How Did Liszt Compose? - Composer Insights

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  • Опубліковано 28 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 170

  • @MusicMattersGB
    @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +8

    Learn Music Online - Check out our courses here!
    www.mmcourses.co.uk/courses

  • @FocusMrbjarke
    @FocusMrbjarke 2 роки тому +34

    Liszt is my favourite composer so this video is awesome

  • @mikegrisafi541
    @mikegrisafi541 2 роки тому +33

    I kept yelling in my head at the opening bars analysis, G phrygian! I can't help it....I'm mostly a guitarist and tend to think in modes.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +8

      Fair enough!

    • @davidyuditskiy
      @davidyuditskiy 2 роки тому +7

      You are correct, looking from a modal perspective; the G Phrygian scale is outlined in the second and third bars. Another interesting thing to point out is in the 5th and 6th bar, in which Liszt features another mode: the Hungarian minor scale, a scale that isn't all that rare in Liszt's music, yet still considered an "exotic" scale.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      😀

  • @fredericfrancoischopin6280
    @fredericfrancoischopin6280 2 роки тому +9

    Thanks he was my friend soo nice to see 😁🙈

  • @dhpbear2
    @dhpbear2 2 роки тому +15

    00:10 - "Now the chorus comes in. Nobody knows why the chorus comes in except Mozart, and he's dead!" - Victor Borge :)

  • @carlstenger5893
    @carlstenger5893 2 роки тому +24

    Absolutely fascinating. The first question that comes to mind is : Did Liszt begin writing this piece by mapping out the scales he wished to explore; carefully design and construct the various motifs he wished to use; put to paper the chord sequences he wanted (or needed) to use -- OR did it begin when he happened to "plunk out" the opening statement (whilst he was noodling about on the piano), found himself completely smitten with the sound and structure, and (in a long stream of consciousness) the piece (quite literally) spilled forth from his mind? I tend to believe that it was the latter (rather than the former); but then, I prefer to believe that the best music is created when the composer doesn't deliberately get "in the way" of the creative process.
    Wonderful video (as always). Thank you. Gareth, you possess a rare talent for analyzing and explaining musical concepts in such a way that I come away having learned far more about given subject than I thought possible. When I was much younger, I was confident that I knew far more about music than the average musician. As the years have raced on by, I have discovered that (much of the time) I don't even know what I don't know. That realization can be crippling. Between your videos, courses, and the monthly livestream sessions (through the wonderful Music Matters Maestro Program), I am not only beginning to realize what I don't know, but you (and Alex and the rest of your team) are helping me to replace ignorance with solid knowledge. I'll never reach a point where I "know it all", but I am thoroughly enjoying the journey of learning all that I can. Thanks so much!

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +6

      That is so kind of you Carl and I’m so pleased that we can assist your musical journey in some way. None of us stops learning - there’s always so more to discover. It’s a real pleasure journeying with you.

    • @ClassicalPower
      @ClassicalPower 2 роки тому +1

      I think the second is much more possible: he just wanted to "play" the piano and impress Liszt's way ahah, even though of course subconsciously he did work harmonally taking advantage of his deep experience. That's how I see it.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      😀

    • @ruramikael
      @ruramikael Рік тому

      Kenneth Hamilton's book on the Liszt Sonata and other sonata forms is an eye-opener. Apparently bars 18-31 were revised. But probably all themes were sketched out before the composition was begun.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  Рік тому

      😀

  • @sosmarr5933
    @sosmarr5933 2 роки тому +4

    Really liking the video so far. Looks like I've finally found the kind of content about composing/music theory that I would enjoy. you're not just blasting out some theory, but you're actually providing a way for me to learn it in relation to something I like. Also I like the calm presentation which doesn't lack some healthy humor. thanks for making these kind of video's. I think I'll definitely check out some more of them!

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @Janiesindall1981
    @Janiesindall1981 2 роки тому +5

    Gareth...You are amazing! I have so much respect for you and for all you offer us! THANK YOU so much! You are a musical genius! I learn SOOO much from your videos! Theory suddenly becomes so exciting! I simply LOVE it! And your analysis is so easy to understand...You make it so interesting! Bless you! Keep posting please, Gareth! Music is becoming so much more alive for me with every video! 🙏❤😄🎶🎵🎶

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      That’s really lovely of you. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @kenneth1767
    @kenneth1767 2 роки тому +2

    Amazing. Will need to watch again. So loaded with innuendo.

