The Evolution of Liszt's Music (From 10 to 73 Years Old)

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024

Комментарии • 630

  • @PianoMusicBros
    @PianoMusicBros  Год назад +191

    It's time to listen to Liszt's evolution! What's your favorite piece by him?
    ♫ 35 Years Old Sheet Music (Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6): tinyurl.com/5y54k5vh *
    ♫ 36 Years Old Sheet Music (Un Sospiro | Different Version): tinyurl.com/583ck8dz *
    ♫ 37 Years Old Sheet Music (Consolation No. 3): tinyurl.com/msaeku44 *
    ♫ 38 Years Old Sheet Music (Liebestraum No. 3): tinyurl.com/6zc54mm7 *
    ♫ 39 Years Old Sheet Music (La Campanella): tinyurl.com/558npd9w *
    * Affiliate Link

    • @ashwindar
      @ashwindar Год назад +23

      La Campanella or Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 or 5. Liebestraum no. 3 is also good

    • @Jairussart
      @Jairussart Год назад +13

      Tarantella

    • @wimmer_1500
      @wimmer_1500 Год назад +16

      I have played Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 for my highschool, so that one is my favorite piece from him!

    • @wtf077
      @wtf077 Год назад +6

      For your q i will say Hr2 or un sospiro / don't forget Alkan he's a genius

    • @michaeel6171
      @michaeel6171 Год назад +15

      Spanish Rhapsody. It's so epic!

  • @charlesthomas5956
    @charlesthomas5956 Год назад +304

    It's actually sad to see how Franz Liszt's pieces got so dark and macabre, he never recovered from losing his loved ones (And the best hands erased from his death), first his father at 15, then his beloved friend Chopin at 37, Then his son at 47 (1859), then his daughter at 50 (1862). Soon he lost all of his loved ones

    • @musiclover4390
      @musiclover4390 Год назад +34

      But his family line fortunately hasn't died out! His great-great-great grandson carries on his legacy today

    • @athaofficial4219
      @athaofficial4219 Год назад +4

      ​@musiclover4390 that's amazing

    • @pineapple7024
      @pineapple7024 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@musiclover4390
      Is Michael Haeringer actually Liszt’s descendant? He definitely plays like a spiritual successor, at the very least

    • @charlesthomas5956
      @charlesthomas5956 7 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@musiclover4390I had Tryrolean Melody play as I read this comment😂😂😂

    • @Stolindo
      @Stolindo 5 месяцев назад +6

      liszt experienced something similar to being immortal, all friends, loved ones, die...

  • @computer6062
    @computer6062 Год назад +1114

    It's interesting to see that Liszt grew a third hand at the age of 25

    • @ismailtaskran9740
      @ismailtaskran9740 Год назад +63

      Humans can’t grow a third hand. It is biologically impossible. It was probably supposed to be played by more than one pianist.

    • @nandovancreij
      @nandovancreij Год назад +330

      @@ismailtaskran9740 brother this is just tragic u both missed the most obvious joke AND the fact this is actually played by a single pianist lol

    • @ismailtaskran9740
      @ismailtaskran9740 Год назад +70

      @@nandovancreij I just wanted to see if they were going to r/whoosh me.

    • @juangalton999
      @juangalton999 Год назад +54

      @@ismailtaskran9740 I love your deadpan delivery. Not many would appreciate this. Carry on brother.

    • @ismailtaskran9740
      @ismailtaskran9740 Год назад +12

      @@juangalton999 Thanks brother. You carry on too.

  • @aaronslens
    @aaronslens Год назад +296

    I like how you included a lot of his lesser known pieces. Liszt wrote an incredible amount of music and lived much longer than Chopin, Beethoven and Mozart. Goes to show how much there is to discover.

    • @Mereaux
      @Mereaux Год назад +6

      Yes

    • @ScoopOfButter
      @ScoopOfButter Год назад +2

      Yes

    • @arandompiano3587
      @arandompiano3587 Год назад +2

      Yes

    • @porkyminch5131
      @porkyminch5131 Год назад +11

      Others are blessed with more time and I'm thankful that Liszt was one of them.

