In 1850, after five years of planning, Liszt began composing music for his Italian opera, Sardanapalo, after Byron. It was central to his ambition to attain status as a European composer, but he abandoned the project halfway through. La Mara (1911), Humphrey Searle (1954) and others declared the manuscript fragmentary and partially illegible, but in 2016 this verdict was categorically overturned when work began on an edition of what Liszt notated: almost the entirety of Act 1. This article draws on an array of sources – published and unpublished – significantly to update our knowledge of the circumstances surrounding Liszt’s composition and abandonment of Sardanapalo. In light of his inconsistently Italianate music and idiosyncratic treatme...
Once seen as an important but ultimately shallow composer, Franz Liszt (1811–1886) is now commonly ...
Perhaps best known as a peerless virtuoso in his day and a composer the significance of whose contri...
International audienceFor more than a century, our knowledge of the Liszt-Wagner relationship has be...
When Franz Liszt moved from Weimar to Rome in 1861, he had plans for one last great creative project...
Fra le carte del compositore Franz Liszt (1811-1886) conservate a Weimar, si trovano 115 pagine mano...
Were Liszt and Wagner as composers and musical thinkers more similar or different? The differences a...
Franz Liszt was preoccupied with a fundamental but difficult question: what is the content of music?...
The article ‘Petrarch’s Sonnets’ by Liszt revolves around the phenomenon of transformation, which do...
The traditional division between "original" and "arrangement" is impossible to sustain for most of L...
Franz Liszt was one of the most dynamic and influential musicians of the nineteenth century. His in...
The following study starts out from the examination of two fragmentary piano compositions by Liszt: ...
Franz Liszt composed his songs in the time when Europe was at the peak of the development of the Rom...
Franz Liszt composed his songs in the time when Europe was at the peak of the development of the Ro...
Little research has been carried out into Liszt’s work as Kapellmeister of the Weimar Court Theatre....
Like many of the great Romantic composers of the 19th-century, Franz Liszt (1811-1886) often embedde...
Once seen as an important but ultimately shallow composer, Franz Liszt (1811–1886) is now commonly ...
Perhaps best known as a peerless virtuoso in his day and a composer the significance of whose contri...
International audienceFor more than a century, our knowledge of the Liszt-Wagner relationship has be...
When Franz Liszt moved from Weimar to Rome in 1861, he had plans for one last great creative project...
Fra le carte del compositore Franz Liszt (1811-1886) conservate a Weimar, si trovano 115 pagine mano...
Were Liszt and Wagner as composers and musical thinkers more similar or different? The differences a...
Franz Liszt was preoccupied with a fundamental but difficult question: what is the content of music?...
The article ‘Petrarch’s Sonnets’ by Liszt revolves around the phenomenon of transformation, which do...
The traditional division between "original" and "arrangement" is impossible to sustain for most of L...
Franz Liszt was one of the most dynamic and influential musicians of the nineteenth century. His in...
The following study starts out from the examination of two fragmentary piano compositions by Liszt: ...
Franz Liszt composed his songs in the time when Europe was at the peak of the development of the Rom...
Franz Liszt composed his songs in the time when Europe was at the peak of the development of the Ro...
Little research has been carried out into Liszt’s work as Kapellmeister of the Weimar Court Theatre....
Like many of the great Romantic composers of the 19th-century, Franz Liszt (1811-1886) often embedde...
Once seen as an important but ultimately shallow composer, Franz Liszt (1811–1886) is now commonly ...
Perhaps best known as a peerless virtuoso in his day and a composer the significance of whose contri...
International audienceFor more than a century, our knowledge of the Liszt-Wagner relationship has be...