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Les préludes

Les préludes ("Preludes" or "The Beginnings"), S.97, is the third of Franz Liszt's thirteen symphonic poems. The music was composed between 1845–54, and began as an overture to Liszt's choral cycle Les quatre élémens (The Four Elements), then revised as a stand-alone concert overture, with a new title referring to a poem by Alphonse de Lamartine. Its premiere was on 23 February 1854, conducted by Liszt himself. The score was published in 1856 by Breitkopf & Härtel.[1] Les préludes is the earliest example of an orchestral work entitled "Symphonic Poem" (German: Symphonische Dichtung or French: Poème symphonique).

Franz Liszt, after a painting of 1856, by Wilhelm von Kaulbach.

Genesis

Les préludes is the final revision of an overture initially written for a choral cycle Les quatre élémens (The Four Elements, 1844–48), on 4 poems by the French author Joseph Autran: La Terre (The Earth), Les Aquilons (The north Winds), Les Flots (The Waves), Les Astres (The Stars).

The chorus Les Aquilons was composed and created in a version for male chorus with 2 pianos accompaniment in Marseille in 1844, and the first sketches of the Ouverture des quatre élémens date from 1845, during Liszt's tour through Spain and Portugal. A manuscript of the overture from 1849-50 shows that the work had by then reached its almost definitive structure and thematic content.[2][3]

After being partially orchestrated, the choral cycle project was abandoned. The overture was revised in 1853-54 as a stand-alone piece, with a new title inspired by an ode by the French poet Alphonse de Lamartine, Les préludes.

Both the title and the reference to Lamartine's poem as a suggestion for a programme were added only after the work was almost complete. Contrary to an idea that is still sometimes widespread today,[4] the work was neither written nor even revised after Lamartine: there were no addition of new themes, no addition or suppression or changes in the order of episodes, not even changes of the tonal structure within the episodes, between the last stage of the manuscript of the Ouverture des quatre élémens, and the final revision of 1853-54 under the title Les préludes. The evidence provided in 1986 by musicologist Andrew Bonner[5] has since been agreed by, among others, two musicologists who have devoted book-length studies to Liszt's symphonic poems, Keith T. Johns[6] and Joanne Cormac.[7]

Les préludes is written for a large orchestra of strings, woodwind, brass (including tuba and bass trombone), harp and a variety of percussion instruments (timpani, side drum, bass drum and cymbals). To realize the orchestration, Liszt was helped by two composers: first by Joachim Raff for the manuscripts of 1849-50, then by Hans von Bronsart for the revision in 1853-54 and for minor corrections before publication by Breitkopf in 1856.[8]

Although the orchestration was 'four-handed', studies on the Raff-Liszt collaboration on the Prometheus Overture, contemporary with the progress of Les quatre élémens, has revealed that Liszt drew up very detailed sketches, rejected or modified almost all of Raff's proposals, and sought in particular to achieve more transparent textures and more subtle variations in orchestral density.[9]

Musical analysis

This analysis is limited to a factual observation of the score and the links with the choruses Les quatre élémens, from which all the themes of Les preludes are derived.[10][11][12] For the possibilities of interpretation according to a programme added later, linked to Lamartine or to the preface by Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein, see the next paragraph.

Form

The form of Les préludes corresponds to both:

• A "synopsis overture", the most common form of overture in the Romantic period.[13] That is, a presentation of the main themes of the forthcoming work, arranged in contrasting episodes, so as to convey an overview of the drama or story. The slow introduction, as well as the brilliant finale, marked by a triumphant return of earlier themes and sometimes described as an apotheosis, are also among the « standard component of romantic overtures ».[14][15]

• A cyclical form, i.e. a construction where a single musical cell gives rise to all the themes, and/or where themes recur cyclically between the beginning and end of the work [16]

The plan based on tempo indications and thematic material is as follows:

Section Bars Tempo indication Themes
1 1-34 Andante Main theme from Les Astres (The Stars)
35-46 Andante maestoso
2 47-68 L'istesso tempo (espressivo cantando) Two themes associated with Love
from Les Astres and La Terre (The Earth)
69-108 L'istesso tempo (espressivo ma tranquillo)
3 109-131 Allegro ma non troppo Motives associated with Sea storms
from Les Aquilons (The Winds) and Les Flots (The Waves)
131-181 Allegro tempestuoso
4 182-200 Un poco più moderato
Love themes transformed into Pastoral themes
200-296 Allegretto pastorale (Allegro moderato)
296-343 Poco a poco più di moto sino al...
5 344-404 Allegro marziale animato Love themes transformed into Triumphal themes
405-419 Andante maestoso Main theme from Les Astres

(Division into 5 mains sections as proposed by Taruskin[17]. Other divisions have also been described : see. paragraph "The first symphonic poem")

Detailed Analysis

1. Andante - Andante maestoso

1a. Andante (Introduction)

 
Example 1: First vocal theme from Les Astres and beginning of Les Préludes.

After 2 pizzicati, the strings intone a phrase which is nothing other than the vocal theme sung by the Stars at the beginning of the chorus Les Astres,[18] underlined by the celli and bassi, then extended by an ascending arpeggio of violins and violas (example 1).

« Hommes épars sur le globe qui roule / (Enveloppé là-bas de nos rayons).»
« Scattered men on the rolling globe / (Wrapped up there in our rays)».

This "theme of the Stars" is also headed by a 'three-note cell', which unify all the thematic material of Les préludes,[19] as it already did in the original choruses (cyclic form).

The theme is first presented as a sketch emerging from silence and returning to silence, with Liszt creating "a sense of rhythmic disorientation" (pizzicati and attacks are systematically shifted to weak beats) and "harmonic ambiguity" (the melody is in aeolian mode, creating ambivalence between C major and A minor, and resolved by woodwinds in A major)[20][21]

The ensemble is taken up a tone higher, and then the music begins to gain forward momentum, with a woodwind ostinato accompanying closer and closer repetitions of the theme in the strings, in an ascending chromatic sequence creating increasing tension up to the dominant of C major, while the trombones reaffirm the 3-note motive by increasing the intervals, more and more insistently.

Note that some editions of the score display a molto ritenuto just before the andante maestoso, while others do not. Both version can be heard till today, without it being possible to know what Liszt would have wanted.

1b. Andante Maestoso ("Les Astres")

Mm.35-46

 
Example 2: Three main elements of the Andante maestoso.

The return to a luminous C major finally resolves the harmonic tension accumulated earlier. The music here comes entirely from the beginning of the chorus Les Astres (The Stars), where it introduced the peremptory song of the "heavenly powers" addressing humans:[22][23]

  • The harmonic scheme, proceeding in descending thirds before returning to C major, is strictly that of the instrumental introduction to the chorus (I - VI - IV - II - bVII - V- I - VI -IV - I - VI - IV - I)
  • The chorale-like writing in held notes in woodwinds, trumpets and horns was the main melodic line in the instrumental introduction.
  • The waves of sharply articulated arpeggios in the violins and violas also appeared in a similar form in the introduction, even in the piano part.
  • The aforementioned theme of the Stars is now declaimed in the trombones, tuba, bassoons and low strings, with a new rhythmic pattern that will be reaffirmed by the timpani. This theme, which in the original chorus appeared only at the entrance of the voices, is here superimposed and adapted to the musical elements of the introduction, providing a melodic and rhythmic counterpoint to the other elements (this addition date from the 1853-54 revision: the 1850 manuscript still had the choral line as its main material).[24]

Note that the trombone and tuba parts are indicated simply f, not ff like the rest of the orchestra, which seems to mean that Liszt was keen on a balance between the 3 musical elements, not an overwhelming predominance of the trombones.

2. L'istesso Tempo ("Love")

 
Example 3: First and second themes from Les Astres, and first "love theme" in Les Préludes.

Continuing with the same pulse, but with a tender and lyrical expression, the new section includes musical material that was explicitly associated with poetic images of love in the 2 choruses Les Astres and La Terre (The Earth).

2a.

Mm.47–69

The theme played by the celli is the exact quote of a theme from the 2d section of the Chorus Les Astres,[25] associated with the notion of heavenly/divine love :

« Seul astre pur qui parfois illumine / Comme un de nous vos ténébreux chemins / [...]»
« Couples heureux, pleins d’extase divine / Vous soupirez, en vous tenant les mains »
« Only pure star that sometimes illuminates / Like one of us your dark paths /[...]»
« Happy couples, full of divine ecstasy / You sigh, holding hands.»

  • This "love theme" is itself virtually a transposition from the 1st to a 3d degree of the initial theme of Les Astres, and therefore also contains the original 3-note cell. (Example 3)
  • The harmonic pattern is strictly identical (transposed 1/2 ton higher) to that of the corresponding passage in Les Astres, including a tonic pedal (here in double-bass pizzicati: see Example 3).
  • The 1st violins accompany softly this theme with a sixteenth-note formula, which derives directly from the last descending arpeggios in the previous Andante maestoso : the principle of thematic transformation thus extends to the secondary voices, and reinforces the continuity already specified by l'istesso tempo.
  • Finally, the 3-note motive appears in syncopated rhythm on the double basses, which energizes the phrase and avoids any effect of languidness (provided the section is played andante and not adagio).

The theme is then resumed in a subtle combination of solo horn and 2d violins, this time in E major, and continues with a section in minor (mm. 63.ff) which also comes entirely from the same chorus.

 
Example 4: Love/Spring theme from La Terre, and second love theme in Les Préludes (barcarolle).

2b.

Mm.69–108

The new theme in E major, carried by a combination of 4 horns and violas "espressivo ma tranquillo", derives from a four-part theme sung by the Trees in the chorus La Terre,[26] this time associated with the notion of love linked with spring,[27] or "earthly love" :

« Des ivresses unanimes, voici les moments heureux / De nos pieds jusqu’à nos cimes / S’élancent en nœuds intimes / Tous les êtres amoureux »
« Of unanimous voluptuousness, here are the happy moments / From our feet to our peaks / All beings in love are thrown into intimate knots »

Although no longer resembling to the themes seen previously, this 2d "love theme" also turns out to be a variation on the 3-notes cell, as shown by Taruskin (Example 4).[19]

In addition, this theme punctuated by harp chords displays the typical sway of a barcarolle, which also seems to originate from Les quatre élémens: an example barcarolle appeared in the chorus Les Flots to accompany the following lines:

« Puis [la mer] promène en silence / La barque frêle qui balance / Un couple d’enfants amoureux. »
« Then [the sea] silently carries / The frail boat that rocks / A couple of children in love. »

 
Courbet - Portrait of Hector Berlioz, 1850

This 2d "love theme" is then resumed in a dialogue between winds and strings (mm.79ff), and gives rise to passionate impulses (some editions indicate poco a poco accelerando), alternating fiery outbursts from the violins in the high register, sudden suspensions, sensual woodwinds sighs, in direct lineage with the Rêveries-passions of the Symphonie fantastique, or the Scène d'amour of Romeo and Juliette, a work of which Liszt had been an enthusiastic admirer since 1846,[28] and which he was to conduct highlights several times in Weimar in 1853,[29] shortly before the last revision of Les préludes. And if certain 9th chords, supported by prominent horns, seem reminiscent of Tristan und Isolde (mm. 89 and 93), this is rather a foreshadowing: Wagner did not complete his opera until 1859.

The return to calm after this obviously suggestive page is accompanied by a reprise of the first "love theme", before woodwind 7th chords set up a new harmonic tension, punctuated by the harp's harmonics, creating an atmosphere of questioning expectation.

3. Allegro ma non troppo - Allegro tempestoso ("Storm")

A characteristic example of the legacy of Sturm und Drang in Liszt's work,[30] this short but intense episode brings together musical material associated with the evocation of sea storms and shipwrecks in the two choruses Les Aquilons (The North Winds) and Les Flots (The Waves), in the service of a highly figurative orchestral writing.

 
Example 5: Premise of the storm.

3a. Allegro ma non troppo

Mm. 109-130:

An ominous chromatic motif, again derived from the 3-note cell, evokes the first tremors of wind or waves, which quickly intensify and accelerate, carried by swirling string tremolos on diminished seventh chord, cancelling out any harmonic marker.

3b. Allegro tempestuoso

 
Example 6: First vocal line Les Aquilons and "storm music" in Les Préludes

Mm. 131-160

The storm breaks on a thematic material based on:

  • The 3-note cell, repeated and hammered
  • A raging eighth-note line in the strings, each beat of which is violently accentuated by the brass, and which in fact derives from the first vocal lines of the chorus Les Aquilons (The North Winds) (Example 6):
    • The strings take up exactly the same rhythmic pattern as the voices, on a different melodic line at the beginning, but identical at the end.
    • The brass takes up virtually the melodic scheme of the voices.
    • The figure is repeated twice, creating the same harmonic progression by ascending semi-tones in Les Flots and in Les préludes.

« Peuple orageux qui des antres sauvages / Sort en fureur, / De toutes parts nous semons les ravages / Et la terreur » […]
(« Des vastes mers qui séparent le monde / Troublant les eaux / Sur les écueils nous déchirons les ondes / Et les vaisseaux. »)
« Stormy people who from the wilderness / Come out in fury, / On all sides we spread devastation / And terror » […]
(« From the vast seas that separate the world / Disturbing the waters / On the reefs we tear the waves / And the ships. »)

Liszt uses here all classical elements of "storm music" figuralism, and perhaps creates new ones:

  • Thunderous rolling of the timpani.
  • Shrill cries from the woodwinds in the high register.
  • Alternance of 4-beat build and 6-beat build phrases, that create rhythmic instability in the 4/4 signature and seem to overflow (mm.131-138).
  • Orchestral waves that begin "piano", rise rapidly, hang for a moment, then crash with all their might (ff with timpani) (mm. 141-147)
  • A harmonic struggle between an attempt to escape from the initial A minor to a B major/G minor pole (140-141 then 145-146) and the return in A minor (violently reassessed with half-cadences)
  • Distorsions of the 3-note motive, that appears inverted at mm. 140-141, while the acceleration of the tempo leads to a frantic panic (indication molto agitato ed accelerando).
  • Orchestral assaults at mm.149-154, which can be played molto pesante as indicated in some editions, or a tempo, then taking the form of an evil laugh: perhaps the joy of the Elements that revel in the terror of the sailors, as in the chorus Les Flots (see the corresponding verses just below)
  • Lastly, an immense chromatic descent of woodwinds and high strings, progressively submerged by an ascending arpeggio of brass and low strings, in which one might be tempted to see the "sinking ship" evoked by Autran in Les Flots (m. 155).
 