    • @lucasgust7720
      @lucasgust7720 4 месяца назад +2

      These are some of his gorgeous, little-known pieces: Romance en mi menor S. 169, Faribolo Pasteur, Die Zelle in Nonnenwerth S. 534/2bis, Andante Finale und Marsch aus der Oper König Alfred S. 421, “Le Forgeron” S. 81, R. 548, Ich möchte hingehn, Mignons Lied - Kennst du das Land, Was Liebe sei S. 288, Angiolin dal Biondo Crin.

  • @johnrees690
    @johnrees690 Год назад +114

    The best keyboard play the world has ever seen and in my opinion the greatest composer to ever live. Liszt did so much for music. He was always helping/supporting other musicians and taught over 400 students for free. Amazing man who lived completely for music. Sad that he had to endure the death of 2 of his children.

    • @jacobgerardy630
      @jacobgerardy630 Год назад +10

      There was a nun in my town that passed a few years back that was taught by a student of his. I was very fortunate to inherit some of her sheet music collection

    • @Mr.Kazangas
      @Mr.Kazangas Месяц назад

      *laughs in Alkan*

    • @SamarthSachinJadhav
      @SamarthSachinJadhav Месяц назад

      @@Mr.Kazangas He was a recluse.

  • @user-nf3kz9ee2n
    @user-nf3kz9ee2n Год назад +98

    For me, Liszt is
    Virtuosic, Romantist, pioneer of Impressionism

    • @zian8452
      @zian8452 Год назад +4

      Respectable opinion

    • @Frederic_Francois_Chopin
      @Frederic_Francois_Chopin 10 месяцев назад +7

      That's actually what he is

    • @DPNack_
      @DPNack_ Месяц назад

      ​@@Frederic_Francois_Chopin FRÉDÉRIC FRANÇOIS CHOPIN ??? OH WOW WHAT A PRIVILEGE SEEING YOU HERE

  • @DarkAcey
    @DarkAcey Год назад +46

    NO WAYY i was looking for an evolution of Liszt's music video last night, and couldn't find any. Thanks for posting this the next day lol

  • @The_Liszty.9664
    @The_Liszty.9664 Год назад +55

    28 Year old liszt literally got a gigachad face

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima Год назад +26

    His genius musical talent is unimaginable, and off the charts

  • @gabetrain8834
    @gabetrain8834 8 месяцев назад +6

    It’s so crazy how you can tell how his life was going by just listening to each song. So many of these made me get teary eyed.

    • @user-wz9fi4ob1b
      @user-wz9fi4ob1b 8 месяцев назад +1

      Sólo tuve que escuchar "sueños de amor" para saber qué el perdió algo que amaba

  • @apokyrfter413
    @apokyrfter413 Год назад +37

    The Man, the Myth, the Legend.

  • @thedaychr
    @thedaychr Год назад +12

    You can clearly here Czerny's influence on first years, then he goes full personal language and he composed his own master repertoire.

  • @SinanAkkoyun
    @SinanAkkoyun Год назад +59

    This is what we need, please more!
    I would really love an "All works by Liszt" sorted by age!

    • @timedchip8146
      @timedchip8146 Год назад +13

      That would be a long ass video, too good to be true.

    • @SinanAkkoyun
      @SinanAkkoyun Год назад +3

      @@timedchip8146 There are 17h versions of this from chopin

    • @falkfink
      @falkfink Год назад +21

      @@SinanAkkoyun Liszt wrote a LOT more than Chopin, firstly because he lived a lot longer and also because he just wrote a shitton of arrangements and transcriptions which Chopin didn't

    • @SinanAkkoyun
      @SinanAkkoyun Год назад +4

      @@falkfink Then bring it on, I'm waiting

    • @falkfink
      @falkfink Год назад +6

      @@SinanAkkoyun I just gave a reason to *not* do it?

  • @Henri.d.Olivoir
    @Henri.d.Olivoir Год назад +47

    I absolutely love these!

