Code: JP5090
ISMN: 979-0-3019-0525-8
Franz Liszt (1811-1886) was born in Hungary. His father,
Adam Liszt, was an official in the service of Prince
Nicolas Eszterhazy. When only nine Franz made his first
public appearance as a concert pianist. His playing so
impressed the local Hungarian magnates that they agreed to
provide the money to pay for his musical education for the
next six years. Adam obtained a leave of absence from
his post and took Franz to Vienna, where he had piano
lessons with Carl Czerny and studied composition with
Antonio Salieri, the musical director at the Viennese
court.
Franz was said by his contemporaries to have been the
most technically advanced pianist of his age and, in the
1840s, was considered by some to be the greatest pianist
of all time. As a composer, Liszt left behind an
extensive and diverse body of work in which he
anticipated some 20th-century ideas and trends. Some of
his most notable contributions included the creation of
the symphonic poem, the development of the concept of
thematic transformation as part of his experiments in
musical form, and the use of radical departures in
harmony.
Five late piano works have been arranged for woodwind
quintet by Sebastian Huydts and provide a wonderful
addition to the romantic repertoire for woodwind
quintet. The five movements are based on Romance
Oubliee (1880), Unstern (1881), Schlaflos!
(1883), Nuages gris (1881) and Abschied
(1881).
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