Páginas

Monday, October 23, 2023

Franz Liszt, Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6

Franz Liszt, inventor of the piano recital

According to a few intrepid scholars, Franz Liszt's Hungarian rhapsodies represent "the less respectable side" of the composer. Their charm would lie not in their musical invention but in the dazzling expansion of the spectrum of expression possible on the piano, or put less elegantly, in "the variety of noises that can be made with a piano." Tough words.

In any case, in 1840, Franz Liszt invented the piano recital as we know it today: the concert of a single instrumentalist who makes music with his own or other people's works, at the piano. Between that year and 1847 (when he met Princess Carolyne of Sayn-Wittgenstein, who urged him to give priority to composition at home) he made many extensive tours throughout Europe, visiting cities as far away as Seville and Moscow. In all of them he received "the affection of his public", as we would say today. Liszt made an effort to please that audience, playing three or four times a week, for the special enjoyment of the ladies, who would faint in the middle of the recital, or would make a trifecta to take possession of the artist's handkerchief, when he retired, after offering an encore with a couple of Hungarian rhapsodies.


Liszt visited Hungary in 1839, after thirteen years settled in Paris. A new visit the following year led to the production, between 1840 and 1847 (precisely his "piano star" years), of ten volumes of piano pieces based on Hungarian themes. Between 1851 and 1853 he published fifteen of them under the title Hungarian Rhapsodies. In 1882-1886 he published four more.

Photograph of Liszt, in 1843
(1811 - 1886)
While in Hungary, the master transcribed numerous melodies heard from native gypsy bands. By using these "old" melodies in his Hungarian rhapsodies, Liszt believed he was immortalizing the soul of the Hungarian people. The truth is that many of these pieces had been written by contemporary composers, achieving popularity in rural areas. But Liszt didn't care. As long as the ladies kept swooning, it was all right.

Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsodies derive from an 18th century style and dance called verbunkos, used in Hungary during the recruitment of troops (for the purpose of enthusiasm, we imagine). It features at least two contrasting sections: a slow one, or lassan, and a fast one, or friska.

Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6, in D flat major
Discounting the overwhelming popular presence of Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 (in C sharp minor), No. 6 is one of the best known, incorporating in less than seven minutes the pomp and playfulness, the exotic and the ostentatious, at once. It has five sections, marked Tempo giusto, Presto, Andante, Allegro and Presto.

The piece is highly demanding. The final Presto illustrates the extraordinary virtuosity that the maestro relied on to provoke swooning and brawls across Europe.

In opposition, the work responds exactly to the kind of piece that for a time allowed Liszt to be mistakenly labeled as just a virtuoso pianist.

The performance is by Ukrainian pianist Anna Fedorova.