Example 7: Trumpet motif in "Les Flots" and in "Les Préludes" (Judgement trumpets).

Mm. 160-181:

The key stabilizes into A minor (reaffirmed in a Beethovenian way by the timpani: E-E-E-A), with music derived directly from the introduction of the chorus Les Flots:

  • A trumpet motif in repeated notes, which was already present in the piano part (Example 7), for which Liszt had very early noted a sketch of orchestration on additional staves, and which was also present in a close form in the vocal parts:[31]

« Nous aimons voir briller dans l’ombre / l’éclair aux ardents javelots / Nous aimons le vaisseau qui sombre / en jetant à la grève sombre / le dernier cri des matelots»
« We like to see the lightning shining in the shadows / with its fiery javelins / we like the sinking ship / throwing to the dark shore / the last cry of the sailors. »

  • Arpeggiated motives played by the strings, which were also present in a close form in the piano introduction of the chorus. The 3-note cell, absent for once from the main motif, is now present in the strings formulas.[32]

The significance of the trumpet motif, an allusion to the Last Judgement awaiting the sailors, is clear from the text of the chorus whose thematic material was set out just before, Les Aquilons:

« Avec fracas promenons les tempêtes / Au firmament / Nous mugissons ainsi que les trompettes / Du jugement.»
« With noise let's walk the storms / In the firmament / We roar like the trumpets / Of judgment.»

Even if it is anecdotal, it may be noted that the music of Les quatre élémens was largely composed during Liszt's stays in port cities (Marseille, Valencia, Malaga, Lisbon),[2] places where stories of shipwrecks were very real.

4. Un poco più moderato - Allegretto pastorale ("Pastoral picture")

The succession of a storm description and a peaceful pastoral scene is an already proven musical effect (see Beethoven's 6th Symphony, Rossini's Overture of Guillaume Tell). Moreover, such a juxtaposition also appears in the text of the chorus Les Aquilons (even if the music associated with country nature is here different from that in Les préludes).

« Avec fracas promenons les tempêtes / Au firmament / Nous mugissons ainsi que les trompettes / Du jugement.»
« Brises du soir, vents de l’aube naissante / Faibles et doux […]/ Vous effleurez de vos ailes bénies / Les fleurs des champs»
« With a roar let's drive the storms / Into the firmament / We howl like the trumpets / Of judgment.»
« Evening breezes, winds of the dawning dawn / Weak and gentle […]/ You touch with your blessed wings / The flowers of the fields".

 
Example 8: Return of the 1st love theme after the storm.

4a. Un poco più moderato

Mm. 182-200.

The calm returns with a reprise of the first "love theme", which was also the last theme heard just before the storm, revealing a cyclical construction in which the storm was the central point. First freely intoned by the oboe classically associated with pastoral evocations, the theme is then adorned with the soft light of a combination of divisi violins and harp.

Note that Liszt insists on a progressive slowing of the pulse (poco rallentando, un poco più moderato), thus seeking to preserve a certain rhythmic continuity despite the change in character.

 
Example 9: Pastoral theme obtained from a variation on the 2nd love theme.

4b. Allegretto pastorale (Allegro moderato)

Mm. 201-260.

A new fresh and graceful theme gives rise to playful exchanges between the various wind soloists and the strings, on the 6/8 rhythm traditionally associated with peasant dances and pastoral scenes, while the new tonal centre stabilises in A major.

This "pastoral theme" is in fact a reprise of a decorative line heard in the Love section, which itself derives from the 2nd "love theme" (Example 9).

4c: Poco a poco più di moto sino al Allegro marziale

From measure 260, the first "love theme" and the "Pastoral theme" are now combined, accelerated very gradually, creating an increasing momentum with the return to the key of C major, and supported by an orchestration with increasingly military overtones (tuba and timpani mes. 316).

No parallel can be established between any verse of the poems of Autran (nor any part of Lamartine's ode), and this joyful and exuberant progression, whose raison d'être seems especially musical, in order to make a transition to the finale.

5: Allegro marziale animato - Andante maestoso ("Triumphal finale")

5a. Allegro marziale animato

This highly virtuosic page, indicated alla breve, continues the principle of thematic transformation:

 
Example 10: First love theme transformed into a triumphal fanfare.

Mm. 344-355:

The first "love theme" is transformed into a triumphant fanfare in C major for trumpets and horns[33] (Example 10), accompanied by strings scale-runs, while the bass trombones and tuba respond with the beginning of the "theme of the Stars". (Note that the idea of a reprise of the love theme in a glorious statement in C major, already existed in the chorus Les Astres, in the instrumental part before the last stanza)

 
Example 11: "Battle music".

Mm. 356-369.

The writing superimposes vivid dotted rhythms in the winds, feverish tremolos in the strings, suddenly accentuated scale-runs, accompanied by a trumpet signal with the appearance of a cavalry bugle, processes traditionally associated with ideas of battle, but in major keys that maintain an enthusiastic and jubilant expression.[34] The "3-note cell" is this time played as a trilled motif by the alti and cello (Example 11).

 
Example 12: Second Love theme transformed into a march.

Mm. 370-385:

The 2nd "love theme" (the former barcarolle) is transformed into a triumphal march (Example 12), accompanied by military percussion — or a cavalcade, depending on the tempo adopted (some editions have a tempo di marcia indication, which may encourage a momentary 4/4 decomposition and broadening of the tempo, others do not, suggesting that the tempo alla breve be retained). The modulations one-upmanship by ascending thirds (C major - E major - Gb major/F#major - B major) create a growing sense of exaltation, and the reprise of the previous fanfare in F# major (marked più maestoso in some editions - but not in all), introduces a maximum tension in relation to the basic C-major (tritone relation), which may have been associated with an idea of challenge.[34]

Mm. 386-404:

Repetition of the same procedures, on a harmonic path preparing the return to C major.

There is no description of a "battle" or "victory" in Autran's poems that could have motivated such a demonstrative page. With the exception of a brief evocation of the navy in the chorus Les Flots, which Liszt accompanied with a marching rhythm, but which lasts only a few seconds.
« C’est nous qui portons sur cîmes / les messagers des Nations / Vaisseaux de bronze aux flancs sublimes… »
« We carry on the crest / the messengers of the Nations / Bronze vessels with sublime sides...»

And as said before, no new episode was added between the 1850 Ouverture des Quatre élémens and the final version, making the idea of a battle episode inspired by Lamartine impossible.[35] On the other hand, the use of triumphant music with military accents as a finale is far from exceptional in opera overtures and concert overtures of this period (see examples below)

5b: Andante maestoso (Recapitulation)

After more or less pronounced ritardendo (the indication varies from "poco" to "molto" ritardendo depending on the editions of the score), the andante maestoso is entirely re-exposed, as the conclusion of a cyclic construction, with reinforced dynamics and additional percussion (snare drum, bass drum and cymbals), and followed by a brief coda ending in a plagal cadence.

Unifying features

Despite the sequence of highly contrasting episodes, the work is unified by several musical processes.

First, the cyclic form.

After Berlioz and the "idée fixe" motif in the Symphonie Fantatstique, Liszt gives here another example of continuous thematic transformation: as it has been described above, all themes derive from each other or are interconnected by a same founding cell, even in certain accompanying formulas.[19][16] It has often been observed that the beginning of the Symphonie en ré mineur by César Franck (1888), a famous example of a cyclical work, uses a three-note cell very similar to the founding cell of Les Preludes.[36][37]


Next, the harmonic structure:

The third relation, which characterises the founding cell C-(b)-E, also governs the harmonic scheme of the work, on several scales:

Third relations on the scale of the whole work : [38][39]

  • Section 1: Unstable then C major
  • Section 2: Key centre = C major then E major (a third above)
  • Section 3: Unstable then a minor (a third below)
  • Section 4: Unstable, then A major, then C major
  • Section 5: C major


Third relations within sections:

  • Introduction: the initial phrase begins in C major and ends in A major.
  • Andante maestoso: the music is built on a descending third sequence, the same as the introduction of the chorus Les astres : I (C major) - VI (a minor) - IV (F major) - II (d minor) - bVII (Bb major) -V (G major) - I
  • Section 2a: the section begins in C major, then rises to E major (mes. 54), goes down for a brief page in key c minor (mes. 63) before returning to E major.
  • Section 2b: at the end of the section, the woodwinds create a tension between the main E major and alternately C major (mes. 91-92) and G major (mes. 95-96)
  • Section 4a: all the section from m.181 to m.200 is built on a descending thirds sequence: Bb major - G major - E major - C#major - A major
  • Section 4c: in the middle of a sequence in C major, Liszt introduces a local climax in Ab major (flat VI degree), with the only fff in the entire score, before returning to C (mm. 332-344)
  • Séquence 5a: the first fanfare begins in C major and ends in E major (mm. 344-355)
  • Séquence 5a: the "march" and the fanfare follow each other on ascending minor thirds: A major - Eb major - Gb major/F# major - Bb major  (m. 370-385)

It has been noticed that the tonic-mediant relationship, which is often favoured in Liszt's work rather than the tonic-dominant relationship, can be found in particular in other of his scores beginning in C, like Orpheus, Tasso, or the first movement of the Faust Symphony[40]


Finally, a rhythmic continuity :

The first half of the work, from the introduction to the end of the Love section, is unified with one overall andante tempo (Liszt indicates « l’istesso tempo » several times), with only variations in expression and a few agogic indications.

In the second half:

  • The allegro ma non troppo is gradually accelerated, and continues with the allegro tempestuoso with an equivalence [alla breve - 12/8].
  • At the end of the storm, the allegro tempestuoso is gradually slowed down — but not to much — to a pastoral allegretto that is also indicated allegro moderato.
  • At the end of the "pastoral episode", the allegretto is gradually accelerated, and continues with the allegro marziale animato through an equivalence [6/8 - alla breve] that mirrors the equivalence at the beginning of the storm, before the return of the concluding andante maestoso.

All theses changes should be seamless. The work is thus supposed to be animated by a continuous forward movement: there is not a single adagio or largo in the entire score, and just a brief suspension before the storm.

Respect for tempi (notably an andante that does not turn into an adagio, and an allegretto that should retain a dance-like character), and for equivalences (the transition from the allegretto pastorale to the allegro marziale animato poses real challenge to the performers, as attested to by the very different options of the conductors), is probably one of the keys to preserving the work's cohesion.



Possible influences

Richard Taruskin pointed out that the sections of Les préludes "[correspond] to the movements of a conventional symphony if not in the most conventional order".[41] He adds that "the music, whilst heavily indebted in concept to Berlioz, self-consciously advertises its descent from Beethoven even as it flaunts its freedom from the formal constraints to which Beethoven had submitted [...] The standard "there and back" construction that had controlled musical discourse since at least the time of the old dance suite continues to impress its general shape on the sequence of programmatically derived events."[42]

Even if other authors underline the distance that Liszt takes towards certain Beethovenian characteristics (the thematic duality, the sonata form...)[43], links can be made with Beethoven's 5th Symphony, another example of cyclic form ending with an iconic triumphal finale in C major, and with Beethoven's 6th Symphony, where a musical storm is followed by a pastoral scene : Liszt even occasionally requested that Les Préludes be played in concert preceded with Beethoven's 6th.[44]

Apart from the Beethovenian model, many Romantic Overtures that predate Les préludes have characteristics found in Liszt's score:

An introduction where the music gradually emerges from the silence:
Weber: Der Freischutz, 1821 (transcribed by Liszt in 1846, S.574), Oberon, 1826 (transcribed by Liszt in 1843, S.574)
Spohr: Jessonda, 1822, Macbeth, 1825 (Liszt frequented Spohr in the 1845s)[45]
Schubert: Fierrabras, 1823 (Liszt would later conduct Schubert's Alfonso und Estrella in Weimar)[46]
Rossini: Guillaume Tell, 1829 (transcribed by Liszt in 1838, S.552)
Marschner: Hans Heiling, 1929 (Liszt knew Marschner personally, and the work was popular at the time [47])
Wagner: Faust ouverture, 1840, a work that also incorporates thematic transformations (Liszt would later conduct the work in Weimar in 1952)[48]
Wagner: Rienzi, 1842 (known by Liszt since a performance in 1844 in Dresde)[49]

The sequence of a storm and a bucolic scene:
Rossini: Guillaume Tell (1829)

A finale with military overtones, featuring brass fanfare and percussion:
Spontini: Fernand Cortez, 1809, Olimpie (1819) (Liszt wrote a Paraphrase on themes from the opera, 1824, S. 150)
Weber: Jubel-Ouvertüre, 1818 (transcribed by Liszt in 1846, S.575)
Marschner: Prinz Friedrich von Homburg, 1821
Auber: La muette de Portici, 1828 (Liszt wrote a Paraphrase on themes from the opera, 1846, S. 386), Fra diavolo, 1830
Rossini: Guillaume Tell, 1829
Berlioz: Les Francs-Juges, 1828 (transcribed by Liszt in 1833, S.471)
Berlioz: Benvenuto Cellini, 1838 / Ouverture d’un Carnaval Romain, 1844 (transcribed by Liszt in the 1840s, S. 741)
Mendelssohn: Ruy Blas, 1839
Wagner: Rienzi, 1842

A final apotheosis, in which a theme from the beginning of the overture is taken over a reinforced orchestration. The procedure is common in the Romantic Overture,[15] but there are some particularly striking examples in the use of trombones and tuba, which shortly precede the writing of Les Préludes:
Der fliegende Holländer, 1843
Tannhäuser, 1845 (transcribed by Liszt in 1948, S. 442, precisely at the time when he was working on the Ouvertüre des Quatre élémens)
Benvenuto Cellini, 1938 / Ouverture d’un Carnaval Romain, 1844 (transcribed by Liszt in 1844-49?, S. 741, lost)

Finally, the work that represents the most similarity in structure to the Préludes is an overture that Liszt transcribed in 1838: Rossini's Guillaume Tell Overture.[50] The musical vocabulary of course different, but with the exception of the 2 occurrences of the andante maestoso, the structure is virtually identical:

  • Introduction : Andante, motif in ascending arpeggio interspersed with rests, repeated a 2d time starting a tone above
  • (…)
  • Lyrical episode
  • Storm
  • Bucolic calm
  • Military finale with cavalry charge and triumphal end.

