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Published: Sunday, 25 August 2024 at 09:00 AM


Read on to discover more about Franz Liszt, the controversial and paradoxical creative showman…

Franz Liszt was a controversial figure in his day. More than 200 years on, he still is. As composer, performer and human being alike, he is multifaceted and paradoxical. At his concerts women swooned in the aisles. But though a ladies’ man and fabled lover, he was always attracted to the Church and ultimately took holy orders. And though a public showman, he was also a creative visionary whose most adventurous works pointed towards those of his son-in-law, Richard Wagner, and beyond. Often misrepresented, he is a seminal figure in the musical landscapes of both the 19th and 20th centuries.

Franz Liszt: flashy and excessive or colourfully creative?

Back in the 1980s, it was fashionable to dismiss his over-the-top opera fantasies, to sigh condescendingly at the rhetorical excesses of the Sonata, ‘Après une lecture de Dante’, to groan over the flashy transcriptions of Schubert songs. Some pianists tried to rescue Liszt from the impure taint of technical display. They accentuated the epic, abstract qualities of the B minor Sonata but downplayed its showiness.