  • @LisztGOAT
    @LisztGOAT Год назад +48

    People can call me crazy, but one of my favorite Liszt pieces is Don Sanche, the opera he started writing when he was only 13. I recommend Y'all checking it out

    • @Whaijorhujishkomunyk
      @Whaijorhujishkomunyk Год назад +5

      Brazilian anthem moment

    • @LisztGOAT
      @LisztGOAT Год назад +4

      @@Whaijorhujishkomunyk as a brazilian, I couldn't agree more with you

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Год назад +3

      You are indeed crazy. I heard that thing yesterday and it sounds like opera sounded at the time, but not like Liszt at all. He started to find his own voice at around age 19. That's when his harmony suddenly became daring.

    • @LisztGOAT
      @LisztGOAT Год назад +2

      @Quotenwagnerianer It really doesn't sound like Liszt, but not only it's gorgeous, but also it's very interesting to compare to another Liszt's pieces and see how much he changed and developed his own style. I wouldn't say it's my favorite Liszt piece because it's the best piece that represents him or even the best sounding one, but it's one of my favorite pieces because of what it represents. The fact it sounds identical to the Brazilian national anthem is also very interesting to me, since I'm from Brazil

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Год назад +1

      @@LisztGOATI'm curious: Which part sounds like the anthem?

  • @mr.originality1005
    @mr.originality1005 8 месяцев назад +7

    Probably the most underrated classical musician of all time

    • @Pamtrucas
      @Pamtrucas 2 месяца назад +1

      Its very famous

  • @Lulu-ow4ej
    @Lulu-ow4ej 11 месяцев назад +14

    1:10 The early version of Ricordanza is also lovely😊

  • @carlmatthes7112
    @carlmatthes7112 Год назад +6

    Intriguing! Lovely project and perspective. Franz Liszt studied with Carl Czerny and Carl studied with Ludwig Van Beethoven.

  • @McCartney_Backing_Tracks6
    @McCartney_Backing_Tracks6 Год назад +268

    I want Tchaikovsky next

  • @ctuth
    @ctuth Год назад +18

    Thank you for liszting all of these. Very interesting!

  • @Liszthesis
    @Liszthesis Год назад +118

    I like the fact that through all over the video several unfairly neglected pieces even rarities from Liszt's himself are introduced to this community probably making these rather slightly known here although I found several mistakes through a couple of midis and the fact that the 1st piece is not by liszt's since the theme is actually from Diabelli (but his collaboration on the set of variations is still remarkable) but however I still like the choice of pieces used for this video

    • @Medtszkowski
      @Medtszkowski Год назад +10

      He better notice the comment from the one and only Liszthesis

    • @snorefest1621
      @snorefest1621 Год назад +2

      Lol

    • @Whaijorhujishkomunyk
      @Whaijorhujishkomunyk Год назад +2

      average lisztian commenter be like

    • @Medtszkowski
      @Medtszkowski Год назад +1

      @@Whaijorhujishkomunyk I wonder who commented this. Pencil, modica, or the other guy (sorry I forgot his name 😢

    • @BBB-hi4hc
      @BBB-hi4hc Год назад +3

      @@Whaijorhujishkomunyk As a Lisztian I agree

  • @jjjohn561
    @jjjohn561 Год назад +34

    Liszt's late pieces contain a tinge of gloom and spookiness, which is quite an opposite to those in the early stage.

    • @drajanacz.1376
      @drajanacz.1376 Год назад +14

      Yeah, well, try to live his life. He had unbelievably sad and hard life despite all the fame he got.

    • @robertocaetano4945
      @robertocaetano4945 Год назад +9

      True...its like that all the joy and complexity of his compositons was just gone away...its much more dark and macabre.

    • @drajanacz.1376
      @drajanacz.1376 Год назад +9

      @@robertocaetano4945 Exactly. We know why it was like that. He himself told to a woman (Lina Ramann) who wrote his biography, that he carries a deep sadness in himself and he expresses it through his music, so that's it.

