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Franz Liszt - Hungarian Rhapsodies No. 11-19 (1853-86) [Roberto Szidon]

Franz Liszt (Hungarian: Liszt Ferencz, in modern usage Liszt Ferenc 22 October 1811 – 31 July 1886) was a prolific 19th-century Hungarian composer, virtuoso pianist, conductor, music teacher, arranger, organist, philanthropist, author, nationalist and a Franciscan tertiary during the Romantic era. Please support my channel: https://ko-fi.com/bartjebartmans Hungarian Rhapsodies Nos. 11-19 S. 244 #11. (0:00) Dedicated to Baron Fery Orczo. This rhapsody is based on a verbunkos and two csárdás. #12. (5:40) Dedicated to Joseph Joachim. Sources for the tunes used in this rhapsody include a csárdás by Márk Rózsavölgyi, a melody from the manuscript collection Nagy potpourri, Beni Egressy's Fantázia, and a portion of A Csikós. #13. (15:25) Dedicated to Count Leó Festetics. It contains a theme used by the well-known Allegro molto vivace from Zigeunerweisen by Pablo de Sarasate (Ketten mentünk, hárman jöttünk). At the end, it quotes the authentic Hungarian folk song Nem, nem, nem, nem megyünk mi innen el (No, no, no, no, we're not going out of here). It also quotes Akkor szép az erdő, mikor zöld. #14. (24:34) Dedicated to Hans von Bülow. This rhapsody is composed of several distinct melodies. Some of them are Hungarian folk songs, such as Magosan repül a daru. Others are of uncertain origin; they may have been written by Liszt himself. Also arranged for piano and orchestra as Hungarian Fantasia, S.123 #15. (36:28) Subtitled Rákóczi-Marsch. The original March was a favorite of Francis Rákóczi II. #16. (42:34) Dedicated to Mihály Munkácsy. subtitled Budapest Munkácsy-Festlichkeiten. This Rhapsody is based entirely on Liszt's original ideas. #17. (48:06) This Rhapsody was a supplement for Le Figaro, c. 1885 and is based entirely on Liszt's original ideas. #18. (51:30) This Rhapsody was written for the Hungarian National Exhibition in Budapest 1885 #19. (54:40) is based on the Csárdás nobles by Kornél Ábrányi, better known as a music critic than as a composer. Roberto Szidon, piano DGG rec. 1972

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