  • @bonuebonue
    @bonuebonue 2 роки тому +1

    As a Music University teacher in Germany I appreciated very much this Video!!! Very inspiring and detailed analysis and I saw things than I never saw: thank you very much for your contribution to keep the art of Music in his most deep aspects alive!!

  • @pjny123
    @pjny123 2 роки тому +4

    So wonderful! Thank you for these insights; I always learn so very much from you. It's a great feeling to be able to follow this piece along with you as you begin to break it down - almost like reading a map to figure out the landscape all around us. Just brilliant!!

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @banjoscoot7145
    @banjoscoot7145 9 місяців тому

    fancinating! He keeps us in suspense which key he is in..Thank you Gareth

  • @DaveBessell
    @DaveBessell 2 роки тому +4

    Thanks for this, interesting you mentioned the connection to film music which also often uses tonal materials in colouristic ways. More generally its great to have your videos available like this, if someone wanted to teach themselves how music works they would be an invaluable resource. Keep on giving people the undiluted information, its sadly lacking from a lot of music courses these days.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @DanderbergK
    @DanderbergK 2 роки тому +1

    Fascinating vid. Fascinating piece of music. Thank you

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @pauldavis6857
    @pauldavis6857 Рік тому

    Fascinating, Gareth! This music is new to me, I'm ashamed to say, but your video, as usual, is vivid and memorable...and always the vocal accompaniments. Thank you!

  • @zenonorth1193
    @zenonorth1193 2 роки тому +3

    I enjoyed this so far as it went, but it's really more a description of "what happens" on the first page of the sonata. To use the title "How Liszt composed" using the B minor sonata as an example and then not to make mention of thematic transformation or thematic derivation from motifs is, to me, inexplicable. I don't know if Liszt started writing down the music with the first page, but if he did, you can bet he damn well knew what was coming AFTER the first page and how everything on the 1st page relates to what happens in the rest of the sonata. I hope you will consider a follow-up explaining the links between the first page and the other themes and motifs in the sonata.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      Of course that’s all true. These are just snapshot videos to inspire engagement with the topic.

  • @bernhard9902
    @bernhard9902 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much for making this, fab analysis! x

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @elierouhana1181
    @elierouhana1181 2 роки тому +8

    Hello i am from lebanon, It seems that Liszt used the Arabic scales, which is strange to Western music. The first 3 bars he used what we call "cord of G" and in the next bars he used the "hijaz of D" we use these two scales in almost all of our songs that don't use the quarter tone :)

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      That’s very interesting

    • @zvonimirtosic6171
      @zvonimirtosic6171 2 роки тому +1

      It is not strange. Liszt was part of Romanticism, and also saw all the Orientalist movement and its influence in arts and music in his time. End of Napoleonic wars helped people travel more, see and hear things. Same as Delacroix was sharing his sketches from Algiers, Morocco and elsewhere, and were used by the Impressionists, various tunes too were notated and used in music across Europe.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      Absolutely

  • @tonyanderton3521
    @tonyanderton3521 2 роки тому

    This is a fascinating video. I'm not a musician, but I still learned a lot. I've got in to Liszt's piano sonata over a period of many years, probably decades, by a process of osmosis on hearing it on BBC Radio 3 - I don't know, maybe 10 times. Just having it on in the background. Then, one time, I just "got it". I bought a CD of Stephen Hough's recording of it and became obsessed with it. Now, I ration the amount of times I play it. Great stuff. Thanks again.

  • @manuelojeda9144
    @manuelojeda9144 2 роки тому +1

    You're doing a great analysis.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @steverox8141
    @steverox8141 2 роки тому

    The best channel for Music. Love from India ❤

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @franzlisztish
    @franzlisztish 2 роки тому

    Bloody EXCELLENT! Thanks VERY much.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @jayducharme
    @jayducharme 2 роки тому +5

    That was a fascinating analysis! I'm curious about the end of the page: why did Liszt place two eighth rests in a row with fermatas over them rather than just a quarter rest with a fermata? It looks like that measure continues on, so I suspect that has something to do with it.