    • @marcorval
      @marcorval Год назад +6

      Listen to his Malediction, which he composed at age 23. It sounds like something from Scriabin.

    • @drajanacz.1376
      @drajanacz.1376 Год назад +6

      @@marcorval Bro, Malédiction (also he wrote it according to some composition he composed when he was 14 yo. But it's lost nowdays😭) is one of my favorite pieces by him. I also think that De profundis concerto Is amazing. Also the first version of Totentanz and I could continue like this for really long. I just love all his pieces. (Especially those rare one, coz you can flex that you know them💅💅💅)

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan Год назад +13

    You should have included his organ work the "Prelude and Fugue on the name of BACH". It's an incredible piece, and a staple of concert organists.

  • @Marcboy7822
    @Marcboy7822 Год назад +38

    So sad that Chopin couldn't live that long.. I can't imagine how many amazing pieces we'd have today..

    • @sandeegrey5977
      @sandeegrey5977 12 дней назад

      Well heck, then be thankful that Liszt lived past 30 years old instead of Chopin

  • @ainguyendoan3028
    @ainguyendoan3028 Год назад +31

    The "Diabelli variation" is in fact Diabelli's original theme. Liszt's variation is really impressive and Beethoven-ish than that.

    • @user-ch3jv5pk4o
      @user-ch3jv5pk4o 7 месяцев назад

      Liszt variation sound like Czerny not like Liszt we all know

    • @user-wz9fi4ob1b
      @user-wz9fi4ob1b 6 месяцев назад

      Una variación de Liszt beethoveniana? Bueno, a mi que me sorprende...

  • @musictop7630
    @musictop7630 Год назад +16

    Wow! It's very interesting to watch composer's evolution!

  • @nhogan84
    @nhogan84 Год назад +7

    25 yr. old Liszt out there flexing like "yeah, try THIS."

  • @Mr-Prasguerman
    @Mr-Prasguerman Год назад +11

    for me , Franz Liszt is the pure embodiment of Victorian music

  • @lenny-io3wp
    @lenny-io3wp Год назад +9

    The picture of liszt while un sospiro suits actually Perfect 😂

  • @zhcpiano_score6896
    @zhcpiano_score6896 Год назад +16

    Liszt's late work is so different than his early work😌

  • @user-fu7zf4ck9z
    @user-fu7zf4ck9z Год назад +59

    Great video, although I am a bit surprised by how many important pieces and milestones are missing from this list.
    1830s:
    Harmonies Poetiques Et Religieuses S.154: it has to be in here! Along with the Apparition No. 1 this piece is the most progressive piece composed so far in the 19th century. It has an unresolved ending and starts with no tempo signature
    1850s:
    Valle d'Obermann: one of his most personal pieces and a prime example of how well Liszt achieves thematic transformation
    Ballade No. 2: first depiction of seas and stormy weather in this combination
    Sonata B-Minor: literally THE sonata of them all
    Funerailles: groundbreaking usage of the low register of the piano
    Prometheus: the opening chords will tell you why this piece is revolutionary
    Mephisto Waltz No. 1: stacks of fourths and fifths (later further developed by the 3rd Mephisto Waltz) and possibly the first depiction of an orgasm before Wagner
    Faust Symphony: features the first true 12-tone row in the history of music!
    Dante Sonata: the use of the tritone in the main theme showcases the boldness of Liszt's music
    1860s:
    Legende No. 1: the earliest piece by Liszt that can be considered fully impressionist
    Christus: his biggest work
    Bach-Variations on "Weeping, Lamenting, Worrying, Fearing": deeply emotional variations that feature a large chunk of his typical technical and stylistic devices
    Totentanz (Solo Version): fully intentional dissonance in some of the adaptions from the more well known version with orchestra
    1870s:
    Fantasy and Fugue on BACH: a rare instance of fully absolute and completely non-programmatic music by Liszt
    Sunt Lacrymae Rerum: no better use of the Hungarian style and simply the most depressing and macabre funeral march written up to this point
    1880s:
    Bagatelle without Tonality: self-explanatory
    Les Jeux: not only anticipates but pretty much starts impressionism
    Sursum Corda: features a whole-tone scale
    Nuages Gris: the most transparent display of every characteristic of Liszt's style in full display
    Mephisto Polka: F

    • @iannagano
      @iannagano Год назад +1

      Printed.