The programme

The full title of the piece, "Les préludes (d'après Lamartine)" refers to an Ode from the Alphonse de Lamartine's Nouvelles méditations poétiques of 1823. The final version thus no longer contains any reference to Autran or to the Chorus cycle Les quatre élémens. Moreover, it seems that Liszt took steps to obscure the origin of the piece, and that this included the destruction of the original overture's title page, and the re-ascription of the piece to Lamartine's poem. Lamartine's ode does indeed contain several similarities with some sections in Autran's poems: an amorous elegy, a sea storm, a bucolic scene, which, as long as one sticks to archetypal images without being too careful about the detail and order of the sequences, can serve as a vague programme.

Several hypothesis have been put forward for this re-ascription, with no certainty: reject by Liszt of a poetry which it would have finally judged too weak with the profit of a more famous author, influence of Liszt's companion Princess Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein and her taste for Lamartine (Liszt having then complied more or less willingly), need to integrate Les préludes into the collection of Poèmes Symphoniques which are all accompanied by a literary support, copyright problems linked to the fact that Autran's poems were not yet all published...[51][18][52]

The 1856 published score includes a text preface, which however is not from Lamartine.

What else is our life but a series of preludes to that unknown Hymn, the first and solemn note of which is intoned by Death?—Love is the glowing dawn of all existence; but what is the fate where the first delights of happiness are not interrupted by some storm, the mortal blast of which dissipates its fine illusions, the fatal lightning of which consumes its altar; and where is the cruelly wounded soul which, on issuing from one of these tempests, does not endeavour to rest his recollection in the calm serenity of life in the fields? Nevertheless man hardly gives himself up for long to the enjoyment of the beneficent stillness which at first he has shared in Nature's bosom, and when "the trumpet sounds the alarm", he hastens, to the dangerous post, whatever the war may be, which calls him to its ranks, in order at last to recover in the combat full consciousness of himself and entire possession of his energy.[53]

The earliest version of this preface was written in March 1854 by Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein.[54] This version comprises voluminous reflections of the Princess, into which some lines of quotations from the ode by Lamartine are incorporated.[55] It was drastically shortened for publication in April 1856 as part of the score; there only the sentence, "the trumpet sounds the alarm" and the title "Les préludes", survive from Lamartine's poem.

A different version of the preface was written for the occasion of a performance of Les préludes on 6 December 1855, in Berlin. In the 1855 version the connection with Lamartine is reduced to his alleged query, "What else is our life but a series of preludes to that unknown Hymn, the first and solemn note of which is intoned by Death?"[56] However this sentence was actually written not by Lamartine, but by Princess Wittgenstein.

For the occasion of a performance of Les préludes on 30 April 1860, in Prague a further version of the preface was made. This version was probably written by Hans von Bülow who directed the performance.[57] It is rather short and contains no reference to Lamartine at all. According to this version, Les préludes illustrates the development of a man from his early youth to maturity.[58] In this interpretation, Les préludes may be taken as part of a sketched musical autobiography.

Nevertheless, no specific statement by Liszt himself has been found in favour of a particular programme. In a letter to his uncle Eduard List, dated 26 March 1857, he refers to his préludes as: « my preludes (which, by the way, are only the prelude to my path of composition)...», which seems to mean nothing more than the beginning of his interest in cyclical form and new orchestration techniques : the rest of the letter contains indeed only technical considerations on the principle of thematic transformation in his 1st piano concerto, and a plea for percussion instruments despite the reproaches of many other musicians.[59]

The first symphonic poem

With the first performance of the work a new genre was introduced. Les préludes is the earliest example for an orchestral work that was performed as "symphonic poem". In a letter to Franz Brendel of 20 February 1854, Liszt simply called it "a new orchestral work of mine (Les préludes)".[60] Two days later, in the announcement in the Weimarische Zeitung of 22 February 1854, of the concert on 23 February, it was called "Symphonische Dichtung".[61]

The term "symphonic poem" was thus invented. And with it, the question of the extent to which recourse to a programme or to extra-musical ideas is necessary - or not - in order to appreciate the work, a question that remains relevant today.[62]

Many commentators have proposed a division of the work based on the ode by Lamartine, or on the preface by Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein, or on the more general philosophical ideas associated with it. Here are 4 examples:

Section Main (1979)[63] Johns (1986)[64] Johns (1997)[65] Taruskin (2010)[17]
1a (1-34) The poet's invocation to the Muse 1. Lack Birth (Dawn of existence) 1. The Question
1b (35-46) The poet's exclamatory welcome to the muse 2. Awakening of consciousness Consciousness
2 (47-108) Love 3. Love and innocence Innocent love 2. Love
3 (49-181) Destiny 4. Storms of life Hardship, struggle 3. Storm
4 (182-343) Countryside 5. Consolation of nature Consolation 4. Bucolic calm
5a (344-404) Warfare 6. Self realization Discovery of action, Transcendance 5. Battle and Victory (including the recapitulation of ″The Question″)
5b (405-419) The poet's farewell salute

The "love", "storm" and "pastoral" sections reach a consensus, and do not raise any concerns about interpretation, as they are based on musical themes that were explicitly associated with poetic images of love, storm and countryside in the choruses "Les quatre élémens".

More, as these are archetypal topi of Romanticism, and as Liszt «involved himself with the archetypal rather than with the purely narrative »,[66] the association with a text by Lamartine that deals with same archetypes as a programme can work... as well as any literary or pictorial work from the same period on the same subjects.

Love Elegy under the Stars:

 
Friedrich: Mann und Frau in Betrachtung des Mondes, 1835

Storm and shipwrecking:

Calm of nature:

 
Durand: Forenoon, 1847

In contrast, the diversity of proposals for the introduction and the first andante maestoso shows that there is no consensus on any interpretation.

According to Haraszti, the famous "question" about Life and Death ("What is our life but a series of preludes...") should be considered only as a personal reflection of the Countess Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein, which Liszt would not have wished to contradict for the sake of their relationship.[67]

Conversely, Taruskin maintains the reference to this "Question" as a programmatic lead for the introduction, but acknowledges that no section of Lamartine's text can be linked to such a question [17]

According to Johns, the legitimacy of such a Life and Death theme would be more to be sought in a general theme of Autran's poems, and in particular in the first stanza of the poem Les Astres:[68]

« Hommes épars sur ce globe qui roule 
Enveloppé là-bas de nos rayons. 
Peuples errants que la mort chasse en foule 
Et précipite à la tombe où s’écoule 
Le long torrent des générations. »

« Scattered men on this turning globe
Envelopped the by the rays of hope
An errant people which is hunted in crowd by death
And hurried to the tomb
Into which falls the long torrent of the generations. »

This pessimistic view would justify setting the introduction to Les préludes on the theme of a reflection on death and the futility of existence.

Conversely, for Main[69] as well as other commentators,[70] the interpretation, if there is one, is rather to be found in the beginning of Lamartine's ode. This initially hesitant music, which emerges from silence, gradually unfolds, and finally asserts itself in all its grandeur, is not linked to a question about life and death, but would be a rendering of the poet invoking the muse, and of the poet's exaltation when the muse responds:

« La nuit, pour rafraîchir la nature embrasée,
De ses cheveux d’ébène exprimant la rosée,
Pose au sommet des monts ses pieds silencieux […]»
« Que ce calme lui pèse ! Ô lyre! ô mon génie !
Musique intérieure, ineffable harmonie,
Harpes, que j'entendais résonner dans les airs
Comme un écho lointain des célestes concerts,
Pendant qu'il en est temps, pendant qu'il vibre encore,
Venez, venez bercer ce cœur qui vous implore.
Et toi qui donnes l'âme à mon luth inspiré,
Esprit capricieux, viens, prélude à ton gré ! [...]
Il descend! il descend!...»

« The night, to refresh nature ablaze,
Of her ebony hair expressing the dew,
Places its silent feet on the summit of the mountains […]».
« How this calm weighs on him! O lyre! O my genius!
Inner music, ineffable harmony,
Harps, which I heard resounding in the air
Like a distant echo of celestial concerts,
While it is time, while it still vibrates,
Come, come and cradle this heart that implores you.
And you who give soul to my inspired lute,
Whimsical spirit, come, prelude as you please! [...]
He's coming down! He's coming down...»

Even if, contrary to what Main sought to demonstrate,[71] it is now proven that the introduction as well as the rest of the work was not written in reference to Lamartine, and that these links are merely coincidental,[72] the possibility of such an association may have contributed to Liszt's choice to use Lamartine's text as a substitute programme. All the more so since Autran's poem Les Astres contained a stanza with images very similar to those at the beginning of Lamartine's ode: the night, the silence of the peaks, the heavenly harp:

« Quand vient la nuit vous couvrir de son aile
Si vous montiez sur les sommets déserts,
Vous entendriez sous la voûte éternelle
Une musique auguste et solennelle
Qui de nos chœurs s’épanche dans les airs. [...]
Nos lyres d’or vous chanteraient la gloire/ De Jéhova...»

« When night comes to cover you with its wing
If you would climb the deserted peaks,
You would hear under the eternal vault
An august and solemn music
Which from our choirs pours forth into the air. […]
Our golden lyres would sing you the glory/ Of Jehova...»

Although speculative, these suggested readings, which refer to the "birth of inspiration" or more generally to the "birth of a music", are in any case compatible with the actual musical content of the introduction: « a continuous transition leading from the seemingly amorphous opening, with its displaced meter, irregular phrasing, and harmonic ambiguity, through a very strong dominant preparation, to the C-major theme (mm. 35-46) with its regular rhythm and phrasing, clear melodic profile, and definite expository character ».[73]

Note also that the introduction is not marked adagio, or largo, or grave, which would have made more sense if Liszt had wanted to depict a sombre reflection on death, but simply andante.


Lastly, regarding the "allegro marziale animato" section:

There is nothing close to a "battle and victory" in Autran's poems. Lamartine does describe a battle in his ode, but it is actually a bloody mass grave, littered with mutilated corpses, the sight of which prompts the poet to withdraw from the world.
« The one perishes whole; the other on the dust,
Like a trunk whose boughs the axe has cut,
Of its scattered limbs sees the shreds fly,
And, dragging himself still on the dampened earth,
Marks in streams of blood his bloody trail.[…]
Suddenly the sun, dispelling the cloud,
Shines with horror on the scene of the slaughter;
And its pale ray, on the slippery earth,
Uncovers to our eyes long streams of blood,
Broken steeds and chariots in the quarry,
Mutilated limbs scattered on the dust,
The confused debris of arms and bodies,
And flags thrown on heaps of the dead. »

Except for two verses evoking earlier a trumpet signal, including the one used by Carolyne Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein in her preface, it is difficult to draw a parallel between this gruesome massacre and Liszt's glorious music in C major. If this section were to be entitled "battle and victory", then it is more of a general idea of the triumph of the romantic artist against adversity, or the achievement of the artist's self-realization along Hegelian lines, the reference model always being the finale of Beethoven's 5th symphony.[74][17] In addition to the heroic-looking themes and military orchestration, certain harmonic processes such as the tritone relationship and the successive modulations in ascending thirds (whereas other sequences proceeded rather in descending thirds, especially the Andante maestoso and the calm after the storm), can indeed be associated with an idea of defiance, of struggle against adversity, of triumph of the will.

But it may also correspond more prosaically to Liszt's desire, with this disguised overture which is also one of his very first orchestral scores, to compete with the most spectacular overtures of the time (Berlioz Benvenuto Cellini / Carnaval Romain, 1838–44, Wagner Rienzi, 1842), or simply reveal Liszt's taste for martial, finales whether it is "programme music" or not (cf. Piano Concerto No.1, Piano Concerto No.2, Hungaria, Mazeppa).

