Beethoven/Liszt - Symphony No.5 in C minor: Allegro con brio

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Uploaded by on Nov 23, 2009

Leslie Howard piano

Beethoven Symphonies is a set of nine transcriptions for solo piano by Franz Liszt after Ludwig van Beethoven's orchestral symphonies.

Liszt began the work in 1838, but at that time only completed Nos. 5, 6 and 7 of which Nos. 5 and 6 were published by Breitkopf & Härtel and No. 7 by Tobias Haslinger. In 1843, he arranged the third movement of Symphony No. 3, which was later published by Pietro Mechetti in 1850. Liszt was paid 8 francs per page by Breitkopf & Härtel who first requested two symphonies to be transcribed. During his 1840 travels in Europe he also gave the transcribed symphonies some publicity by playing them at his concerts. With three symphonies transcribed, Liszt set aside the work for another 23 years. It wasn't until 1863 that Breitkopf & Härtel advised Liszt to transcribe the complete set for a future publication. For this work, Liszt recycled his previous transcriptions by simplifying passages, stating that "the more intimately acquainted one becomes with Beethoven, the more one clings to certain singularities and finds that even insignificant details are not without their value". Liszt would note down the names of the orchestral instruments for the pianist to imitate, he would also add pedal marks and fingerings for amateurs and sight readers. He transcribed all movements of the symphonies without getting across any rendering issues. However, for the 4th movement of Symphony No. 9, Liszt became "...convinced of the impossibility of making any pianoforte arrangement of the 4th movement... that could in any way be... satisfactory". Nevertheless, Liszt made another attempt to adapt the 4th movement after an expressive letter from Breitkopf & Härtel. The full set of transcriptions was finally published in 1865 and dedicated to Hans von Bülow. To date, these have been the most accurate and preferred transcriptions of Beethoven's Symphonies. There actually exists a fragment by Beethoven of an attempt to transcribe the first movement of his 7th symphony. A very basic comparison shows that Liszt is far more faithful to the original text than Beethoven.

(en.wikipedia.org)

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Uploader Comments (theprof1958)

  • why did burn the piano lol?

  • @bachatr

    Maybe they misread the score and played Allegro con fuoco :-)

Top Comments

  • Oh no a burning piano. Cry harder

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All Comments (21)

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  • the picture fits on Beethoven-Liszt Symphony n.7 - 4th movement...

    not fit on that

  • Hmm is the burning piano also suggesting that this would happen if you played this piece on it? D:

  • @theprof1958 Sir, please accept my internet.. or for this purpose my nostalgia^^

  • I love the music but absolutley hate the picture! >.<

  • @bachatr why not?

  • ...like everybody here I was thrilled by the image of the burning piano...like man, they set a real piano on fire, etc...but it is really faked, unfortunately...cf. what Mr.Howard does here to Glenn Gould.

  • so beautiful piano and it burned/ oh my heart((

  • @theprof1958 This cracked me the hell up.... Ns one!!!

  • @theprof1958

    YES. That is by far the greatest Musical pun I have heard in my entire life.

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