  • @laurelmentor404
    @laurelmentor404 Рік тому

    Thank you for illuminating Liszt's Sonata in B minor in a new and exciting way for me. I used to dislike this piece, as it just sounded like a bunch of noise, and my housemate used to hammer it out on the piano all the time late at night 😣. However, i now find it fascinating to listen to. 😀

  • @AtomizedSound
    @AtomizedSound 2 роки тому

    Such a genius and virtuoso in his day!

  • @HowlingUlf
    @HowlingUlf 2 роки тому

    YES! It kind of dawned on me that there would be a diminished thingamabob in there halfway before the big secret was revealed!
    I like that !!! Now ... I will liszten to some more tunes from Franz !!!
    This is kind of spectacularly dry and funny channel with the wildest imaginable music. Really mind expanding! Thankz a lot, Garreth!

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      A pleasure!

    • @HowlingUlf
      @HowlingUlf 2 роки тому

      @@MusicMattersGB
      I just hear it all of it over at a channel called: Ashish Xiangyi Kumar
      Liszt: Sonata in B Minor (Zimerman) ... I wasn't allowed to post a link from one UA-cam channel to another for some reason so ...
      I'm speechless !!! 30 minutes that seemed like 3 ...

  • @ExistentialistDasein
    @ExistentialistDasein 2 роки тому

    Thank you so much for this wonderful upload. I know how requesting things could be annoying, but I would like to humbly request an analysis of The Fantasy and Fugue on the chorale "Ad nos, ad salutarem undam" if you had the time or the motivation.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      Big project but we could look at some of it.

  • @WalyB01
    @WalyB01 2 роки тому

    Love it, I have this a lot when studying pieces, that what is going on here moment. Now working on Ravel Forlane, which well is this continuously.

  • @alcyonecrucis
    @alcyonecrucis 2 роки тому

    Wow, never resting on one’s laurels! First Debussy and now Liszt! A composer’s handbook!!

  • @iamfantastic.iamgreat3649
    @iamfantastic.iamgreat3649 2 роки тому

    Thank you very much!

  • @REB3Lmusic
    @REB3Lmusic 2 роки тому

    Wow keep up the good work ❤ thank you so much

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @siriusra2692
    @siriusra2692 2 роки тому

    .... another great analysis.....thanks...

  • @4thlord51
    @4thlord51 2 роки тому

    Big fan of Liszt. Thx

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @OliverG12345
    @OliverG12345 2 роки тому +3

    This is awesome! Have you done one with Rachmaninoff?

  • @gillianarmour1444
    @gillianarmour1444 2 роки тому

    Fascinating to hear a complex piece of music explained like this! It would be beyond my abilities to play but good to get some understanding of how it is constructed

  • @GeorgeZwierzchowskipianomusic
    @GeorgeZwierzchowskipianomusic 2 роки тому

    the G melodic minor is also Bflat major and according to beethovens mind (opus 106) B flat major is the farthest key from b minor. when the fugue in the fourth movement goes into b minor the whole atmosphere changes for Beethoven also. perhaps Liszt had this in mind in his opening. he was the first to perform the opus 106 not long from the composition of his own Sonata.

  • @DottoreSM
    @DottoreSM 2 роки тому +1

    part 2 pls

  • @SpaghettiToaster
    @SpaghettiToaster 2 роки тому +2

    Rachmaninoff Next PLEASE!

  • @ciararespect4296
    @ciararespect4296 2 роки тому

    Fascinating. I couldn't follow all the scales and chord descriptions but have a general idea thanks
    People say having knowledge of theory helps with memorisation on piano. I'm sure that's correct but it seems a small amount of knowledge isn't enough by far

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      Keep building it and it will help enormously

  • @sarbajitghosh5244
    @sarbajitghosh5244 2 роки тому

    Enjoyable as usual

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @Mynelka
    @Mynelka 2 роки тому

    All those " analysts " always ignore one thing that they probably can`t understand ... they always look for some logical explanation ... real, authentic, true music comes from inspiration, the higher source and doesn`t really care about rules. Mediocre composers need to " know " what to do ... geniuses just hear it and do it ... the inspiration comes through them and beauty comes out of it. So you can analyze all you want and you will never get it unless you are one of them.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      Or the analysis reveals those inspirational gems hidden in the music.