The musicologist Alan Walker, author of a 3-volume biography of Liszt, summarises the discussion as follows:
« First, the prefaces were written after the music was composed [...]: in such circonstances, one might with equal logic talk of "programmes about music". Secondly, there is evidence that Princess Carolyne had a hand in their formulation. The conclusion seams clear enough. Posterity has probably overestimated the importance of the extra-musical thought in Liszt's symphonic poems [...] We should not follow them slavishly, for the simple reason that the symphonic poems do not follow them slavishly either. »[62]

Critical reception

Shortly after the creation, the critic Eduard Hanslick, who believed in 'absolute music', lambasted Les préludes. In an 1857 article, following a performance in Vienna, he denounced the idea of a 'symphonic poem' as a contradiction in terms. He also denied that music was in any way a 'language' that could express anything, and mocked Liszt's assertion that it could translate concrete ideas or assertions. The aggrieved Liszt wrote to his cousin Eduard "The doctrinaire Hanslick could not be favourable to me; his article is perfidious".[75] Other critics, such as Felix Draeseke, were more supportive.[76]

Early performances in America were not appreciated by conservative critics there. At an 1857 performance of the piano duet arrangement, the critic of Dwight's Journal of Music wrote:

What shall we say of The Preludes, a Poésie Symphonique by Liszt [...] The poetry we listened for in vain. It was lost as it were in the smoke and stunning tumult of a battlefield. There were here and there brief, fleeting fragments of something delicate and sweet to ear and mind, but these were quickly swallowed up in one long, monotonous, fatiguing melée of convulsive, crashing, startling masses of tone, flung back and forth as if in rivalry from instrument to instrument. We must have been very stupid listeners; but we felt after it as if we had been stoned, and beaten, and trampled under foot, and in all ways evilly entreated.[77]

Nowadays, opinions remain divided between some music critics, who still accuse certain pages of vulgarity (Berry: "If the brass section could not entirely escape vulgarity, that is Liszt's responsibility"[78]), and musicologists who praise the inventiveness of the writing (Tranchefort: "Ductile and sumptuous, the orchestra demonstrates a variety of colours and movements the likes of which have not been heard since Beethoven"[37]), who highlight "many technical innovations" and "the use of chamber-music textures, in which small groups of soloists periodically emerge from the orchestral mass, forming contrasts among themselves"(Walker [79]), or who emphasize the rigour of a structure based on "a complex pattern of key and motivic relationships" (Johns [80]).

In any case, Les préludes is undoubtedly « the most popular of Liszt's 13 symphonic poems », as both musicologists[81] and Liszt specialist interpreters such as Leslie Howard[82] have attested.

Arrangements

In the beginning of 1859 Les préludes was successfully performed in New York City.[83] Karl Klauser, New York, made a piano arrangement, which in 1863 was submitted to Liszt. In a letter to Franz Brendel of 7 September 1863, Liszt wrote that Les préludes in Klauser's arrangement was a hackneyed piece, but he had played it through again, to touch up the closing movement of Klauser's arrangement and give it new figuration.[84] Liszt sent Klauser's revised arrangement to the music publisher Julius Schuberth of Leipzig,[85] who was able to publish it in America. In Germany, due to the legal situation of that time, Breitkopf & Härtel as original publishers of Les préludes owned all rights on all kinds of arrangements. For this reason, in 1865 or 1866 Klauser's arrangement was published not by Schuberth but by Breitkopf & Härtel.

Besides Klauser's arrangement there were further piano arrangements by August Stradal and Karl Tausig. Liszt made his own arrangements for two pianos and for piano duet. There were also arrangements for harmonium and piano by A. Reinhard and for military orchestra by L. Helfer.[86] In recent times Matthew Cameron has prepared his own piano arrangement of Les préludes.[citation needed]

Uses in Media

  • The closing fanfare of Les préludes was used for news bulletins by the Reichs-Rundfunk-Gesellschaft during the Nazi regime. The fanfare would cue the announcer to say, "Das Oberkommando der Wehrmacht gibt bekannt..." ("The supreme command of the armed forces announces...") before relating the Nazis' latest victory. Germans were so conditioned by the militaristic usage of Les préludes that there was a de facto ban on the piece after the war.[87]
  • Albert Speer related that he was called into Adolf Hitler's salon during dinner. He had the piece playing and stated "You'll hear that often in the near future because it is going to be our victory fanfare for the Russian campaign. Walther Funk chose it. How do you like it?" Hitler had chosen different musical fanfares for each of the previous victories.[88]
  • Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe uses the same concluding fanfare from Les préludes over its iconic opening titles and as a heroic theme during many scenes.[89]
  • Parts of Les Preludes were used as background music during scene changes in the 1940s radio series The Lone Ranger.
  • The music is used for the intro and outro of the Tom and Jerry episode Tom and Jerry in the Hollywood Bowl.
  • Les Preludes is used throughout Juzo Itami's "ramen western" film Tampopo.

Year's end tradition at Interlochen

A performance of Les préludes concludes each summer camp session at the Interlochen Center for the Arts. In the past, the piece has been conducted by the president of the institution (although this was never a tradition or requirement), and is performed by the camp's large ensembles in the oldest building on the ICA grounds - the Interlochen Bowl - which dates from 1928.[90]

Recordings

Conductor Orchestra Year(*) Studio/ Live Label(**) Time(***)
Mengelberg, Willem New York Philharmonic 1922 Studio Victrola 15’45 +/-
Fried, Oscar Berliner Philharmoniker 1928 Studio Music & Arts / Pristine 15’10 +/-
Mengelberg, Willem Concertgebouw Orchestra 1929 Studio Naxos 15’15 +/-
Kleiber, Erich Czech Philharmonic 1936 Studio Preiser 13’50
Kempen, Paul van Berliner Philharmoniker 1937 Studio DG 15’35
Weingartner, Felix London Symphony Orchestra 1940 Studio Columbia 14’45
Knappertsbusch, Hans Berliner Philharmoniker 1941 Studio Preiser 15’55
Knappertsbusch, Hans Berliner Philharmoniker 1941 Live (Berlin) Andromeda / Archipel 16’33
Ormandy, Eugene Philadelphia Orchestra 1947 Studio Sony 16’00
Stokowski, Leopold Leopold Stokowski's Orchestra 1947 Studio RCA 16’00
Monteux, Pierre Standard Symphony Orchestra (San Francisco) 1950 Live (California) Music & Arts 14’38
Otterloo, Willem van Het Residentie Orkest 1951 Studio Philips 15’03
Ludwig, Leopold Berliner Philharmoniker 1951 Studio DG / Guild 14’17
Celibidache, Sergiu Wiener Symphoniker 1952 Live (Wien) Orfeo 17’17
Monteux, Pierre Boston Symphony Orchestra 1952 Studio RCA 15’40
André, Franz Orchestre Symphonique de la Radiodiffusion Nationale Belge 1952 Studio Telefunken 13’57
Golovanov, Nikolai USSR Radio Symphony Orchestra 1953 Studio Music Online 15’10
Paray, Paul Detroit Symphony Orchestra 1953 Studio Mercury 15’43
Galliera, Alceo Philharmonia Orchestra 1953 Studio Columbia 16’25
Dixon, Dean Royal Philharmonic 1953 Studio Westminster 13’35
Furtwängler, Wilhelm Wiener Philharmoniker 1954 Studio EMI 15’38
Argenta, Ataúlfo Orchestre de la Suisse Romande 1955 Studio Decca 16’25
Mitropoulos, Dimitri New York Philharmonic 1956 Studio Sony 16’32
Silvestri, Constantin Philharmonia Orchestra 1957 Studio EMI 15’35
Scherchen, Hermann Orchester Der Wiener Staatsoper 1957 Studio Westminster 15’35
Karajan, Herbert von Philharmonia Orchestra 1958 Studio EMI 16’07
Fricsay, Ferenc Radio-Symphonie-Orchester Berlin 1959 Studio DG 16’38
André, Franz Orchestre Symphonique de la Radiodiffusion Nationale Belge 1959 (?) Studio Telefunken 15’40
Cluytens, André Berliner Philharmoniker 1960 Studio Erato 17’55
Doráti, Antal London Symphony Orchestra 1960 Studio Mercury 15’43
Benzi, Roberto Orchestre des Concerts Lamoureux 1960 Studio Philips 15’55
Boult, Sir Adrian New Symphony Orchestra of London 1960 Studio RCA 15’10
Rozsa, Miklos The Hollywood Bowl Symphony Orchestra 1960 (?) Studio Capitol/Seraphim 16’55
Rozhdestvensky, Gennady USSR Radio Symphony Orchestra

(Grand Symphony Orchestra of All-Union National Radio Service)

1960 Studio Melodyia 15’35
Fiedler, Arthur Boston Pops 1960 Studio Mercury 15’23
Bernstein, Leonard New York Philharmonic 1963 Studio Sony 16’43
Ančerl, Karel Czech Philharmonic 1964 Studio Supraphon 16’38
Mehta, Zubin Wiener Philharmoniker 1966 Studio Decca 16’10
Karajan, Herbert von Berliner Philharmoniker 1967 Studio DG 17’05
Haitink, Bernard London Symphony Orchestra 1968 Studio Philips 15'00
Neumann, Václav Gewandhausorchester Leipzig 1968 (?) Studio Apex 16’17
Paray, Paul Orchestre National de Monte Carlo 1969 Studio Concert Hall 15’43
Barenboim, Daniel Chicago Symphony Orchestra 1977 Studio DG 15’55
Solti, Sir Georg London Symphony Orchestra 1977 Studio Decca 16’48
Masur, Kurt Gewandhausorchester Leipzig 1978 Studio EMI 15’03
Neumann, Vaclav Czech Philharmonic 1979 Live (Prague) Supraphon 15’18
Solti, Sir Georg Symphonie-Orchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks 1980 Live (München) Unitel (DVD) 14’57
Casadesus, Jean-Claude Orchestre Symphonique de la RTL 1983 Studio Forlane 15’50
Muti, Riccardo Philadelphia Orchestra 1983 Studio EMI 16’33
Ferencsik, János Hungarian State Orchestra 1983 (?) Studio Hungaroton 16’48
Joó, Arpad Budapest Symphony Orchestra 1984-85 Studio Hungaroton 15’50
Karajan, Herbert von Berliner Philharmoniker 1984 Studio DG 16’48
Conlon, James Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra 1985 Studio Erato 16’55
Kunzel, Erich Cincinnati Pops 1985 Studio Telarc 15’55
Németh, Gyula Hungarian State Orchestra 1990 (?) Studio Hungaroton 16’15
Fischer, Iván Budapest Festival Orchestra 1991 Studio Harmonia Mundi 15’03
Halász, Michael Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra 1991 Studio Naxos 16’55
Solti, Sir Georg Chicago Symphony Orchestra 1992 Live (Salzburg) Decca 15’03
Plasson, Michel Dresden Philharmonie 1992 Studio Berlin Classics 16’27
Järvi, Neeme Orchestre de la Suisse Romande 1994 Studio Chandos 15’03
Mehta, Zubin Berliner Philharmoniker 1994 Studio Sony 16’07
Sinopoli, Giuseppe Wiener Philharmoniker 1996 Studio DG 16’13
Saccani, Rico Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra 1985-2005 ? Live BPO Live 15’35
Barenboim, Daniel Berliner Philharmoniker 1998 Live (Berlin) TDK/EuroArts (DVD) 15’55
Frühbeck de Burgos, Rafael Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin 1999 Studio BIS 16’00
Oue, Eiji Minnesota Orchestra 1999 Studio RR 17’00
Sawallisch, Wolfgang Philadelphia Orchestra 1999 Studio Water Lily 16’30
Immerseel, Jos van Anima Eterna 2003 Studio ZigZag 15’03
Noseda, Gianandrea BBC Philharmonic 2004 Studio Chandos 16’00
Pletnev, Mikhail Russian National Orchestra 2005 Live (Moscow) RNO tv, video 14’10
Barenboim, Daniel West Eastern Divan Orchestra 2009 Live (London) Decca 15’43
Kocsis, Zoltán Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra 2011 Live (Budapest) Warner 14’17
Gergiev, Valery Wiener Philharmoniker 2011 Live (Schönbrunn) DG (CD & DVD) 15’03
Haselböck, Martin Orchester Wiener Akademie 2011 Live (Raiding) NCA/Gramola 15’35
Thielemann, Christian Project Orchestra Franz Liszt 2011 Live (Weimar) Unitel (DVD) 15’50
Märkl, Jun Leipzig MDR Symphony Orchestra 2011 Studio MDR 15’30
Botstein, Leon American Symphony Orchestra 2011 Live ASO 15’38
Thielemann, Christian Staatskapelle Dresden 2016 Live (Dresden) Unitel (DVD) 15’35

(*) Recording year, not release year.
(**) Label may vary with the reissues. Not all recordings are currently available.
(***) Duration given without blank or applause. For some older recordings, the pitch and the duration may vary depending on the equipment used for the transfer.

Recordings up to 1956 are in mono, with a sound varying considerably from "historical" in some to "fair" in others. Recordings from 1957 onwards are in stereo, some with excellent definition from the end of the 1950s[91].


Conceptions and tempi vary considerably from one version to another, and sometimes for the same conductor in different years. Moreover, the various Breitkopf editions of the score contain a few differences, the 1908 edition including effects which tend to weigh the performance down ("molto ritenuto", "pesante", "tempo di marcia", "più maestoso"…), and of which it is difficult to know whether they come from Liszt's hand or if they were added by the editor : these effects are absent from the 1885 edition, as well as from Liszt's own transcription for 2 pianos, which suggest a more straightforward playing.

The most lively and fiery versions are generally found in the older recordings, when it was not uncommon to perform Les préludes in 14' to 14'30, sometimes less. For example, Erich Kleiber's 1936 version, « energetic and driving »,[92] offering « an absolutely exceptional incandescence, enthusiasm, grandeur without rhetoric and communicativeness »,[93] while being one of the most faithful to the score (1885 edition) in the entire discography. Or Monteux in concert in 1950: an amazingly luminous performance despite minor orchestral flaws, freer and more fluid than in studio in 1952,[94] without any added effects and without a trace of bombast.[95] (For the "Mengelberg case", see below)

In modern sound, Kocsis, with the Hungarian Philharmonic in 2011, is apparently the only conductor among those whose recordings are easily available to dare such a burning and direct approach: « The symphonic discs of this Liszt year are clearly dominated by this feverish concert from the Palace of Arts in Budapest. The excellent pianist Kocsis has become an equally excellent conductor who seems to be fueled by passion. »[96] (Not to be confused with a 2014 filmed version with a different orchestra, circulating here and there, less accomplished and dry sounding).

