0:00 : Andante con moto (E major)
1:06 : Un poco più mosso (E major)
3:50 : Lento placido (D-flat major)
7:49 : Quasi Adagio (D-flat major)
10:29 : Andantino (E major)
12:25 : Allegretto sempre cantabile (E major)
今天最大的收获是听了并学习了李斯特完整的《consolation》。 最不喜欢人们甚至演奏家们都爱脸谱化李斯特和肖邦, 什么李斯特风流, 肖邦忧伤
The Consolations are a set of six solo piano works composed by Franz Liszt. The compositions take the musical style of Nocturnes[1] with each having its own distinctive style.[2] Each Consolation is composed in either the key of E major or D-flat major. E major is a key regularly used by Liszt for religious themes.[3][4]
There exist two versions of the Consolations. The first version (S.171a) was composed by Liszt between 1844 and 1849,[5] and the second version (S.172) was composed between 1849 and 1850. [6] The first version of his Consolations was published in 1992 by G. Henle Verlag.[7] The second version was first published in 1850 by Breitkopf & Härtel and contains the renowned third Consolation.
The source of the title Consolations may have been Lamartine’s poem Une larme, ou Consolation from the poetry collection Harmonies poétiques et religieuses (Poetic and Religious Harmonies). [3] Liszt's piano cycle Harmonies poétiques et religieuses is based on Lamartine's collection of poems.[10] Another possible inspiration for the title are the Consolations of the French literary historian Charles Saint Beuve.[6][11] Saint Beuve's Consolations, published in 1830, is a collection of Romantic era poetry where friendship is extolled as a consolation for the loss of religious faith. [12]
The Consolations are also referred to by the title Six Pensées poétiques (Six poetic thoughts). The title Pensées poétiques was not used in the first (Breitkopf, 1850) publication of the Consolations but was used in a version published shortly afterwards (1850) by the Bureau Central de Musique, Paris.[13]
The Consolations, S.171a consist of six solo compositions for the piano. [14][15]
Composed between 1844 and 1849,[5] they are Liszt's first version of the Consolations and were first published in 1992 by G. Henle Verlag.[16] The manuscripts are located at the Goethe and Schiller Archives in Weimar.[17]
The third Consolation is an arrangement of a Hungarian folksong that would be later reused by Liszt in his Hungarian Rhapsody No.1, S.244/1.[18] The fifth Consolation is the earliest of the compositions and dates from 1844. In an early manuscript the fifth Consolation is entitled “Madrigal”.[19][20] Liszt dedicated the Madrigal to a friend of his, a Weimar Intendant named M. de Ziegäser.[19]
The Consolations, S.172 consist of six solo compositions for the piano. [21][22]
Composed between 1849 and 1850, [6] they are Liszt's second version of the Consolations. This version of the Consolations is better known than the first version and was published in 1850 in Leipzig by Breitkopf & Härtel.[7] In comparison to the first version of the Consolations, the original third Consolation (S.171a/3) was replaced with a new Consolation (Lento placido in D-flat major) and the remaining Consolations were simplified.[17]
The first of the Consolations is in E Major and initially marked as Andante con moto. It is the shortest Consolation consisting of 25 measures. The Consolation has an identical opening to another of Liszt's works, the Album-Leaf (Première Consolation), S.171b. [23] Consolation No. 2 is composed in E Major and is initially marked Un poco più mosso. The second Consolation is often played directly after the first Consolation without a break. [24]
The third Consolation is in D-flat major and initially marked as Lento placido. It is the most popular of the Consolations [3][8][9] and also a favorite encore piece.[25]
Its style is similar to the Chopin Nocturnes,[3] in particular, it seems to have been inspired by Chopin’s Nocturne Op. 27 No. 2.[11] The similarity between the two works has been interpreted as a tribute to Chopin who died in 1849, a year before the Consolations were published.[17] This third Consolation is however one of several of Liszt's works that take a style reminiscent of Chopin; some examples include Liszt's Polonaises, Berceuse, Mazurka brillante, and his Ballades.[26]
In 1883, years after composing the Consolation, Liszt received a Grand piano from the Steinway Company with a design that included a sostenuto pedal.[27] Liszt began transcribing this Consolation for the new sostenuto pedal and in a letter to Steinway he wrote:
"In relation to the use of your welcome tone-sustaining pedal I inclose two examples: Danse des Sylphes, by Berlioz, and No. 3 of my Consolations. I have today noted down only the introductory bars of both pieces, with this proviso, that, if you desire it, I shall gladly complete the whole transcription, with exact adaptation of your tone-sustaining pedal."[28]
Liszt recommended sparing usage of the sostenuto pedal in the interpretation of this Consolation and opined on the positive effect it would have on the more tranquil passages.[27]
Consolation No. 4 is in D-Flat major and is initially marked Quasi adagio. Composed in 1849, [29] it is also known as the Strern-Consolation ("Star Consolation") because of the six-pointed white star that appears on the printed score.[3] The Consolation was inspired by a Lied written by Maria Pavlovna, the Grand Duchess of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach. [30] The mood of the composition has been described as "churchly-religious"[31] and "prayerlike".[32]
Liszt later re-used the Consolation's theme in the Andante sostenuto / quasi adagio section of his Piano Sonata in B Minor.[30]
Consolation No. 5 is in E-Major. It is initially marked Andantino. The Consolation has a cantilena vocal style. .[8][32] This Consolation has the oldest genealogy having been reworked from the earlier fifth version of the Consolations, entitled the Madrigal .[17][19][20] Compared to the earlier Madrigal, this Consolation: [33]
The sixth and final Consolation is in E Major. It is initially marked Allegretto sempre cantabile and is the longest of the Consolations with a total of 100 measures. It is the most technically demanding of the Consolations.[8] The piece has been described by Carl Lachmund, one of Liszt's students, as more characteristic of Liszt's style than the more renowned D-flat major third Consolation.[34] Lachmund provides insight into the style in which Liszt played the Consolation, stating:
"He [Liszt] played each note of the melody as if it were a significant poetic word, which effect was heightened in that he used the thumb for each one of these notes, and dropping his hand in a languid manner as he did this. He would dwell slightly here or there on a note as if entranced and then resume the motion without leaving a feeling that the time had been disturbed. I do not recall the particular measures in which he did this; but even then I felt that he might do it in a different place each time he played the piece." [35]