    • @gf4453
      @gf4453 Год назад +2

      Everybody is a critic.

    • @LarchenkoTF
      @LarchenkoTF Год назад +2

      @@gf4453 NO HE'S NOT. Can you imagine the amount of time and work a human being have put into this comment just to show you all that there is more to Ferenz Liszt than that incomplete list (no pun intended). You should THANK the Man.

  • @Kyujar.png49
    @Kyujar.png49 Год назад +4

    Fun fact: his harmonies poetiques et religieuses was actually written between 1847 - 1849 but was not published until 1853

  • @beseemescavanger1403
    @beseemescavanger1403 Год назад +25

    Maybe rachmaninoff next?

    • @mangomerkel2005
      @mangomerkel2005 Год назад +4

      Yes please! I love Rach from the bottom of my heart, he would definitely deserve it!

  • @lovemase_
    @lovemase_ Год назад +11

    Thank you for making such an amazing video!!

  • @unacorda32
    @unacorda32 Год назад +4

    The video is great and full of small discoveries for me! I knew about his evolution, but never had a chance to see it like you did! Thank you) Although the age is a little off. Liszt was born in 1811, so that made him 74 in 1885, 22 in 1833 and so on.

    • @minerader999
      @minerader999 Год назад +2

      probably cuz it was made before October.

  • @unidentifieduser5346
    @unidentifieduser5346 Год назад +4

    Rachmaninoff: how many hands do you need these piece to be?
    Liszt: yes

  • @kuuderepiano2988
    @kuuderepiano2988 Год назад +20

    Glad to see Liszt getting his recognition :)
    Liszt composed three influential pieces in his late years that paved the way for the impressionist era:
    -Au bord d'une source (influenced Claude Debussy):
    ruclips.net/video/Y_CebTxig1M/видео.html
    -Les jeux d'eau a la villa d'Este (a watery work that influenced Maurice Ravel to compose his own Jeux d'eau):
    ruclips.net/video/2mKqwA6J5lE/видео.html
    -Au lac de Wallenstadt:
    ruclips.net/video/HAePfr0qsmc/видео.html

    • @tomowenpianochannel
      @tomowenpianochannel 3 месяца назад

      Yes, at the very least! Just listen to Carillon (2/3 way through this video). No one before Liszt, not Chopin or anyone else, could have written this. Nor has there been anything quite like it since.

  • @lewisb9226
    @lewisb9226 Год назад +19

    The first piece is just diabelli's original theme, not Liszt's variation

    • @caterscarrots3407
      @caterscarrots3407 Год назад +3

      Yeah, I was thinking "Wait, I haven't heard Liszt's variation, but this definitely doesn't sound like Liszt, even early Liszt. It's too simple and classical(as in Classical Era), no pedal at all, this can't be Liszt. It's the theme as heard at the very start of Beethoven's Diabelli Variations." cause that's what I've heard before based on that waltz theme is the Diabelli Variations by Beethoven.

  • @terraseamapping823
    @terraseamapping823 Год назад +17

    10:10 best piece ever written, best music ever written, best sound ever written come at me.

    • @Memories_broken_
      @Memories_broken_ Год назад +7

      I agree that its great pieces ,but in my prospective,its greatly overrated and many of his other works deserves more attention. Like his transcendental etudes and some of his nocturnes,and my personal favourite, the Grand gallop

    • @Itibitydetsku
      @Itibitydetsku Год назад +1

      La Campanella!?
      I agree xd

    • @terraseamapping823
      @terraseamapping823 Год назад +1

      @@Memories_broken_ yeah they are great but la campanella’s sound feels like if god was showing off. nothing can beat it ever.

    • @terraseamapping823
      @terraseamapping823 Год назад +1

      @@Memories_broken_ it’s a greatly underrated piece.