At the opposite extreme, some conductors broaden tempi far from Liszt's indications to bring out a shimmering of orchestral colours, like Karajan, notably in his 1967 version, which strongly divides the critics: « Both showmanship and refinement characterize Karajan's exciting, gorgeously executed Les Preludes »[97] / « Karajan drags the music so painfully at times [...] that the excitement of the music is lost »[98]/ « A slow and fabulously traced interpretation, overturned in spectacularity and sonorous beauty, and which therefore falls into grandiloquence and insincerity »[93] / « Through the spell of nuance, Karajan wraps the piece in a dreamy gauze, giving the epic the distant feel of legend ».[99] Karajan's 1958 version is generally considered as more balanced and accurate, but rather cool, and the 1984 version still impressive, but less dreamlike.[93][99] Other majestic and contemplative versions include, for example, Conlon's reading, which also divides opinions, between boredom and admiration for its « elegance, the « fleshy and balanced sound », the « fusion of timbres »,[99] or Oue's, « a finely sustained, noble performance in which the demonstration-quality sonics permit fullness of tone without a trace of bombast ».[100]

Some versions are regularly reported for their emotional strength, like Furtwängler’s, which still has strong supporters, praising its sense of narrative, its « effusiveness » that avoids grandiloquence, the « singing quality » and the « humanistic sense of the phrasing », « the solidity as well of the naturalness of the construction », despite a brass section that sometimes « falls short », and making one regret not having a live recording.[99][93] Or Mitropoulous' highly effusive but more dark and tragic vision, broad but « incredilbly intense », « spectacular », « occasionally unkempt », but always « a source of excitement ».[99][101] Or, in a more luminous style and sound, Fricsay's version, one of the most frequently recommended: a « stunningly intense » reading,[102] which captivates by accentuating the contrasts rather than the continuity between episodes,[99] with outstanding « effusive, carnal and thrilling phrasings »[93] and a broad gesture that « never compromise the long melodic line »[91] in the lyrical sections, while proving « spectacularly virile » and fiery in the final section.[99]

Some conductors do not hesitate to multiply effects and to take significant liberties with the rhythm, like Mengelberg in 1929 with the Concertgebouw orchestra, an « impassioned performance » marked by a « flamboyant style », in which some commentators imagine an echo of the freedom of interpretation that could exist in Liszt's time. « Besides huge tempo fluctuations, portamenti, and degrees of orchestral slides and rubato, a terrific tension permeates every bar ». Solo instruments « convey a sweet elasticity » in dreamy pages, « the momentum and intensity increase without ruffling the [clarity] of lines », and the climaxes prove to be « absolutely thrilling ».[93][99][103][104] (Not to be confused with a version from 1922, with modified instrumentation and an even more rudimentary sound recording). In an equally idiosyncratic but much rougher style, Golovanov conducts in 1953 a white-hot orchestra in a theatrical epic, with a love scene of exacerbated lyricism, and a cataclysmic storm with additional instrumentation. A performance whose « intemperate emotionalism », sonic harshness, and rushed allegretto may however strongly divide opinions.[105][106]

Without going to such extremes, some conductors fully embrace the work's demonstrative nature. Van Otterloo takes up some of Mengelberg's rubati and tempo changes in a contrasting and tense reading, without the same charm or singing qualities in the lyrical pages, but highly spectacular and sharp in the virtuoso pages. Celibidache in his early years offers a « staggering » vision,[107] with pages already marked by its legendary slowness and creating hypnotic soundscapes, and others by turns intensely lyrical, wild, martial and epic, making each line sing, and « staging a real drama ».[108][109][107] Silvestri's « free and rhapsodic » reading,[110] sometimes inventive and refined, at the risk of sounding artificial, sometimes fiery, literally supercharged in the battle section,[93] is particularly ear-catching[110] despite some occasional rough woodwinds playing : a version that « stands with the most imaginative and evocative versions available ».[111] Bernstein has « thrilling » and « brilliant » moments,[112] but also pages that one might have expected to be more persuasive compared to his burning performance of the Faust Symphony from the same period, including a surprisingly dragging andante maestoso. In contrast Fiedler is often cited for his fanfares, which have seldom had « such bite and majesty »,[113] but does not seem as inspired in the lyrical pages. Solti’s 1991 concert, much more lively and coherent than his 1977 studio version, and more flexible and expressive than the 1980 filmed concert, has been particularly appreciated: « There is a special excitement and sense of occasion in this live performance that enhances his very dynamic style and goes well with [this work] »[114] / « The elderly director takes the thorn out of his former studio performance » [and, despite some overdone effects] « the execution is of such a high standard, and the brilliance, color, and plasticity of the baton are so prescient that the maestro and his incredible orchestra ultimately triumph. »[93] Pletnev's sharp, uncompromisingly conducting delivers one of the most terrific storms and battles ever recorded, as well as an exceptionally vigorous and biting andante maestoso, and gives the work a perfect unity, but the hasty allegretto that seems to be inherited from Golovanov may again divide opinion. Gergiev also offers a « rip-roaring reading » in an « especially electric » concert in 2011,[115][116] sometimes lacking the refinement one might have expected from the Vienna Philharmonic (this is an open-air recording), but bursting with energy throughout the second half of the work.

Other versions stand out rather for their sense of balance, without seeking effects, such as Weingartner's, a reading of absolute fidelity while never allowing the music to sound hackneyed, which « maintains excitement without “Lisztian” hysteria and gives full due to the lyric sections », supported by a London Symphony in top form.[117][118] Or Monteux's 1952 studio version, « sharp and luminous, letting the inherent drama shine within a context of lyricism », with better horns and richer strings, but less spontaneity than the 1950 concert (where basses and timpani were also better recorded).[119] Boult offers an « incredibly convincing presentation » of the work,[120] a reading remarkable for its unity, without excess of sentimentality but rich in colour, and where the slightly too Elgarian andante maestoso is counterbalanced by a surprising ardour in the storm and battle sections. Masur's « no-nonsense » version and Haitink's particularly faithful reading, divided the critics, the line being thin between rigour and stiffness or coolness,[121][112][122][99] although Haitink's improves significantly in the second half of the work.[93] More recently, Ivan Fischer's clear, fresh, sometimes chamber-like reading, avoiding any excessive sentimentality, has been particularly appreciated, as well as Neeme Järvi's equally lively and faithful, but more brilliant and « athletic » reading, whose climaxes are nevertheless « accomplished [...] with a seductive warmth ».[123]

Note that in the allegro marziale animato section, what might pass for virtuoso exuberance in some conductors is in fact a strict adherence to the challenge Liszt placed in his score, with a gradual acceleration from allegretto pastorale to allegro marziale animato and a suggested equivalence (1 beat of 6/8 = 1 beat of 2/2), logically leading to a tempo well above 100 alla breve, as played by Fried, Kleiber, Ludwig, Muti in 1983, and to a lesser extend André, Dixon, Silvestri, Fricsay, Benzi, Haitink, Solti, Fischer, Gergiev, and a few other. Some conductors opt for a different tempo equivalence (1 bar 6/8 = 1 beat 2/2), frantically accelerating the end of the 6/8 section, then moving on to a more majestic allegro marziale, an option advocated by Mengelberg, and taken up by van Otterloo, Mitropoulos, Karajan, Oue... Some choose an intermediate solution, gradually accelerating the allegretto in a joyful but not frenetic manner, then more or less widening the beginning of the allegro marziale, like Monteux, Furtwängler, Boult, Kocsis... As already mentioned, Golovanov and Pletnev play the allegretto as a quasi allegro from the start, displaying impressive orchestral playing but depriving the episode of its charm.

Many conductors remain more cautious here, or give priority to the "marziale" over the "animato", or prefer to temper Lisztian virtuosity in favour of more detailed architecture. Some begin the allegretto in a surprisingly slow tempo to maintain a margin of progression, like Paray in 1953, a « dry and uncompromising reading », giving the work the appearance of « a "relief" in the sculptural sense of the term ».[99]

Some even modify the score by ignoring almost all the indicated acceleration and tempo change between the allegretto and the allegro marziale animato, depriving the page of its sense of excitement, like Ančerl, in a version who seems to abandon any narrative aspect in favour of a study of timbre and architecture, « a probing [reading] focusing more on the work's purely musical values than on its implied rhetoric »,[124] especially appreciated for « the Czech musicians’ warm and round tones » and « the brass’ refusal to blow to the point of rasping ».[125] Or Dorati, in a reading with clear lines, precise accents, and a cheerfull, dancing allegretto which curiously segues into a slower allegro marziale : an elegant version that some may have nevertheless judged « animated without great conviction ».[126] This is also the option chosen by Neumann in studio in Leipzig, a version otherwise remarkable for its musicality and structural unity — but the conductor offers a much more lively, free and captivating reading in concert in Prague, at least in the first part of the work, while benefiting again from the suggestive colours of the Czech woodwinds. Or by Noseda, whose recording was however praised for his « clarity », « acuity » and absence of bombast.[127]

Some versions are especially noted for their orchestral qualities: for example, the brilliance (which some may have considered excessive)[99] of the Philadelphia Orchestra with Muti, a highly « controlled reading » that accentuates contrasts between subtle balances in finely chiselled episodes, and « furious tempi » in others.[128][129] Or the luxurious opulence of the Berlin Philharmonic with Mehta, who achieves a better control here than in his previous recording in Vienna, weighed down by overly Wagnerian trombones.[130][99][93] The Vienna Philharmonic, for its part, offers all the sumptuousness of its colours and the magic of its strings with Sinopoli, in a recording which however alternates between more or less successful moments.[131][93] Barenboim's recording with the Chicago Symphony has been highly regarded for its « orchestral perfection » and for its control and architectural achievement.[93] But the conductor offers perhaps more « effusiveness » and « lyrical emotionality » in his 1998 Berlin concert.[93] Or in his 2009 London Concert, where the less sumptuous but enthusiastic young orchestra[132] makes the music « sing and surge with freedom and freshness »,[133] and highlights the « lyrical allure » of the work [134] (in an overall conception that still favours control rather than ardor, at least compared to the more fiery versions).

Conversely, other versions may be worth a visit for the conductor's personality despite more or less obvious orchestral weaknesses, such as Scherchen's « ardent », « enthusiastic » and highly contrasted reading.[135][136]

Lastly, some conductors have proposed recordings on period instrument, favouring the transparency of the textures and highlighting the woodwinds, like van Immerseel, perhaps lacking a more generous string sound in the lyrical moments, more convincing in other pages.[99][93]

Note that there are apparently no versions by some conductors who have left notable recordings of other Liszt works, and who might have been expected in this one, such as Toscanini, Reiner, Martinon, Markevitch, Kubelik...



Version for 2 pianos (transcription by Liszt) :

  • Georgia Mangos & Louise Mangos, 1993, Studio, Cédille, 14’03
  • Budapest Piano Duet: Tamás Kereskedő & Zoltán Pozsgai, 1995, Studio, Hungaroton, 15’32
  • Tami Kanazawa & Yuval Admony, 2007, Studio, Naxos, 15’15
  • Martha Argerich & Daniel Rivera, 2010, Live (Lugano), Warner, 15’00
  • Marialena Fernandes, Ranko Markovic, 2011, Studio, Gramola, 15’58
  • Martha Argerich & Daniel Rivera, 2012, Live (Rosario, Argentina), 15’32
  • Leslie Howard & Mattia Ometto, 2016, Live (Padova), Brilliant classics, 14’39
  • Giuseppe Bruno & Vincenzo Maxia, 2019 (?), Studio, OnClassical, 16’50