    • @Mynelka
      @Mynelka 2 роки тому

      @@MusicMattersGB They do not really need to be revealed , just enjoyed ... they can`t be copied ... anybody who wants to duplicate them is just another wannabe, an imposter and not a real creator of art ... you find your own inspiration or put up with the fact that you`re not at that level of talent ... kind of like Mozart vs Salieri ... you just can`t teach talent and God given ability

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      Sure but lots of people are asking for this to be revealed and are excited by what they discover through such study. Many find that it enhances their enjoyment.

  • @FocusMrbjarke
    @FocusMrbjarke 2 роки тому +1

    What seems to be going on to me is harmonic transformation or harmonic development.

  • @4thlord51
    @4thlord51 2 роки тому

    Please do more Liszt

  • @joepalooka2145
    @joepalooka2145 2 роки тому

    I think Liszt learned everything from his idol Beethoven, whom he played for as a 12 year old. Reportedly Beethoven gave him a "Wiehekuss" or "Kiss of Consecration" for his marvellous playing. I can certainly hear the influence of Beethoven in this work. Has anyone studied and understood Beethoven more than Liszt?---- he transcribed Beethoven's nine symphonies for solo piano, which Vladimir Horowitz called "the greatest works for piano ever written". It's curious that these transcriptions are not as well known as one would think, because they are truly fantastic.

  • @isaacshaw1596
    @isaacshaw1596 Рік тому

    You almost made the piece slightly comedic. The last 4 bars of the page were slightly comedic especially with how low on the keyboard it is with that fast motif. Great horror movie stuff. That might be a bit on the surface. I know Liszt is one of the geniuses of the past so huge respect too him but it's so different to everyone else like with Chopin with his very decorated melodies like in op 9 no 2 nocturne the little chromatic and scalic runs Chopin does in the melody line is just magic and no one could write them like him. Listz very good at handling dissonance and drama in fact a master of it.

  • @dominikschelling4168
    @dominikschelling4168 2 роки тому

    Which midi piano are you using?

  • @ahmetayhan6993
    @ahmetayhan6993 2 роки тому

    coming up and entering "the house of usher"

  • @peterclark1041
    @peterclark1041 2 роки тому

    Complete novice here…….surely rules are made to be broken?……interesting to see very experienced aficionados response to all this. At least, thanks to mm I can at least now appreciate some of the points made!!!

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      Absolutely true re rules. It’s always good to know what they are and why you’ve decided to break them. You’re very welcome at MM

  • @juicedelemon
    @juicedelemon 2 роки тому

    that means I compose like Liszt

  • @laureanoahmad7495
    @laureanoahmad7495 2 роки тому

    Atonal music is not just random notes.
    It has a meaning.
    Tonal music is tonal precisely when it has a gravity center. Forced by a dominant.
    To me is modal music.
    Same as Debussy

    • @FranklinChen
      @FranklinChen 2 роки тому +2

      The beginning is just a G phrygian mode descending scale.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      😀

    • @bennaarsongidi9269
      @bennaarsongidi9269 2 роки тому

      @@FranklinChen wondering why it wasn’t mentioned

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      I don’t think Liszt would have thought of it that way but that doesn’t particularly matter

    • @bennaarsongidi9269
      @bennaarsongidi9269 2 роки тому

      @@MusicMattersGB you’re right . It’s a temperament he likely explored / discovered on his own .

  • @iwright621
    @iwright621 2 роки тому +1

    He was probably bored of predictable convention . Given how much of virtuoso he was - I bet he’d tried everything under the sun. & had his own logic for each piece
    Thank you
    How about inside the mind of Gareth green ? Your experiences and journey in music etc .

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      Plenty of truth in that re Liszt. On the latter point, others have asked too so we will address that shortly.

  • @robertbeaman5761
    @robertbeaman5761 2 роки тому

    Is the sheet music written wrong ?

