Franz Liszt's pianism is unique in its simplicity. Maybe it came from in part from his teacher Czerny. His musical texture is thick somewhere and thin somewhere like a beautiful girl's body. Not a single note was wasted like music of Bach and Chopin.
@flexolos Yes, but just for a moment. In the Liszt, the top note then follows the scale up while the bottom two notes stay the same. Had nothing to do with Chopin - it's just a common pianistic device.
is it me or does the triller from 4:48 to 5:01 sound like the one in the chopin minute waltz? i know that they were friends so it would make sense i guess but maybe someone knows for sure
Egy szabadelvű zseni .Aki zongoristának és zeneszerzőnek is nagyszerű volt ! Mondhatnánk úgy is .a legelső "celebek" egyike ,a nők bálványa ! Három gyerekének ,három nő az anyja ,akiket távolról tartott szemmel és gondoskodott róluk! Nincs nap ,hogy ne hallgatnék Lisztet!
Ah,a celebek ,,szabadelvü zsenik"!?Meg azt sem dönthetik el szabadon,hogy aznap mikent alljon rajtuk a sapka vagy eppen milyen halalos korba estek .......stb...
@brandonscherrer Perhaps we see simplicity differently. The best folk melodies are not simple to me, nor is the 'Dies Irae', as I know the labouring over each interval that likely was the groundwork of those melodies. The outcomes look simple because they are stripped of all but the monophonic, modal melodies in the end, but that such complexity can be so veiled only intensifies this complexity. And if no labouring had been done, I find this complexity in the very minds of those composers.
When you say something you should be responsible what you are saying. Liszt's compositional texture is rather simple. For your eye it would look very complex due to the so many notes and sometimes very fast tempo.
Thanks the upload. Love form Hungary. Köszönöm!
Utterly beautiful. I recommend Joseph Bulva's rendition of the second Hungarian rhapsody.
Franz Liszt's pianism is unique in its simplicity. Maybe it came from in part from his teacher Czerny. His musical texture is thick somewhere and thin somewhere like a beautiful girl's body. Not a single note was wasted like music of Bach and Chopin.
@flexolos Yes, but just for a moment. In the Liszt, the top note then follows the scale up while the bottom two notes stay the same. Had nothing to do with Chopin - it's just a common pianistic device.
@AHN5D You might know Liszt was a Chopin's friend. And he loved Chopins compositions.
@Divinemetal I think simplicity is the most complex thing to master.
szeretem nagyon!
is it me or does the triller from 4:48 to 5:01 sound like the one in the chopin minute waltz? i know that they were friends so it would make sense i guess but maybe someone knows for sure
@W0lfman0 thank you
Egy szabadelvű zseni .Aki zongoristának és zeneszerzőnek is nagyszerű volt ! Mondhatnánk úgy is .a legelső "celebek" egyike ,a nők bálványa ! Három gyerekének ,három nő az anyja ,akiket távolról tartott szemmel és gondoskodott róluk! Nincs nap ,hogy ne hallgatnék Lisztet!
Ah,a celebek ,,szabadelvü zsenik"!?Meg azt sem dönthetik el szabadon,hogy aznap mikent alljon rajtuk a sapka vagy eppen milyen halalos korba estek .......stb...
Azert nincs harag?
@@janoscs.1946 Természetesen nincs harag. Mindenkinek van véleménye .Ettől ő még ugyanolyan zseni marad !!
@@janoscs.1946 Persze ,hogy nincs harag . Azért vagyunk különbözőek, hogy mindenkinek legyen egyéni véleménye ! Ettől ő még ugyanaz a zseni marad !!
3 gyereke volt egy nőtől...
@brandonscherrer Perhaps we see simplicity differently. The best folk melodies are not simple to me, nor is the 'Dies Irae', as I know the labouring over each interval that likely was the groundwork of those melodies. The outcomes look simple because they are stripped of all but the monophonic, modal melodies in the end, but that such complexity can be so veiled only intensifies this complexity. And if no labouring had been done, I find this complexity in the very minds of those composers.
When you say something you should be responsible what you are saying. Liszt's compositional texture is rather simple. For your eye it would look very complex due to the so many notes and sometimes very fast tempo.
Miért nem fedezek fel soha magyar népi dallamokat? Én ismerek kevés népdalt? Szerintem nehezen felismerhetőek.
I disagree as well. Please give me examples of these "wasted notes" you speak of in the music of Bach or Chopin.
Horrible! Not a single note was wasted just like as in the music of the Great Bach and so lovable Chopin. That's what I meant.