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Orchestral concert: Liszt

Lazić, Fischer

2021
August24, 7:00 P.M.
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Program

The “home” of the program will be Weimar, the city where the piano virtuoso settled in order to further hone his skills as a composer. The place where his most significant orchestral works were born. The program, however, also has two other protagonists besides Liszt. Faust and Berlioz. Liszt became acquainted with the story of Faust through Berlioz and remained curious about it throughout his life. During one the “Berlioz weeks” organized by Liszt, the French composer conducted his friend’s piano concerto and later Liszt dedicated his Faust Symphony to Berlioz.

Liszt, once described as “Mephistopheles clad as an abbé” for his demonic piano playing, was an admirer of the Faust story, but did not like Goethe. With only one exception, his inspirations always came from the story’s version by Austrian poet Nikolaus Lenau. He was especially curious about Mephistopheles and devoted to him several waltzes. The first one was written as the second part of a two-part composition, but today it is more often performed as a single concert piece. The Dance in the Village Inn – this is the waltz’s alternative title, referring to how Mephistopheles drives the people in the inn crazy and helps Faust to a conquest. The dance with the variations becomes ever faster until the traditional uneven pulse turns into a beat with a 2/4 rhythm.

Although Liszt withdrew from his career as a virtuoso pianist in 1847, and, now a court conductor at Weimar, he focused on composing in the symphonic genres that he had earlier rather neglected, he did not completely disappear as a pianist. He played the solo part of the piano concerto in E-flat major at its premiere in 1855. The composition, polished for a quarter of a century, is a significant example of theme-transformation, as it is called, where the themes presented keep returning in modified versions in later movements. Contemporary audiences were rather shocked by the virtuoso piano cadence striking immediately after the opening theme and the triangle moved into the spotlight in the scherzo (the reason why this piece was mocked as the triangle concerto). Nevertheless, it has become one of the most often played piano concertos.

Liszt developed his “invention”, theme-transformation, to perfection in the Faust Symphony. Although the piece in three movements is the one exception inspired by Goethe’s Faust, instead of simply setting the story to music, Liszt creates musical portraits of the three protagonists. The first to appear is Faust, with a melody pointing forward to the 20th century and containing all notes of the chromatic scale in a symbol of desire for omniscience. His theme returns in the last movement as Mephistopheles, distorted, twisted even mocked. The devil’s machinations are no match for Gretchen’s glorious innocence—the melodies of the exquisite second movement are uncorrupted by any transformations. Eventually, Faust manages to escape. In this program, the composition will be performed in its version without the choral finale.

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The event is about 2.5 hours long.

About the event

Which composer could better befit the title “Bridging Europe” than Franz Liszt, the well-travelled artist renowned all over Europe and cultivating several international friendships. Through his music and activities, he himself is the bridge between cultures and genres. The “home” of the program will be Weimar, the city where the piano virtuoso settled in order to further hone his skills as a composer. The place where his most significant orchestral works were born. The program, however, also has two other protagonists besides Liszt. Faust and Berlioz. Liszt became acquainted with the story of Faust through Berlioz and remained curious about it throughout his life. During one the “Berlioz weeks” organized by Liszt, the French composer conducted his friend’s piano concerto and later Liszt dedicated his Faust Symphony to Berlioz.

Liszt, once described as “Mephistopheles clad as an abbé” for his demonic piano playing, was an admirer of the Faust story, but did not like Goethe. With only one exception, his inspirations always came from the story’s version by Austrian poet Nikolaus Lenau. He was especially curious about Mephistopheles and devoted to him several waltzes. The first one was written as the second part of a two-part composition, but today it is more often performed as a single concert piece. The Dance in the Village Inn – this is the waltz’s alternative title, referring to how Mephistopheles drives the people in the inn crazy and helps Faust to a conquest. The dance with the variations becomes ever faster until the traditional uneven pulse turns into a beat with a 2/4 rhythm.

Although Liszt withdrew from his career as a virtuoso pianist in 1847, and, now a court conductor at Weimar, he focused on composing in the symphonic genres that he had earlier rather neglected, he did not completely disappear as a pianist. He played the solo part of the piano concerto in E-flat major at its premiere in 1855. The composition, polished for a quarter of a century, is a significant example of theme-transformation, as it is called, where the themes presented keep returning in modified versions in later movements. Contemporary audiences were rather shocked by the virtuoso piano cadence striking immediately after the opening theme and the triangle moved into the spotlight in the scherzo (the reason why this piece was mocked as the triangle concerto). Nevertheless, it has become one of the most often played piano concertos.

Liszt developed his “invention”, theme-transformation, to perfection in the Faust Symphony. Although the piece in three movements is the one exception inspired by Goethe’s Faust, instead of simply setting the story to music, Liszt creates musical portraits of the three protagonists. The first to appear is Faust, with a melody pointing forward to the 20th century and containing all notes of the chromatic scale in a symbol of desire for omniscience. His theme returns in the last movement as Mephistopheles, distorted, twisted even mocked. The devil’s machinations are no match for Gretchen’s glorious innocence—the melodies of the exquisite second movement are uncorrupted by any transformations. Eventually, Faust manages to escape. In this program, the composition will be performed in its version without the choral finale.

Did you know? All three works premiered in Weimar: the Mefisztó Waltz on August 3, 1861 (with the composer conducting), the Piano Concerto on 16 February, 1855 (with the composer's solo and Hector Berlioz conducting), the Faust Symphony on September 5, 1857 (with the composer conducting); the Festival Orchestra last performed the Two Episodes in 2011, the Piano Concerto in St. Petersburg on June 9, 2016, and the Faust Symphony in Budapest on May 17 2021. All three concerts were conducted by Iván Fischer, the soloist of the concerto was Daniil Kharitonov.

Contemporary events On March 9, 1861, Ferenc Erkel's opera Bánk bán premiered at the Hungarian National Theatre in Pest / Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevsky's novel titled Humiliated and Insulted was published in 1861 / French painter Éduard Manet painted The Surprised Nymph in 1861 / American poet Walt Whitman's book of poems titled Leaves of Grass was published in 1855 / French painter Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres presented his painting Venus Anadyomene, which he had been working on for four decades, at the 1855 Paris World Exhibition / on November 16, 1857, Scottish explorer David Livingstone first glimpsed Victoria Falls / on March 12, 1857, Giuseppe Verdi's Simon Boccanegra premiered at the Teatro La Fenice in Venice / on December 31, 1857, Queen Victoria of England chose Ottawa as the capital of Canada / in 1857, French poet Charles Baudelaire's seminal volume, The Flowers of Evil, was published

A joint event of the Müpa Budapest and the Budapest Festival Orchestra.

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