References

Notes
  1. ^ Müller-Reuter (1909) p. 266.
  2. ^ a b Bonner (1986), pp. 98-106
  3. ^ Johns (1997), pp.145-147
  4. ^ In books that are not specifically devoted to Liszt: Walton: Basic Forms in Music, Alfred Music, 2005, p.192; Leikin: The Mystery of Chopin's Préludes, 2016, p.46. Or in the foreword of some editions of the score: Liszt: Les Préludes, orchestral score, Kalmus - Alfred Music, 1999 (There still does not seem to be a critical edition in 2022.)
  5. ^ Bonner (1986)
  6. ^ Johns (1997), p.145
  7. ^ Cormac (2017), pp.11 &70
  8. ^ Bonner (1986), pp. 98-103
  9. ^ Bertagnolli (2002)
  10. ^ Haraszti (1953), pp.117-122
  11. ^ Bonner (1986) pp.103-107
  12. ^ Johns (1997), p.54 & p.147
  13. ^ Moortele (2017), p.38-40
  14. ^ Moortele (2017), p.109
  15. ^ a b Moortele (2017), p.149
  16. ^ a b Searle (1970), p.281
  17. ^ a b c d Taruskin (2010), Chap. 8 Midcentury / The symphony later on
  18. ^ a b Haraszti (1953), p.121
  19. ^ a b c Taruskin (2010), Chap.8, example 8.1
  20. ^ Johns (1997), p.54
  21. ^ Bonner (1986) pp. 103-105
  22. ^ Bonner (1986) pp. 103-106
  23. ^ Haraszti (1953), pp.121-122
  24. ^ Bonner (1986) pp. 105-106
  25. ^ Haraszti (1953), p.122
  26. ^ Haraszti (1953) p.118
  27. ^ Johns (1997), p.147
  28. ^ Berlioz (1846)
  29. ^ Walker (1989) Book Three / Liszt the conductor / Paragraph III (eBook)
  30. ^ Johns (1997), p.26, p.33 & Table 4. p.36
  31. ^ Haraszti (1953) p.118-120
  32. ^ Taruskin (2010) Chap.8, Example 8.1
  33. ^ Haraszti (1953) p.122
  34. ^ a b Johns (1986), p. 89
  35. ^ Bonner (1986), p. 107
  36. ^ Abraham (2017)
  37. ^ a b Tranchefort (1986), p. 420
  38. ^ Johns (1986), p. 80
  39. ^ Johns (1997), p. 55
  40. ^ Cormac (2017), p. 273, note 77
  41. ^ Taruskin (2010), p. 423
  42. ^ Taruskin (2010), pp. 424, 427
  43. ^ Haraszti (1953) p.136
  44. ^ Walker (2009), Book Three / Liszt and the Orchestra / Paragraph I (eBook)
  45. ^ Walker (1987) Book Four / The Beethoven Monument Unveiled in Bonn, 1845. (eBook)
  46. ^ Walker (1989) Book Three/ Growing achievement / Note 58 (eBook)
  47. ^ Cormac (2017), p.142
  48. ^ Cormac (2017), p.12
  49. ^ Walker (1987) Book Four / Marie d’Agoult Becomes “Daniel Stern" / Paragraph IV (eBook)
  50. ^ « Ironically, Les Preludes owes more to the William Tell Overture than to Leonore no.3, and conductors who fail to understand this don't do well with the work. » Shoemaker, Paul: Franz Liszt - Symphonic Poems Complete, in MusicWeb International, 2002,     /classrev/2002/dec02/liszt_symphonicpoems.htm
  51. ^ Bonner (1986), p.107
  52. ^ Ramann (1896)
  53. ^ This English version is taken from vol. I, 2 of the complete edition of Liszt's musical works of the "Franz Liszt Stiftung".
  54. ^ Walker (1989) p. 307, n. 13.
  55. ^ Walker (1989) p. 297
  56. ^ Müller-Reuter (1909), p. 300.
  57. ^ Haraszti (1953), p. 128f.
  58. ^ Müller-Reuter(1909), p. 301.
  59. ^ La Mara (ed.), Letter no.180: to Eduard List, 24 March 1857
  60. ^ La Mara(ed), Letter No. 108: To Dr. Franz Brendel, January 28th 1854
  61. ^ Cormac (2017), p. 12
  62. ^ a b Walker (1989) Book Three / Liszt and the orchestra / Paragraph I (eBook)
  63. ^ Main (1979), p.141-143
  64. ^ Johns (1986), p.79
  65. ^ Johns (1997), p.55
  66. ^ Johns (1997) p. 147.
  67. ^ Haraszti (1953), p.124-130
  68. ^ Johns (1997), pp.145-148
  69. ^ Main (1979) p.141
  70. ^ De Louit, Paul: Liszt: Les Préludes - Histoire, interprétation, discographie comparée, in Diapason, no. 677, pp.40-44
  71. ^ Main (1979) p.133-148
  72. ^ Bonner (1986), p.107
  73. ^ Bonner (1986) p. 104
  74. ^ Johns (1997), p.148
  75. ^ Walker (1989), p. 363
  76. ^ Gibbs (2010), pp. 485-7.
  77. ^ Cited in Modolell (2014), p.13
  78. ^ Berry (2009)
  79. ^ Walker (1989), Book three / Liszt the Conductor / Paragraph I
  80. ^ Johns (1997), pp.54-55
  81. ^ Tranchefort (1986), p. 418
  82. ^ Howard (1996)
  83. ^ See Liszt's letter to Julius Schuberth of 9 March 1859, in Jung (ed.): Franz Liszt in seinen Briefen, p. 165.
  84. ^ La Mara (ed.): Liszts Briefe, Band 2, translated to English by Constance Bache, No. 20.
  85. ^ Liszt's letter to Brendel of 7 September 1863, as cited above.
  86. ^ Raabe: Liszts Schaffen, p. 299.
  87. ^ Sound Matters: Essays on the Acoustics of Modern German Culture. Alter, Nora, and Lutz Peter Koepnick, Editors. Berghahn Books, 2004. 69 & 71.
  88. ^ Zalampas, Sherree Owens (1990). Adolf Hitler: A Psychological Interpretation of His Views on Architecture, Art, and Music. ISBN 9780879724887.
  89. ^ Kinnard, Roy, and Tony Crnkovich, R.J. Vitone. The Flash Gordon Serials, 1936-1940: A Heavily Illustrated Guide. McFarland, 2015. 138.
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  92. ^ Woolf, Jonathan: In Memoriam Erich Kleiber, in MusicWeb International, 2006,  /classrev/2006/Oct06/Kleiber_TAH581.htm
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  94. ^ Gutmann, Peter: Pierre Monteux in San Francisco, in ClassicalNotes, 2017, /columns/monteux.html
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  96. ^ Huss, Christophe: Vitrine du disque - 28 octobre 2011, in Le Devoir,  /culture/musique/334634/vitrine-du-disque-28-octobre-2011
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  108. ^ Friedrich, Stéphane: Onze chefs pour le majestueux 40e anniversaire du label Orfeo, in ResMusica, 16 August 2020 /2020/08/16/onze-chefs-pour-le-majestueux-40e-anniversaire-du-label-orfeo/
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  127. ^ Morrison, Brice: Liszt symphonic poems, vol.1, in Gramophone, 2005, /review/liszt-symphonic-poems-vol-1
  128. ^ Leonard, James: Muti: 1812, Boléro, Les Préludes, CD review in Allmusic, /album/muti-1812-boléro-les-préludes-mw0001805750
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  • La Mara (ed.) Letters of Franz Liszt, Volume 1, “From Paris to Rome: Years of Travel as a Virtuoso, translated into English by Constance Bache.</ref>
  • Main, Alexander : Liszt après Lamartine: Les Préludes, Music & Letters, 60/2 (1979), pp. 133–148
  • Modollel, Jorge L.: The Critical Reception of Liszt's Symphonic and Choral Works in the United States, 1857-1890, Master's Thesis, University of Miami, 2014, accessed 2 January 2015.
  • Moortele, Steven Vande: The Romantic Overture and Musical Form from Rossini to Wagner. Cambridge University Press, 2017.
  • Müller-Reuter, Theodor: Lexikon der deutschen Konzertliteratur, 1. Band, Leipzig 1909.
  • Raabe, Peter: Liszts Schaffen, Cotta, Stuttgart, Berlin 1931.
  • Ramann, Lina: Franz Liszt als Künstler und Mensch, Band 2, Zweite Abteilung (1848-1886), Leipzig 1894.
  • Taruskin, Richard: Music in the nineteenth Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010 ISBN 9780195384833, pp. 411–442
  • Taruskin, Richard: Liszt and bad taste, Arti Musices 49(1):3-32, 2018
  • Tranchefort, François-René: Franz Liszt - Les Poèmes symphoniques in Guide de la musique symphonique, Fayard, 1986, p. 418-423
  • Searle, Humphrey, ed. Alan Walker: "The Orchestral Works", in Franz Liszt: The Man and His Music (New York: Taplinger Publishing Company, 1970).
  • Walker, Alan: Franz Liszt, The Virtuoso Years, revised edition, Cornell University Press 1987.
  • Walker, Alan: Franz Liszt, The Weimar Years (1848–1861), Cornell University Press 1989.


Orchestral Scores
  • Liszt: Les préludes, Breitkopf, 1885
  • Liszt: Les préludes, Breitkopf, 1908, edited by Franz Liszt-Stiftung
  • Liszt: Les préludes, Breitkopf, 1908, edited by Otto Taubmann, reprinted by Kalmus

(Each have slight different tempi or phrasing indications)

Poems
  • Autran, Joseph: La Terre, Les Aquilons, Les Flots, Les Astres, in Liszt: Choral Works for Male Voices, CD Hungaroton/HCD 31923.
  • Lamartine, Alphonse: Les Préludes, in Œuvres complètes de Lamartine (1860)/Tome 1/Les Préludes, Wikisource, last accessed 13 August 2022