    • @AldorleaGames
      @AldorleaGames 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@terraseamapping823well god was indeed showing off in La campanella. At least god of music lol

  • @Larancure
    @Larancure Год назад +6

    He lost his son at age of 20, and music is far darker than anybefore.

    • @Itibitydetsku
      @Itibitydetsku Год назад

      No, actually he losg his father firstly.

    • @Lisztito1811
      @Lisztito1811 6 месяцев назад +2

      I lost my dad before.

  • @fedemunoz7415
    @fedemunoz7415 Год назад +6

    Lo que estabamos todos esperando

  • @cziffrathegreat666
    @cziffrathegreat666 Год назад +6

    Wonderful collection. Appreciate your work very much!

  • @GonzaBuckRP
    @GonzaBuckRP Год назад +8

    Scriabin would be interesting.
    From being Chopin to being Scriabin

  • @STAND-ALONE
    @STAND-ALONE Год назад +3

    You can actually hear the very beginnings and birth of rock and roll with Liszts playing,... And then later when black man blues came along the two mixed together and you can easily hear how rock and roll formed! Awesome!❤

  • @murattaner7384
    @murattaner7384 Год назад +5

    ı found it interesting that as seen in your videos on Bach, Mozart; Beethoven, Chopin and here, their portraits were painted starting at very early ages by very competent painters :))

  • @user-og7hi7ck2u
    @user-og7hi7ck2u Год назад +4

    I personally love harmonies de la Poetique and his sonata in b minor, It is way too good and I couldn't stop my self from thinking about things happened...

  • @Tizohip
    @Tizohip Год назад +4

    2:50 when Liszt created another arm.

  • @FallenCreed
    @FallenCreed Год назад +24

    The god of composing alongside Chopin

  • @TF2Starlight
    @TF2Starlight Год назад +11

    i like liszt

  • @TheJedo
    @TheJedo Год назад +3

    Nice to see some rarer pieces here

  • @minoracademy
    @minoracademy Год назад +8

    It’s sad to see how Liszt lost his sense of romanticism in his later life. Later Liszt just gets more depressing

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Год назад +7

      He lost his illusions. And looked far into the future. Isn't it fascinating how he saw what was coming in music about 30 years before it happened?

  • @CarmenReyes-em9np
    @CarmenReyes-em9np Год назад +3

    No cambio a Franz. Kizst desde la primera vez que lo toque en el piano 🇮🇷 🎵🎵🎹

  • @richdisilvio4591
    @richdisilvio4591 Год назад +3

    Great presentation! ... But it's impossible for me to name just One favorite. Here are a few of the essential Liszt piano pieces for me:
    Harmonies du Soir, Un Sospiro, Benediction de Dieu dans la Solitude, Wilde Jagd, Chasse-Neige, Ballade No.2, Fusées, Fantasy & Fugue on B-A-C-H, Au lac de Wallenstadt, Am Rhein, Consolation Nos 2 &3, Cantique d' Amour, Dante Sonata, Funérailles, Les Jueux Villa d'Este, Petrarca Sonetto 104, Totentanz, Nuage Gris, Trauer Marsch, Mosonyis Grabgeleit, Liebestraume, Mephisto Waltz 1 &2, Csárdás Macabre, Transcendental Etude #10, Feux Follets, La Lugubre Gondola, Galop in A minor, Pensée des morts, Hungarian Rhapsody#2, and for piano & orchestra , Piano Concertos 1 &2, Malediction & Spanish Rhapsody

  • @youssefelansary6746
    @youssefelansary6746 Год назад +12

    Franz Schubert please 🥺

  • @playspeedcode
    @playspeedcode Год назад +3

    My favorite composer. I personally like in sospiro

  • @Syrianlove678
    @Syrianlove678 Год назад +5

    My favourite composer

  • @athaofficial4219
    @athaofficial4219 Год назад +3

    You are amazing for making this!!!!!!!! Thank you soo much!

