As love conquers all, when he was thirty-six Franz Liszt slowed down his incessant and extensive touring as a piano performer at the behest of his new partner, Carolyne von Sayn-Wittgenstein, who suggested that he would do better devoting all his efforts to composition. They had met in Kyiv in 1847, on the occasion of Liszt's tour of cities in the Russian Empire. Carolyne, long distanced from her husband and in charge of their daughter, soon followed the maestro to Weimar, where Liszt resided, or rather, had to do so. From then on, Carolyne would accompany Franz for nearly forty years though they never married, and their relationship of the last years became purely epistolary.
In Weimar
Five years earlier, in 1842, Franz Liszt had taken up the post of Kapellmeister of Weimar, the capital city of the Grand Duchy of Saxony-Weimar-Eisenach, signing a contract obliging him to stay in Weimar for at least three months a year, a commitment that Liszt fulfilled as he pleased. Interestingly, Grand Duke Karl Friedrich and his wife, Duchess Maria Pavlovna Romanova, were surprisingly tolerant of the maestro's informality. This is shown by a letter that Karl Alexander, son of the couple, sent to his friend Liszt reminding him of his engagement to Weimar with astonishing delicacy:
"I hope you won't be angry with me if I distract you for a moment from all your activities. I have taken up the pen only to ask you how everything is going, and especially, how everything is going with you. I have heard nothing from you for a long time, except for a few words that [a common acquaintance] passed on to me when he returned from Vienna. He told me that you work quite hard, so I am sorry not to see you, given your self-imposed task... Don't grudge me if I try to slip the name of Weimar into your plans..... The Grand Duchess and I look forward to seeing our wishes come true in December..... If the summer had already dashed my hopes of seeing you again, let the winter be the one to keep the promise..."
Yours most affectionately
Karl Alexander
This situation went on until 1848 when Liszt took Carolyne and her daughter to Weimar, where they lived until 1859 in a residence that Maria Pavlovna placed at the master's disposal. The duchess, pianist, lover, and patron of the arts, was also the one who paid Franz's salary out of her own pocket. A rather low salary, to the extent that the maestro went so far as saying that he regarded the income from Weimar as "little money for cigars", which explains, to a certain extent, Liszt's scant commitment to the court.
Piano Sonata in B minor
Published in 1854, it was premiered in public by Franz von Büllow, Liszt's pupil and son-in-law, on January 27, 1857. It is dedicated to Robert Schumann.
Despite its title, it does not present the typical sonata form of the classical-romantic period but a very personal framework of the form, a large continuous stroke of half an hour that dispenses with the traditional "exposition, development, recapitulation" scheme for a first movement. However, the following movements are marked, even if they are played continuously:
00 Lento assai - allegro energico - grandioso
12:05 Andante sostenuto
18:42 Allegro energico - andante sostenuto - lento assai
No comments :
Post a Comment