writers.
A catalog by Ludwig Nohl was approved and corrected by Liszt in September 1881. This gave 48 names, including: Carl Baermann, Franz Bendel, Hans von Bronsart, Hans von Bülow, Julius Eichberg, Arthur Friedheim, Karl Klindworth, William Mason, Sophie Menter, Karl Pohlig, Dionys Pruckner, Julius Reubke, Eduard Reuss, Giovanni Sgambati, Karl Tausig, Vera Timanova, Józef Wieniawski, Alexander Winterberger, and Juliusz Zarębski. Nohl's catalog omitted, amongst others, Károly Aggházy and Agnes Street-Klindworth.
By 1886, a similar catalogue would have been much longer, including names such as Eugen d'Albert, Conrad Ansorge, Walter Bache, William Dayas, August Göllerich, Carl Lachmund, José Vianna da Motta, Moriz Rosenthal, Emil Sauer, Alexander Siloti, Bernhard Stavenhagen, August Stradal, István Thomán, and Bettina Walker.
Some of Liszt's students were disappointed with him. An example is Eugen d'Albert, who eventually was almost on hostile terms with Liszt. Felix Draeseke, who had joined the circle around Liszt at Weimar in 1857, is another example.
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 (usually done by playing the piece too fast in the composer's presence): "There you go, mixing salad again." Liszt also wanted to avoid creating carbon copies of himself; rather, he believed in preserving artistic individuality.
Liszt did not charge for lessons. He was troubled when German newspapers published details of pedagogue Theodor Kullak's will, revealing that Kullak had generated 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," Liszt told his biographer Lina Ramann. Carl Czerny, however, charged an expensive fee for lessons and even dismissed Stephen Heller when he was unable to afford to pay for his lessons. Liszt spoke very fondly of his former teacher—who gave lessons to Liszt free of charge—to whom Liszt dedicated his Transcendental Études. He wrote to the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung, urging Kullak's sons to create an endowment for needy musicians, as Liszt himself frequently did.
Liszt's character was portrayed by Claudio Arrau in Dreams of Love (1935); by Brandon Hurst in the 1938 film Suez; by Fritz Leiber in the 1943 film Phantom of the Opera; by Stephen Bekassy in the 1945 film A Song to Remember; by Henry Daniell in the 1947 film Song of Love; by Sviatoslav Richter in the 1952 film Glinka – The Composer; by Will Quadflieg in Max Ophüls's 1955 film Lola Montès; by Carlos Thompson in the 1955 film Magic Fire; by Dirk Bogarde in the 1960 film Song Without End; by Jeremy Irons in the 1974 BBC Television series Notorious Woman; by Roger Daltrey in the 1975 Ken Russell film Lisztomania; by Anton Diffring in the 1986 Franco-German film Wahnfried directed by Peter Patzak; and by Julian Sands in the 1991 British-American film Impromptu.