  • @emreozdemir3164
    @emreozdemir3164 Год назад +5

    the first piece is just the theme by diabelli and not the variation that liszt wrote but anyway.. nice vid

  • @MinhNguyen-wz2wn
    @MinhNguyen-wz2wn Год назад +2

    Most of my favorite pieces of him were compose between when he is 36 and 39 years old (sorry for my English)

  • @junejoung1653
    @junejoung1653 Год назад +4

    I think it would have been better if you had put some of his more famous pieces(his Sonata, Spanish Rhapsody etc) for those who are just getting started with Liszt

  • @tamassarosi7258
    @tamassarosi7258 Год назад +24

    Thank you! Liszt Ferenc is from my country! He was Hungarian! Can you do Bartók Béla or Kodály Zoltán next?
    Edit: Liszt át 28 be looking like the Rush E Markiplier+Lord Farquad guy💀☠️

  • @emiliavorreilli638
    @emiliavorreilli638 Год назад +4

    I love how some of his themes sound like they would fit great on various Mario levels.

  • @teodorb.p.composer
    @teodorb.p.composer Год назад +5

    Liszt invented impressionism in year 1838!

    • @Aleksandr_Skrjabin
      @Aleksandr_Skrjabin 10 месяцев назад +1

      No, they did not get any inspiration or anything from Liszt, it is just his original self.

  • @leevinolla8818
    @leevinolla8818 Год назад +6

    14:54 Lol😂

  • @Medtszkowski
    @Medtszkowski Год назад +3

    Alkan next?

  • @CarmenReyes-em9np
    @CarmenReyes-em9np Год назад +3

    Muy interesante y bellisimo 🎹.

  • @jbrisby
    @jbrisby Год назад +2

    Your kiszt, your kiszt, is on my liszt...

  • @demertzis2694
    @demertzis2694 Год назад +4

    The best work from him is missing here his music is something else hes a crazy genius even in his very young age if you search you will see

    • @ianalen1687
      @ianalen1687 Год назад +1

      which work?

    • @kayelam6966
      @kayelam6966 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@ianalen1687His Hungarian Rhapsody 2 it’s probably hard to figure out when he made it though

    • @ianalen1687
      @ianalen1687 9 месяцев назад

      @@kayelam6966 How do you rate this version of no.2 ruclips.net/video/ZKqa547Ev5w/видео.html
      my favourite is no.19
      ruclips.net/video/qxCge23mOR0/видео.html

  • @szilike_10
    @szilike_10 Год назад +1

    Been waiting for this

  • @jackychan7758
    @jackychan7758 Год назад +3

    At his later years he developed Starvinskian Vibes 18:02

  • @SamarAyaan-ju3hn
    @SamarAyaan-ju3hn 19 дней назад

    I like how last composition do not die.

  • @boomizummi6425
    @boomizummi6425 Год назад +5

    Please Schubert next🙏🏻

  • @user-rf6rk9wk3b
    @user-rf6rk9wk3b 9 месяцев назад +1

    11:30-11:35 лучшее

  • @Whaijorhujishkomunyk
    @Whaijorhujishkomunyk Год назад +3

    Do Alkan next

  • @sonicblaze1539
    @sonicblaze1539 Год назад +3

    20:03 reminds me so much of Breath of the Wild. It's like the beginning is freedom and the wind--and then we accidentally fall into a Bokoblin camp.

  • @MaNiHaGaming
    @MaNiHaGaming Год назад +3

    At 25, Liszt apparently grew a third hand. Good to know.

  • @a.feuerstein9512
    @a.feuerstein9512 Год назад +3

    2:31 This sounds like Chopin to me.

  • @franzliszt123-x6p
    @franzliszt123-x6p 17 дней назад +1

    Ah, good ol' days !

  • @StickyNBob
    @StickyNBob Год назад +3

    What about Vivaldi?

  • @deadbloody669
    @deadbloody669 Год назад +1

    12:26 FTW, How many hands had Franz????
    I love these videos, thanks!

  • @BackusMannus18
    @BackusMannus18 Месяц назад

    1:45 hits HARD.

