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Longing for Liszt Pianist and composer Franz Liszt brought star power to 19th-century music. By Kathleen McGarvey
lisztCAPTIVATING: Franz Liszt (below, in a portrait by Henri Charles Lehmann) played in ways intended to excite audiences鈥攁nd succeeded, as shown (above) in a caricature by Theodor Hosema of an 1842 concert in Berlin. (Photo: Art Collection 2/Alamy)
liszt (Photo: Scala/Art Resource)
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Liszt List

Franz Liszt鈥攚ho once famously declared 鈥淟e concert, c鈥檈st moi鈥鈥攃hanged classical music in a dizzying number of ways:

First 鈥渟tar鈥 of the musical world

Inventor of the public concert tour

Coiner of the term 鈥渟olo recital鈥

Inventor of the master class

Creator of many of the conventions of modern piano performance, including the pianist entering from the wings, playing in profile to the audience, and performing from memory

Performer and composer who pushed the boundaries of piano technique to their limits

Most important musical transcriber, who made music newly accessible to the public

Champion of the musical avant garde of his day

鈥擪athleen McGarvey

More than a hundred years before Beatlemania, audiences went wild for pianist and composer Franz Liszt, in thrall to his charisma and dramatic musicianship. Women vied to garner scraps of his hair or clothes or broken piano strings. German poet Heinrich Heine, his contemporary, invented a term for the sensation he created: 鈥淟isztomania.鈥

鈥淚t was a very similar phenomenon鈥 to the Beatles craze, says Robert Doran, an associate professor of French and comparative literature. 鈥淗is sex appeal, his looks, his magnetism鈥攁ll those things became important, as they鈥檇 never been important for a musician before.鈥

But by no means was Liszt all flash and flamboyance. 鈥淪ome commentators consider him to be the greatest musician of the 19th century鈥攇reater even than Beethoven in terms of all-around musicianship, and in terms of his impact on performance,鈥 Doran says.

When he died in 1886, at age 74, Liszt left behind some 1,400 works. He created the symphonic poem and wrote instrumental music, piano works, and sacred choral music. He produced new sounds and effects that relied on extreme technical prowess at the keyboard. He was an unrivaled musical transcriber who, by arranging others鈥 symphonic works for the piano, made music more accessible to a general public. And his influence reverberates in the works of composers such as Bartok, Grieg, Saint-Saens, Tchaikovsky, and Rachmaninoff.

In collaboration with Eastman School of Music faculty Jonathan Dunsby, a professor of music theory, and Ralph Locke, a professor emeritus of musicology, Doran was the principal organizer of a three-day international symposium on Liszt and virtuosity that was held at the University in early March. It brought together some of the world鈥檚 leading Liszt scholars and scholar-performers鈥攊ncluding Alan Walker, author of a monumental three-volume biography鈥攖o consider the ways in which Liszt transformed virtuosity. The conference was among this year鈥檚 Humanities Projects, a program that champions work by Rochester faculty in all humanistic fields.

A child prodigy who studied piano with Beethoven鈥檚 former student Carl Czerny and with composer Antonio Salieri鈥攂est known to modern audiences as the protagonist of Amadeus鈥擫iszt took over the financial support of his family at age 15, after the death of his father. But grief drove him from the stage, and he considered a clerical life. Among the influences that called him back was hearing violinist Niccol貌 Paganini perform. The young man determined to achieve the same level of virtuosity on the piano that Paganini had on the violin.

He set forth on his career at a time when music was taking on a much more expansive social role. Formal musical performances had been the territory of the aristocracy; in the 19th century, with the rise of bourgeois culture, a concert-going public emerged. 鈥淧eople were learning, appreciating, and enjoying music鈥攁nd supporting it monetarily, so that you could start to make a lot of money from it,鈥 says Doran. Liszt launched one of the first concert tours, the forerunner of today鈥檚 鈥渨orldwide tours.鈥 Because the apparatus of touring didn鈥檛 yet exist, Liszt did everything, from booking the venue to advertising the concert, before he took the stage.

His deft management of the business side of performing didn鈥檛 detract from popular adulation of his artistry. 鈥淗e basically incarnated what we now call the modern virtuoso,鈥 Doran says. And audiences claimed for music a newly lofty status. 鈥淚t was the exaltation of genius, musical genius, that gave the musician a new social status,鈥 he says.

Appealing to the public meant that virtuosity and public spectacle took on new significance, too. Liszt created the conventions of the modern classical music performance, repositioning the piano in profile to the audience, so that his playing could be better seen鈥攂efore Liszt, pianists performed with their backs to the audience. It was said that to really hear Liszt, you had to see him. 鈥淗is performances were also a visual experience,鈥 Doran says.

Liszt invented the practice of performing from memory. Playing without sheet music had been considered less than serious, because it looked like improvisation.

And Liszt excelled at improvisation, too. Concerts鈥攚hich, before he remade them, were more like variety shows鈥攊nvolved a musician playing others鈥 works, original works, and improvisations. 鈥淥ften the audience would provide a theme, and then the virtuoso would be called upon to play on it, to make sure that you hadn鈥檛 written on it before. It was very important to show that you were able to improvise in the moment,鈥 Doran says.

But in Liszt鈥檚 day, virtuosity was in tension with so-called 鈥渟erious music,鈥 he adds. Liszt was criticized for being too much of a showman, and using virtuosity to bring music down to public tastes. It 鈥渙ften unjustly marred his reputation as a composer,鈥 Doran says. But ultimately, Liszt redefined virtuosity as something artistically potent and not mere showmanship.

鈥淚t鈥檚 difficult to understand his innovations because we take them all for granted now,鈥 says Doran.


With reporting by Helene Snihur.