Franz Liszt (1811-1886): Ballades Polonaises Trois morceaux suisses The power of ambition urged him on. A chaos of ideas fermented in him. He must have a...
Franz Liszt (1811-1886):
Ballades Polonaises Trois morceaux suisses
The power of ambition urged him on. A chaos of ideas fermented in him. He must have a world...in which he could
at the same time rule alone. Chopin had given romantic piano music a powerful impetus. He made use of it. This
was now his world. - The pianoforte the throne from which he exercised his creative might.
Carlo: Liszt and French Romanticism.
Wiener Zeitschrift für Kunst, 5th May 1838
Born at Raiding, in Hungary, in 1811, the son of Adam
Liszt, a steward in the service of Haydn's former
patrons, the Esterhazy Princes, Franz Liszt had early
encouragement from members of the Hungarian
nobility, allowing him in 1822 to move to Vienna, for
lessons with Czerny and a famous meeting with
Beethoven. From there he moved to Paris, where
Cherubini refused him admission to the Conservatoire.
Nevertheless he was able to impress audiences by his
performance, now supported by the Erard family, piano
manufacturers whose wares he was able to advertise in
the concert tours on which he embarked. In 1827 Adam
Liszt died, and Franz Liszt was now joined again by his
mother in Paris, while using his time to teach, to read
and benefit from the intellectual society with which he
came into contact. His interest in virtuoso performance
was renewed when he heard the great violinist Paganini,
whose technical accomplishments he now set out to
emulate.
The years that followed brought a series of
compositions, including transcriptions of songs and
operatic fantasies, part of the stock-in-trade of a
virtuoso. Liszt's relationship with a married woman, the
Comtesse Marie d'Agoult, led to his departure from
Paris for years of travel abroad, first to Switzerland, then
back to Paris, before leaving for Italy, Vienna and
Hungary. By 1844 his relationship with his mistress, the
mother of his three children, was at an end, but his
concert activities continued until 1847, the year in which
his association began with Carolyne zu Sayn-
Wittgenstein, a Polish heiress, the estranged wife of a
Russian prince. The following year he settled with her in
Weimar, the city of Goethe, turning his attention now to
the development of a newer form of orchestral music,
the symphonic poem, and, as always, to the revision and
publication of earlier compositions.
It was in 1861 at the age of fifty that Liszt moved to
Rome, following Princess Carolyne, who had settled
there a year earlier. Divorce and annulment seemed to
have opened the way to their marriage, but they now
continued to live in separate apartments in the city. Liszt
eventually took minor orders and developed a pattern of
life that divided his time between Weimar, where he
imparted advice to a younger generation, Rome, where
he was able to pursue his religious interests, and Pest,
where he returned now as a national hero. He died in
1886 in Bayreuth, where his daughter Cosima, former
wife of Hans von Bülow and widow of Richard Wagner,
lived, concerned with the continued propagation of her
husband's music.
His friend Chopin died in 1849, and two years later,
in Weimar, Liszt was working with Princess Carolyne
on a book on the Polish composer. It was natural that he
should turn his attention, at least superficially, to some
of the forms that Chopin had made his own. To this may
be added the fact that Princess Carolyne was Polish.
Liszt wrote his two Polonaises in 1851. The first,
sometimes known as Polonaise melancolique, in C minor
and marked Moderato, starts with a short introduction,
before the expressive entry of the principal polonaise
theme, developed with occasional hand-crossing and
leading, through a cadenza, to a major-key secondary
theme, itself expanded before the return of a version of
the first theme, marked Allegro energico. A passage in
the manner of an improvised cadenza brings a return of
the second theme and reminiscences of the principal
theme in the coda. The second Polonaise, in E major, is
marked Allegro pomposo con brio, and has a few
introductory bars before the characteristic rhythm of the
dance is heard. There is a contrasting trio section in A
minor, leading to a declamatory passage and a cadenza,
the return of the original key and a more elaborate and
delicately ornamented development of the original
material, before it returns in its initial vigour.
The Ballade as a musical form was also closely
associated with Chopin, whose four Ballades seem to
have had a literary source. Liszt's Ballade No. 1 in D flat
major was written between 1845 and 1848, before
Chopin's death, and has the descriptive subtitle Le chant
du croise (The Crusader's Song). It was dedicated to
Princess Carolyne's cousin, the sculptor Prince Eugen
Wittgenstein. The brief Preludio, hinting at what is to
come, modulates to D flat major for the main theme,
marked Andantino, con sentimento, perhaps derived
from a possibly earlier piano piece in A flat major. There
is a modulation to A major for a Tempo di marcia,
animato, a march to be played, we are told, elegantly
and fast, before a return to an elaborated version of the
first theme in the original key.
Ballade No. 2 in B minor was written in 1853 and
dedicated to Count Karoly Leiningen, brother-in-law of
Prince Eugen Wittgenstein. Marked Allegro moderato, it
opens ominously, with a melody slowly emerging over
menacing chromatic figuration in a lower register.
A shaft of light appears in an intervening Allegretto,
which returns in contrast after the resumption of the
opening mood, now in B flat minor. An Allegro deciso
follows and a passage of tempestuous activity, quietening
into a delicately worked version of the Allegretto, now in
D major. The mood of the opening returns, in G sharp
minor, leading to later contrasts between the two principal
elements and moods of the work, leading to a final climax
and gently positive conclusion.
Liszt's Au bord d'une source, a graphic and poetic
interpretation of the scene suggested in the title, first
appeared in the Album d'un voyageur of 1835-36, first
published in its complete three books in 1842. It was
later revised to form part of the Annees de pèlerinage,
première annee, Suisse, evoking the Swiss landscape
that appealed so strongly to the romantic temperament.
The Album d'un voyageur, in its third book, provided
three paraphrases. These had been first published in
1836 as Trois airs suisses, Op. 10, and included
Improvisata sur le ranz de vaches: 'Depart pour les
Alpes' de Ferdinand Huber (Improvisation on the Ranz
de Vaches: 'Departure for the Alps' by Ferdinand
Huber), Nocturne sur le 'Chant montagnard' d'Ernest
Knop (Nocturne on the 'Mountain Song' of Ernest Knop),
and Rondeau sur le 'Ranz de chèvre' de Ferdinand
Huber (Rondeau on the 'Ranz de chèvre' of Ferdinand
Huber). These were published in various places,
including Haslinger's complete edition of the Album
d'un voyageur, when they had the general title
Paraphrases. They were finally published in 1877 under
the title Trois morceaux suisses.
The first and third of the Paraphrases make use of
material from the Swiss composer Ferdinand Huber
(1791-1863), whose interest in Alpine folk-music had
led him to collect examples of alphorn repertoire and
even tune instruments so that three might play together.
The first, based on the cowherds' traditional Ranz de
vaches, is a series of free variations on the theme heard
at the beginning. The second paraphrase, with the new
title Un soir dans la montagne (An Evening on the
Mountain) uses a yodelling song melody by the Swiss
cellist, composer and publisher Ernest Knop, and includes
a dramatic storm, as alpine weather deteriorates. The
third of the set is a Rondeau based on Huber's version of
the goatherds' Ranz de chèvres.
Keith Anderson