  • @luismolina8257
    @luismolina8257 2 роки тому

    on structure is stucture

  • @martinbennett2228
    @martinbennett2228 2 роки тому +1

    Liszt is always concerned with tonal ambiguity. I think he was the first composer to be instinctively atonal (or without a tonal centre). Clara Schumann could not understand what Liszt was doing and disliked it, few did understand Liszt in his time, though the ambiguity is a recurrent feature from many of his earlier compositions too.
    Liszt is certainly one of the most fascinating composers, but such a pity his music is usually so hard to play. For someone with a reputation of something of a showman it is extraordinary how cerebral his music can be and how few concessions he is prepared to make for performers and listeners.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      True but it’s also part of what makes it so engaging.

    • @man0sticks
      @man0sticks 2 роки тому +1

      Liszt might be thought of as a proto-Modernist. He was all about challenging conventions and defying expectations. The diminished seventh chord was very useful in this regard, since it is intrinsically ambiguous.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      I agree

    • @martinbennett2228
      @martinbennett2228 2 роки тому

      @@man0sticks Similarly he used augmented triads to derail tonality.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      True

  • @fingerzfrienemy2226
    @fingerzfrienemy2226 2 роки тому

    we'd tend to assume the tonality

  • @none5020
    @none5020 2 роки тому

    Maybe making a 23 minute video observing only the first page of a Liszt piece might be overthinking it.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      Or it may be under thinking it because there’s still so much more to observe.

  • @manuelojeda9144
    @manuelojeda9144 2 роки тому

    Then Dramatic

  • @spav7597
    @spav7597 2 роки тому

    Do Rachmaninoff!

  • @emeraldeyes9565
    @emeraldeyes9565 2 роки тому

    The way Liszt composed music suggests he must have been a rather strange individual.

  • @yannmondehard4171
    @yannmondehard4171 2 роки тому +2

    That's an analysis but I don't see any insight in the way of composing.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому

      Analysis provides huge insight into composition technique.

  • @ylst8874
    @ylst8874 2 роки тому

    Do really composers think theory when writing ?

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      They generally either think it or it’s completely absorbed within them.

    • @ylst8874
      @ylst8874 2 роки тому

      @@MusicMattersGB Thank you.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      A pleasure. Much more at www.mmcourses.co.uk including details of our online courses and of our exciting Maestros programme. If you value this channel and would like to help us continue to share and develop the content please consider supporting us as a level 1 Maestro by clicking here ua-cam.com/channels/8yI8P7Zi3yYTsypera-IQg.htmljoin Alternatively you can express your support for the channel by clicking on the Super Thanks button beneath any of our videos. Thank you.

  • @deanwright7611
    @deanwright7611 2 роки тому

    Please! Music is not just about saying what key a phrase is in!

  • @fingerzfrienemy2226
    @fingerzfrienemy2226 2 роки тому

    tis to trick the ear...

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 2 роки тому

    Liszt sight read most of the time than compose. He loves to see how other compose and giving much less credit to himself.

  • @AbdulazizShabakouh
    @AbdulazizShabakouh 2 роки тому +2

    666 666 666 Looks familiar? Triple sixes repeated three times could be the symbol of the Beast as mentioned in the Book of Revelation?
    Measure 2 and 3 descending on Phrygian mode on G.
    Measure 5 and 6 descending on Hungarian mode on G.

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      Certainly something you could read into it.

    • @DottoreSM
      @DottoreSM 2 роки тому +1

      yes, some scholars have thought that the piece has an underlying program that could be about john milton's 'paradise lost', but we'll never know. maybe that would be the motif representing the devil. but later on we see this motiftransformed into a beautiful melody. so who knows

    • @MusicMattersGB
      @MusicMattersGB  2 роки тому +1

      Yes that’s very interesting

    • @magmasunburst9331
      @magmasunburst9331 2 роки тому

      Liszt was an ordained priest in the Catholic church later in his life.

  • @manuelojeda9144
    @manuelojeda9144 2 роки тому

    Misterious.

  • @vincentedelmond5404
    @vincentedelmond5404 Рік тому

    Im sorry to tell I never liked Liszt Its one way hi way Hannon like exercises To have some melody he must relate his name to other musicians he is a technician a piano performer an entertainer a transcriptor I agree but surely an underrated musician