External links

préludes, preludes, beginnings, third, franz, liszt, thirteen, symphonic, poems, music, composed, between, 1845, began, overture, liszt, choral, cycle, quatre, élémens, four, elements, then, revised, stand, alone, concert, overture, with, title, referring, poe. Les preludes Preludes or The Beginnings S 97 is the third of Franz Liszt s thirteen symphonic poems The music was composed between 1845 54 and began as an overture to Liszt s choral cycle Les quatre elemens The Four Elements then revised as a stand alone concert overture with a new title referring to a poem by Alphonse de Lamartine Its premiere was on 23 February 1854 conducted by Liszt himself The score was published in 1856 by Breitkopf amp Hartel 1 Les preludes is the earliest example of an orchestral work entitled Symphonic Poem German Symphonische Dichtung or French Poeme symphonique Franz Liszt after a painting of 1856 by Wilhelm von Kaulbach Contents 1 Genesis 2 Musical analysis 2 1 Form 2 2 Detailed Analysis 2 3 Unifying features 2 4 Possible influences 3 The programme 4 The first symphonic poem 5 Critical reception 6 Arrangements 7 Uses in Media 8 Year s end tradition at Interlochen 9 Recordings 10 References 11 External linksGenesis EditLes preludes is the final revision of an overture initially written for a choral cycle Les quatre elemens The Four Elements 1844 48 on 4 poems by the French author Joseph Autran La Terre The Earth Les Aquilons The north Winds Les Flots The Waves Les Astres The Stars The chorus Les Aquilons was composed and created in a version for male chorus with 2 pianos accompaniment in Marseille in 1844 and the first sketches of the Ouverture des quatre elemens date from 1845 during Liszt s tour through Spain and Portugal A manuscript of the overture from 1849 50 shows that the work had by then reached its almost definitive structure and thematic content 2 3 After being partially orchestrated the choral cycle project was abandoned The overture was revised in 1853 54 as a stand alone piece with a new title inspired by an ode by the French poet Alphonse de Lamartine Les preludes Both the title and the reference to Lamartine s poem as a suggestion for a programme were added only after the work was almost complete Contrary to an idea that is still sometimes widespread today 4 the work was neither written nor even revised after Lamartine there were no addition of new themes no addition or suppression or changes in the order of episodes not even changes of the tonal structure within the episodes between the last stage of the manuscript of the Ouverture des quatre elemens and the final revision of 1853 54 under the title Les preludes The evidence provided in 1986 by musicologist Andrew Bonner 5 has since been agreed by among others two musicologists who have devoted book length studies to Liszt s symphonic poems Keith T Johns 6 and Joanne Cormac 7 Les preludes is written for a large orchestra of strings woodwind brass including tuba and bass trombone harp and a variety of percussion instruments timpani side drum bass drum and cymbals To realize the orchestration Liszt was helped by two composers first by Joachim Raff for the manuscripts of 1849 50 then by Hans von Bronsart for the revision in 1853 54 and for minor corrections before publication by Breitkopf in 1856 8 Although the orchestration was four handed studies on the Raff Liszt collaboration on the Prometheus Overture contemporary with the progress of Les quatre elemens has revealed that Liszt drew up very detailed sketches rejected or modified almost all of Raff s proposals and sought in particular to achieve more transparent textures and more subtle variations in orchestral density 9 Musical analysis EditThis analysis is limited to a factual observation of the score and the links with the choruses Les quatre elemens from which all the themes of Les preludes are derived 10 11 12 For the possibilities of interpretation according to a programme added later linked to Lamartine or to the preface by Carolyne zu Sayn Wittgenstein see the next paragraph Form Edit The form of Les preludes corresponds to both A synopsis overture the most common form of overture in the Romantic period 13 That is a presentation of the main themes of the forthcoming work arranged in contrasting episodes so as to convey an overview of the drama or story The slow introduction as well as the brilliant finale marked by a triumphant return of earlier themes and sometimes described as an apotheosis are also among the standard component of romantic overtures 14 15 A cyclical form i e a construction where a single musical cell gives rise to all the themes and or where themes recur cyclically between the beginning and end of the work 16 The plan based on tempo indications and thematic material is as follows Section Bars Tempo indication Themes1 1 34 Andante Main theme from Les Astres The Stars 35 46 Andante maestoso2 47 68 L istesso tempo espressivo cantando Two themes associated with Lovefrom Les Astres and La Terre The Earth 69 108 L istesso tempo espressivo ma tranquillo 3 109 131 Allegro ma non troppo Motives associated with Sea storms from Les Aquilons The Winds and Les Flots The Waves 131 181 Allegro tempestuoso4 182 200 Un poco piu moderato Love themes transformed into Pastoral themes200 296 Allegretto pastorale Allegro moderato 296 343 Poco a poco piu di moto sino al 5 344 404 Allegro marziale animato Love themes transformed into Triumphal themes405 419 Andante maestoso Main theme from Les Astres Division into 5 mains sections as proposed by Taruskin 17 Other divisions have also been described see paragraph The first symphonic poem Detailed Analysis Edit 1 Andante Andante maestoso 1a Andante Introduction Example 1 First vocal theme from Les Astres and beginning of Les Preludes After 2 pizzicati the strings intone a phrase which is nothing other than the vocal theme sung by the Stars at the beginning of the chorus Les Astres 18 underlined by the celli and bassi then extended by an ascending arpeggio of violins and violas example 1 Hommes epars sur le globe qui roule Enveloppe la bas de nos rayons Scattered men on the rolling globe Wrapped up there in our rays This theme of the Stars is also headed by a three note cell which unify all the thematic material of Les preludes 19 as it already did in the original choruses cyclic form The theme is first presented as a sketch emerging from silence and returning to silence with Liszt creating a sense of rhythmic disorientation pizzicati and attacks are systematically shifted to weak beats and harmonic ambiguity the melody is in aeolian mode creating ambivalence between C major and A minor and resolved by woodwinds in A major 20 21 The ensemble is taken up a tone higher and then the music begins to gain forward momentum with a woodwind ostinato accompanying closer and closer repetitions of the theme in the strings in an ascending chromatic sequence creating increasing tension up to the dominant of C major while the trombones reaffirm the 3 note motive by increasing the intervals more and more insistently Note that some editions of the score display a molto ritenuto just before the andante maestoso while others do not Both version can be heard till today without it being possible to know what Liszt would have wanted 1b Andante Maestoso Les Astres Mm 35 46 Example 2 Three main elements of the Andante maestoso The return to a luminous C major finally resolves the harmonic tension accumulated earlier The music here comes entirely from the beginning of the chorus Les Astres The Stars where it introduced the peremptory song of the heavenly powers addressing humans 22 23 The harmonic scheme proceeding in descending thirds before returning to C major is strictly that of the instrumental introduction to the chorus I VI IV II bVII V I VI IV I VI IV I The chorale like writing in held notes in woodwinds trumpets and horns was the main melodic line in the instrumental introduction The waves of sharply articulated arpeggios in the violins and violas also appeared in a similar form in the introduction even in the piano part The aforementioned theme of the Stars is now declaimed in the trombones tuba bassoons and low strings with a new rhythmic pattern that will be reaffirmed by the timpani This theme which in the original chorus appeared only at the entrance of the voices is here superimposed and adapted to the musical elements of the introduction providing a melodic and rhythmic counterpoint to the other elements this addition date from the 1853 54 revision the 1850 manuscript still had the choral line as its main material 24 Note that the trombone and tuba parts are indicated simply f not ff like the rest of the orchestra which seems to mean that Liszt was keen on a balance between the 3 musical elements not an overwhelming predominance of the trombones 2 L istesso Tempo Love Example 3 First and second themes from Les Astres and first love theme in Les Preludes Continuing with the same pulse but with a tender and lyrical expression the new section includes musical material that was explicitly associated with poetic images of love in the 2 choruses Les Astres and La Terre The Earth 2a Mm 47 69The theme played by the celli is the exact quote of a theme from the 2d section of the Chorus Les Astres 25 associated with the notion of heavenly divine love Seul astre pur qui parfois illumine Comme un de nous vos tenebreux chemins Couples heureux pleins d extase divine Vous soupirez en vous tenant les mains Only pure star that sometimes illuminates Like one of us your dark paths Happy couples full of divine ecstasy You sigh holding hands This love theme is itself virtually a transposition from the 1st to a 3d degree of the initial theme of Les Astres and therefore also contains the original 3 note cell Example 3 The harmonic pattern is strictly identical transposed 1 2 ton higher to that of the corresponding passage in Les Astres including a tonic pedal here in double bass pizzicati see Example 3 The 1st violins accompany softly this theme with a sixteenth note formula which derives directly from the last descending arpeggios in the previous Andante maestoso the principle of thematic transformation thus extends to the secondary voices and reinforces the continuity already specified by l istesso tempo Finally the 3 note motive appears in syncopated rhythm on the double basses which energizes the phrase and avoids any effect of languidness provided the section is played andante and not adagio The theme is then resumed in a subtle combination of solo horn and 2d violins this time in E major and continues with a section in minor mm 63 ff which also comes entirely from the same chorus Example 4 Love Spring theme from La Terre and second love theme in Les Preludes barcarolle 2b Mm 69 108The new theme in E major carried by a combination of 4 horns and violas espressivo ma tranquillo derives from a four part theme sung by the Trees in the chorus La Terre 26 this time associated with the notion of love linked with spring 27 or earthly love Des ivresses unanimes voici les moments heureux De nos pieds jusqu a nos cimes S elancent en nœuds intimes Tous les etres amoureux Of unanimous voluptuousness here are the happy moments From our feet to our peaks All beings in love are thrown into intimate knots Although no longer resembling to the themes seen previously this 2d love theme also turns out to be a variation on the 3 notes cell as shown by Taruskin Example 4 19 In addition this theme punctuated by harp chords displays the typical sway of a barcarolle which also seems to originate from Les quatre elemens an example barcarolle appeared in the chorus Les Flots to accompany the following lines Puis la mer promene en silence La barque frele qui balance Un couple d enfants amoureux Then the sea silently carries The frail boat that rocks A couple of children in love Courbet Portrait of Hector Berlioz 1850 This 2d love theme is then resumed in a dialogue between winds and strings mm 79ff and gives rise to passionate impulses some editions indicate poco a poco accelerando alternating fiery outbursts from the violins in the high register sudden suspensions sensual woodwinds sighs in direct lineage with the Reveries passions of the Symphonie fantastique or the Scene d amour of Romeo and Juliette a work of which Liszt had been an enthusiastic admirer since 1846 28 and which he was to conduct highlights several times in Weimar in 1853 29 shortly before the last revision of Les preludes And if certain 9th chords supported by prominent horns seem reminiscent of Tristan und Isolde mm 89 and 93 this is rather a foreshadowing Wagner did not complete his opera until 1859 The return to calm after this obviously suggestive page is accompanied by a reprise of the first love theme before woodwind 7th chords set up a new harmonic tension punctuated by the harp s harmonics creating an atmosphere of questioning expectation 3 Allegro ma non troppo Allegro tempestoso Storm A characteristic example of the legacy of Sturm und Drang in Liszt s work 30 this short but intense episode brings together musical material associated with the evocation of sea storms and shipwrecks in the two choruses Les Aquilons The North Winds and Les Flots The Waves in the service of a highly figurative orchestral writing Example 5 Premise of the storm 3a Allegro ma non troppoMm 109 130 An ominous chromatic motif again derived from the 3 note cell evokes the first tremors of wind or waves which quickly intensify and accelerate carried by swirling string tremolos on diminished seventh chord cancelling out any harmonic marker 3b Allegro tempestuoso Example 6 First vocal line Les Aquilons and storm music in Les Preludes Mm 131 160The storm breaks on a thematic material based on The 3 note cell repeated and hammered A raging eighth note line in the strings each beat of which is violently accentuated by the brass and which in fact derives from the first vocal lines of the chorus Les Aquilons The North Winds Example 6 The strings take up exactly the same rhythmic pattern as the voices on a different melodic line at the beginning but identical at the end The brass takes up virtually the melodic scheme of the voices The figure is repeated twice creating the same harmonic progression by ascending semi tones in Les Flots and in Les preludes Peuple orageux qui des antres sauvages Sort en fureur De toutes parts nous semons les ravages Et la terreur Des vastes mers qui separent le monde Troublant les eaux Sur les ecueils nous dechirons les ondes Et les vaisseaux Stormy people who from the wilderness Come out in fury On all sides we spread devastation And terror From the vast seas that separate the world Disturbing the waters On the reefs we tear the waves And the ships Liszt uses here all classical elements of storm music figuralism and perhaps creates new ones Thunderous rolling of the timpani Shrill cries from the woodwinds in the high register Alternance of 4 beat build and 6 beat build phrases that create rhythmic instability in the 4 4 signature and seem to overflow mm 131 138 Orchestral waves that begin piano rise rapidly hang for a moment then crash with all their might ff with timpani mm 141 147 A harmonic struggle between an attempt to escape from the initial A minor to a B major G minor pole 140 141 then 145 146 and the return in A minor violently reassessed with half cadences Distorsions of the 3 note motive that appears inverted at mm 140 141 while the acceleration of the tempo leads to a frantic panic indication molto agitato ed accelerando Orchestral assaults at mm 149 154 which can be played molto pesante as indicated in some editions or a tempo then taking the form of an evil laugh perhaps the joy of the Elements that revel in the terror of the sailors as in the chorus Les Flots see the corresponding verses just below Lastly an immense chromatic descent of woodwinds and high strings progressively submerged by an ascending arpeggio of brass and low strings in which one might be tempted to see the sinking ship evoked by Autran in Les Flots m 155 Example 7 Trumpet motif in Les Flots and in Les Preludes Judgement trumpets Mm 160 181 The key stabilizes into A minor reaffirmed in a Beethovenian way by the timpani E E E A with music derived directly from the introduction of the chorus Les Flots A trumpet motif in repeated notes which was already present in the piano part Example 7 for which Liszt had very early noted a sketch of orchestration on additional staves and which was also present in a close form in the vocal parts 31 Nous aimons voir briller dans l ombre l eclair aux ardents javelots Nous aimons le vaisseau qui sombre en jetant a la greve sombre le dernier cri des matelots We like to see the lightning shining in the shadows with its fiery javelins we like the sinking ship throwing to the dark shore the last cry of the sailors Arpeggiated motives played by the strings which were also present in a close form in the piano introduction of the chorus The 3 note cell absent for once from the main motif is now present in the strings formulas 32 The significance of the trumpet motif an allusion to the Last Judgement awaiting the sailors is clear from the text of the chorus whose thematic material was set out just before Les Aquilons Avec fracas promenons les tempetes Au firmament Nous mugissons ainsi que les trompettes Du jugement With noise let s walk the storms In the firmament We roar like the trumpets Of judgment Even if it is anecdotal it may be noted that the music of Les quatre elemens was largely composed during Liszt s stays in port cities Marseille Valencia Malaga Lisbon 2 places where stories of shipwrecks were very real 4 Un poco piu moderato Allegretto pastorale Pastoral picture The succession of a storm description and a peaceful pastoral scene is an already proven musical effect see Beethoven s 6th Symphony Rossini s Overture of Guillaume Tell Moreover such a juxtaposition also appears in the text of the chorus Les Aquilons even if the music associated with country nature is here different from that in Les preludes Avec fracas promenons les tempetes Au firmament Nous mugissons ainsi que les trompettes Du jugement Brises du soir vents de l aube naissante Faibles et doux Vous effleurez de vos ailes benies Les fleurs des champs With a roar let s drive the storms Into the firmament We howl like the trumpets Of judgment Evening breezes winds of the dawning dawn Weak and gentle You touch with your blessed wings The flowers of the fields Example 8 Return of the 1st love theme after the storm 4a Un poco piu moderatoMm 182 200 The calm returns with a reprise of the first love theme which was also the last theme heard just before the storm revealing a cyclical construction in which the storm was the central point First freely intoned by the oboe classically associated with pastoral evocations the theme is then adorned with the soft light of a combination of divisi violins and harp Note that Liszt insists on a progressive slowing of the pulse poco rallentando un poco piu moderato thus seeking to preserve a certain rhythmic continuity despite the change in character Example 9 Pastoral theme obtained from a variation on the 2nd love theme 4b Allegretto pastorale Allegro moderato Mm 201 260 A new fresh and graceful theme gives rise to playful exchanges between the various wind soloists and the strings on the 6 8 rhythm traditionally associated with peasant dances and pastoral scenes while the new tonal centre stabilises in A major This pastoral theme is in fact a reprise of a decorative line heard in the Love section which itself derives from the 2nd love theme Example 9 4c Poco a poco piu di moto sino al Allegro marzialeFrom measure 260 the first love theme and the Pastoral theme are now combined accelerated very gradually creating an increasing momentum with the return to the key of C major and supported by an orchestration with increasingly military overtones tuba and timpani mes 316 No parallel can be established between any verse of the poems of Autran nor any part of Lamartine s ode and this joyful and exuberant progression whose raison d etre seems especially musical in order to make a transition to the finale 5 Allegro marziale animato Andante maestoso Triumphal finale 5a Allegro marziale animatoThis highly virtuosic page indicated alla breve continues