  • @pranavmurali8022
    @pranavmurali8022 Год назад +5

    Rachmaninoff next

  • @jed3188
    @jed3188 Год назад +3

    Franz Schubert next pls

  • @leevinolla8818
    @leevinolla8818 Год назад +1

    Thanks, very large thanks

  • @BlueeEyesWhiteDragon
    @BlueeEyesWhiteDragon Год назад +5

    Liszt is the greatest pianist to exist

  • @deltasquared7777
    @deltasquared7777 Год назад +1

    MUCH APPRECIATED! THANK YOU !!

  • @zluis9380
    @zluis9380 Год назад +3

    Pls do Schubert next

    • @caterscarrots3407
      @caterscarrots3407 Год назад +1

      Same, I would love a Schubert video as the next video. By the way, I love your music Ludwig, there's hardly a day that I don't listen to your music. The symphonies especially, if I'm listening to nothing else by you that day, I generally gravitate towards your symphonies, especially the Fifth Symphony, that's my favorite. And the Pathetique sonata, can't forget that, I play that piece. But really, I can't think of anything I've heard from you that I don't love, except the late quartets, but I think it's just because I'm really new to those quartets. I know it took me a few years to go from first hearing your Hammerklavier Sonata to loving it and I think the same will hold true of your late quartets.

  • @murattaner7384
    @murattaner7384 Год назад +1

    12:50 piano concerto no 1 in E flat major :))))

  • @HandlebarOrionX
    @HandlebarOrionX Год назад +4

    3:28 This riff right here

  • @user-rj6pk2ns9h
    @user-rj6pk2ns9h 10 месяцев назад +2

    In my opinion, his
    musics from 31 years old to 41 years old were the best.

    • @pineapple7024
      @pineapple7024 10 месяцев назад +1

      I think it’s more like 31-death, guy was knocking it out of the park. Even as an old man, he was still breaking the rules of music

    • @user-rj6pk2ns9h
      @user-rj6pk2ns9h 10 месяцев назад

      @@pineapple7024 I still love
      "Un sospiro", "La campanella",
      "Consolation", "Liebestraum" and "Hungarian rhapsody no.2".
      (and I think all of them
      composed in his 30's.)
      But good point.

    • @pineapple7024
      @pineapple7024 10 месяцев назад

      @@user-rj6pk2ns9h
      I agree. He just peaked and never stopped peaking, especially when you run into those mephisto waltzes, ballades, and the piano sonata

    • @user-rj6pk2ns9h
      @user-rj6pk2ns9h 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@pineapple7024 ok. Nice
      Conversation...pineapple.

    • @petrupiano6398
      @petrupiano6398 10 месяцев назад

      agree

  • @malachickisawesome
    @malachickisawesome Год назад +1

    Those last couple of years in his 30s has a lot of his most well known ones sheeesh

  • @sheetmusicsadra5887
    @sheetmusicsadra5887 Год назад +2

    Amazing Vid. Can you do Schubert?

  • @johnniefujita
    @johnniefujita 11 месяцев назад +2

    Galop in a minor is for sure the inspiration for mario games songs

  • @balamponce8667
    @balamponce8667 Год назад +2

    Liszt = relax 😀

  • @Rene-uz3eb
    @Rene-uz3eb 11 месяцев назад +2

    It just occurred to me Liszt moving other's orchestral work to the piano, a lot of his work seems would have been much better suited for orchestra than for piano.

  • @xxratattackytxx5172
    @xxratattackytxx5172 5 месяцев назад

    Grandes Etude S.137 lV Is Mazzepa so its an Allegreto playing an octave and going into chords

  • @unassumingnob3738
    @unassumingnob3738 Год назад +1

    Liszt the showman

  • @nikolasidis3557
    @nikolasidis3557 Год назад +5

    Do Heandel next please.

  • @user-nf3kz9ee2n
    @user-nf3kz9ee2n Год назад +4

    I want Ravel next!

  • @Limosethe
    @Limosethe Год назад +1

    Today, 137 years ago Franz Liszt passed away. RIP