the principle of thematic transformation Example 10 First love theme transformed into a triumphal fanfare Mm 344 355 The first love theme is transformed into a triumphant fanfare in C major for trumpets and horns 33 Example 10 accompanied by strings scale runs while the bass trombones and tuba respond with the beginning of the theme of the Stars Note that the idea of a reprise of the love theme in a glorious statement in C major already existed in the chorus Les Astres in the instrumental part before the last stanza Example 11 Battle music Mm 356 369 The writing superimposes vivid dotted rhythms in the winds feverish tremolos in the strings suddenly accentuated scale runs accompanied by a trumpet signal with the appearance of a cavalry bugle processes traditionally associated with ideas of battle but in major keys that maintain an enthusiastic and jubilant expression 34 The 3 note cell is this time played as a trilled motif by the alti and cello Example 11 Example 12 Second Love theme transformed into a march Mm 370 385 The 2nd love theme the former barcarolle is transformed into a triumphal march Example 12 accompanied by military percussion or a cavalcade depending on the tempo adopted some editions have a tempo di marcia indication which may encourage a momentary 4 4 decomposition and broadening of the tempo others do not suggesting that the tempo alla breve be retained The modulations one upmanship by ascending thirds C major E major Gb major F major B major create a growing sense of exaltation and the reprise of the previous fanfare in F major marked piu maestoso in some editions but not in all introduces a maximum tension in relation to the basic C major tritone relation which may have been associated with an idea of challenge 34 Mm 386 404 Repetition of the same procedures on a harmonic path preparing the return to C major There is no description of a battle or victory in Autran s poems that could have motivated such a demonstrative page With the exception of a brief evocation of the navy in the chorus Les Flots which Liszt accompanied with a marching rhythm but which lasts only a few seconds C est nous qui portons sur cimes les messagers des Nations Vaisseaux de bronze aux flancs sublimes We carry on the crest the messengers of the Nations Bronze vessels with sublime sides And as said before no new episode was added between the 1850 Ouverture des Quatre elemens and the final version making the idea of a battle episode inspired by Lamartine impossible 35 On the other hand the use of triumphant music with military accents as a finale is far from exceptional in opera overtures and concert overtures of this period see examples below 5b Andante maestoso Recapitulation After more or less pronounced ritardendo the indication varies from poco to molto ritardendo depending on the editions of the score the andante maestoso is entirely re exposed as the conclusion of a cyclic construction with reinforced dynamics and additional percussion snare drum bass drum and cymbals and followed by a brief coda ending in a plagal cadence Unifying features Edit Despite the sequence of highly contrasting episodes the work is unified by several musical processes First the cyclic form After Berlioz and the idee fixe motif in the Symphonie Fantatstique Liszt gives here another example of continuous thematic transformation as it has been described above all themes derive from each other or are interconnected by a same founding cell even in certain accompanying formulas 19 16 It has often been observed that the beginning of the Symphonie en re mineur by Cesar Franck 1888 a famous example of a cyclical work uses a three note cell very similar to the founding cell of Les Preludes 36 37 Next the harmonic structure The third relation which characterises the founding cell C b E also governs the harmonic scheme of the work on several scales Third relations on the scale of the whole work 38 39 Section 1 Unstable then C major Section 2 Key centre C major then E major a third above Section 3 Unstable then a minor a third below Section 4 Unstable then A major then C major Section 5 C majorThird relations within sections Introduction the initial phrase begins in C major and ends in A major Andante maestoso the music is built on a descending third sequence the same as the introduction of the chorus Les astres I C major VI a minor IV F major II d minor bVII Bb major V G major I Section 2a the section begins in C major then rises to E major mes 54 goes down for a brief page in key c minor mes 63 before returning to E major Section 2b at the end of the section the woodwinds create a tension between the main E major and alternately C major mes 91 92 and G major mes 95 96 Section 4a all the section from m 181 to m 200 is built on a descending thirds sequence Bb major G major E major C major A major Section 4c in the middle of a sequence in C major Liszt introduces a local climax in Ab major flat VI degree with the only fff in the entire score before returning to C mm 332 344 Sequence 5a the first fanfare begins in C major and ends in E major mm 344 355 Sequence 5a the march and the fanfare follow each other on ascending minor thirds A major Eb major Gb major F major Bb major m 370 385 It has been noticed that the tonic mediant relationship which is often favoured in Liszt s work rather than the tonic dominant relationship can be found in particular in other of his scores beginning in C like Orpheus Tasso or the first movement of the Faust Symphony 40 Finally a rhythmic continuity The first half of the work from the introduction to the end of the Love section is unified with one overall andante tempo Liszt indicates l istesso tempo several times with only variations in expression and a few agogic indications In the second half The allegro ma non troppo is gradually accelerated and continues with the allegro tempestuoso with an equivalence alla breve 12 8 At the end of the storm the allegro tempestuoso is gradually slowed down but not to much to a pastoral allegretto that is also indicated allegro moderato At the end of the pastoral episode the allegretto is gradually accelerated and continues with the allegro marziale animato through an equivalence 6 8 alla breve that mirrors the equivalence at the beginning of the storm before the return of the concluding andante maestoso All theses changes should be seamless The work is thus supposed to be animated by a continuous forward movement there is not a single adagio or largo in the entire score and just a brief suspension before the storm Respect for tempi notably an andante that does not turn into an adagio and an allegretto that should retain a dance like character and for equivalences the transition from the allegretto pastorale to the allegro marziale animato poses real challenge to the performers as attested to by the very different options of the conductors is probably one of the keys to preserving the work s cohesion Possible influences Edit Richard Taruskin pointed out that the sections of Les preludes correspond to the movements of a conventional symphony if not in the most conventional order 41 He adds that the music whilst heavily indebted in concept to Berlioz self consciously advertises its descent from Beethoven even as it flaunts its freedom from the formal constraints to which Beethoven had submitted The standard there and back construction that had controlled musical discourse since at least the time of the old dance suite continues to impress its general shape on the sequence of programmatically derived events 42 Even if other authors underline the distance that Liszt takes towards certain Beethovenian characteristics the thematic duality the sonata form 43 links can be made with Beethoven s 5th Symphony another example of cyclic form ending with an iconic triumphal finale in C major and with Beethoven s 6th Symphony where a musical storm is followed by a pastoral scene Liszt even occasionally requested that Les Preludes be played in concert preceded with Beethoven s 6th 44 Apart from the Beethovenian model many Romantic Overtures that predate Les preludes have characteristics found in Liszt s score An introduction where the music gradually emerges from the silence Weber Der Freischutz 1821 transcribed by Liszt in 1846 S 574 Oberon 1826 transcribed by Liszt in 1843 S 574 Spohr Jessonda 1822 Macbeth 1825 Liszt frequented Spohr in the 1845s 45 Schubert Fierrabras 1823 Liszt would later conduct Schubert s Alfonso und Estrella in Weimar 46 Rossini Guillaume Tell 1829 transcribed by Liszt in 1838 S 552 Marschner Hans Heiling 1929 Liszt knew Marschner personally and the work was popular at the time 47 Wagner Faust ouverture 1840 a work that also incorporates thematic transformations Liszt would later conduct the work in Weimar in 1952 48 Wagner Rienzi 1842 known by Liszt since a performance in 1844 in Dresde 49 The sequence of a storm and a bucolic scene Rossini Guillaume Tell 1829 A finale with military overtones featuring brass fanfare and percussion Spontini Fernand Cortez 1809 Olimpie 1819 Liszt wrote a Paraphrase on themes from the opera 1824 S 150 Weber Jubel Ouverture 1818 transcribed by Liszt in 1846 S 575 Marschner Prinz Friedrich von Homburg 1821 Auber La muette de Portici 1828 Liszt wrote a Paraphrase on themes from the opera 1846 S 386 Fra diavolo 1830 Rossini Guillaume Tell 1829 Berlioz Les Francs Juges 1828 transcribed by Liszt in 1833 S 471 Berlioz Benvenuto Cellini 1838 Ouverture d un Carnaval Romain 1844 transcribed by Liszt in the 1840s S 741 Mendelssohn Ruy Blas 1839 Wagner Rienzi 1842 A final apotheosis in which a theme from the beginning of the overture is taken over a reinforced orchestration The procedure is common in the Romantic Overture 15 but there are some particularly striking examples in the use of trombones and tuba which shortly precede the writing of Les Preludes Der fliegende Hollander 1843Tannhauser 1845 transcribed by Liszt in 1948 S 442 precisely at the time when he was working on the Ouverture des Quatre elemens Benvenuto Cellini 1938 Ouverture d un Carnaval Romain 1844 transcribed by Liszt in 1844 49 S 741 lost Finally the work that represents the most similarity in structure to the Preludes is an overture that Liszt transcribed in 1838 Rossini s Guillaume Tell Overture 50 The musical vocabulary of course different but with the exception of the 2 occurrences of the andante maestoso the structure is virtually identical Introduction Andante motif in ascending arpeggio interspersed with rests repeated a 2d time starting a tone above Lyrical episode Storm Bucolic calm Military finale with cavalry charge and triumphal end The programme EditThe full title of the piece Les preludes d apres Lamartine refers to an Ode from the Alphonse de Lamartine s Nouvelles meditations poetiques of 1823 The final version thus no longer contains any reference to Autran or to the Chorus cycle Les quatre elemens Moreover it seems that Liszt took steps to obscure the origin of the piece and that this included the destruction of the original overture s title page and the re ascription of the piece to Lamartine s poem Lamartine s ode does indeed contain several similarities with some sections in Autran s poems an amorous elegy a sea storm a bucolic scene which as long as one sticks to archetypal images without being too careful about the detail and order of the sequences can serve as a vague programme Several hypothesis have been put forward for this re ascription with no certainty reject by Liszt of a poetry which it would have finally judged too weak with the profit of a more famous author influence of Liszt s companion Princess Carolyne zu Sayn Wittgenstein and her taste for Lamartine Liszt having then complied more or less willingly need to integrate Les preludes into the collection of Poemes Symphoniques which are all accompanied by a literary support copyright problems linked to the fact that Autran s poems were not yet all published 51 18 52 The 1856 published score includes a text preface which however is not from Lamartine What else is our life but a series of preludes to that unknown Hymn the first and solemn note of which is intoned by Death Love is the glowing dawn of all existence but what is the fate where the first delights of happiness are not interrupted by some storm the mortal blast of which dissipates its fine illusions the fatal lightning of which consumes its altar and where is the cruelly wounded soul which on issuing from one of these tempests does not endeavour to rest his recollection in the calm serenity of life in the fields Nevertheless man hardly gives himself up for long to the enjoyment of the beneficent stillness which at first he has shared in Nature s bosom and when the trumpet sounds the alarm he hastens to the dangerous post whatever the war may be which calls him to its ranks in order at last to recover in the combat full consciousness of himself and entire possession of his energy 53 The earliest version of this preface was written in March 1854 by Carolyne zu Sayn Wittgenstein 54 This version comprises voluminous reflections of the Princess into which some lines of quotations from the ode by Lamartine are incorporated 55 It was drastically shortened for publication in April 1856 as part of the score there only the sentence the trumpet sounds the alarm and the title Les preludes survive from Lamartine s poem A different version of the preface was written for the occasion of a performance of Les preludes on 6 December 1855 in Berlin In the 1855 version the connection with Lamartine is reduced to his alleged query What else is our life but a series of preludes to that unknown Hymn the first and solemn note of which is intoned by Death 56 However this sentence was actually written not by Lamartine but by Princess Wittgenstein For the occasion of a performance of Les preludes on 30 April 1860 in Prague a further version of the preface was made This version was probably written by Hans von Bulow who directed the performance 57 It is rather short and contains no reference to Lamartine at all According to this version Les preludes illustrates the development of a man from his early youth to maturity 58 In this interpretation Les preludes may be taken as part of a sketched musical autobiography Nevertheless no specific statement by Liszt himself has been found in favour of a particular programme In a letter to his uncle Eduard List dated 26 March 1857 he refers to his preludes as my preludes which by the way are only the prelude to my path of composition which seems to mean nothing more than the beginning of his interest in cyclical form and new orchestration techniques the rest of the letter contains indeed only technical considerations on the principle of thematic transformation in his 1st piano concerto and a plea for percussion instruments despite the reproaches of many other musicians 59 The first symphonic poem EditWith the first performance of the work a new genre was introduced Les preludes is the earliest example for an orchestral work that was performed as symphonic poem In a letter to Franz Brendel of 20 February 1854 Liszt simply called it a new orchestral work of mine Les preludes 60 Two days later in the announcement in the Weimarische Zeitung of 22 February 1854 of the concert on 23 February it was called Symphonische Dichtung 61 The term symphonic poem was thus invented And with it the question of the extent to which recourse to a programme or to extra musical ideas is necessary or not in order to appreciate the work a question that remains relevant today 62 Many commentators have proposed a division of the work based on the ode by Lamartine or on the preface by Carolyne zu Sayn Wittgenstein or on the more general philosophical ideas associated with it Here are 4 examples Section Main 1979 63 Johns 1986 64 Johns 1997 65 Taruskin 2010 17 1a 1 34 The poet s invocation to the Muse 1 Lack Birth Dawn of existence 1 The Question1b 35 46 The poet s exclamatory welcome to the muse 2 Awakening of consciousness Consciousness2 47 108 Love 3 Love and innocence Innocent love 2 Love3 49 181 Destiny 4 Storms of life Hardship struggle 3 Storm4 182 343 Countryside 5 Consolation of nature Consolation 4 Bucolic calm5a 344 404 Warfare 6 Self realization Discovery of action Transcendance 5 Battle and Victory including the recapitulation of The Question 5b 405 419 The poet s farewell saluteThe love storm and pastoral sections reach a consensus and do not raise any concerns about interpretation as they are based on musical themes that were explicitly associated with poetic images of love storm and countryside in the choruses Les quatre elemens More as these are archetypal topi of Romanticism and as Liszt involved himself with the archetypal rather than with the purely narrative 66 the association with a text by Lamartine that deals with same archetypes as a programme can work as well as any literary or pictorial work from the same period on the same subjects Love Elegy under the Stars Friedrich Mann und Frau in Betrachtung des Mondes 1835 Storm and shipwrecking Turner The Shipwreck 1805 Calm of nature Durand Forenoon 1847 In contrast the diversity of proposals for the introduction and the first andante maestoso shows that there is no consensus on any interpretation According to Haraszti the famous question about Life and Death What is our life but a series of preludes should be considered only as a personal reflection of the Countess Carolyne zu Sayn Wittgenstein which Liszt would not have wished to contradict for the sake of their relationship 67 Conversely Taruskin maintains the reference to this Question as a programmatic lead for the introduction but acknowledges that no section of Lamartine s text can be linked to such a question 17 According to Johns the legitimacy of such a Life and Death theme would be more to be sought in a general theme of Autran s poems and in particular in the first stanza of the poem Les Astres 68 Hommes epars sur ce globe qui roule Enveloppe la bas de nos rayons Peuples errants que la mort chasse en foule Et precipite a la tombe ou s ecoule Le long torrent des generations Scattered men on this turning globeEnvelopped the by the rays of hopeAn errant people which is hunted in crowd by deathAnd hurried to the tombInto which falls the long torrent of the generations This pessimistic view would justify setting the introduction to Les preludes on the theme of a reflection on death and the futility of existence Conversely for Main 69 as well as other commentators 70 the interpretation if there is one is rather to be found in the beginning of Lamartine s ode This initially hesitant music which emerges from silence gradually unfolds and finally asserts itself in all its grandeur is not linked to a question about life and death but would be a rendering of the poet invoking the muse and of the poet s exaltation when the muse responds La nuit pour rafraichir la nature embrasee De ses cheveux d ebene exprimant la rosee Pose au sommet des monts ses pieds silencieux Que ce calme lui pese O lyre o mon genie Musique interieure ineffable harmonie Harpes que j entendais resonner dans les airs Comme un echo lointain des celestes concerts Pendant qu il en est temps pendant qu il vibre encore Venez venez bercer ce cœur qui vous implore Et toi qui donnes l ame a mon luth inspire Esprit capricieux viens prelude a ton gre Il descend il descend The night to refresh nature ablaze Of her ebony hair expressing the dew Places its silent feet on the summit of the mountains How this calm weighs on him O lyre O my genius Inner music ineffable harmony Harps which I heard resounding in the air Like a distant echo of celestial concerts While it is time while it still vibrates Come come and cradle this heart that implores you And you who give soul to my inspired lute Whimsical spirit come prelude as you please He s coming down He s coming down Even if contrary to what Main sought to demonstrate 71 it is now proven that the introduction as well as the rest of the work was not written in reference to Lamartine and that these links are merely coincidental 72 the possibility of such an association may have contributed to Liszt s choice to use Lamartine s text as a substitute programme All the more so since Autran s poem Les Astres contained a stanza with images very similar to those at the beginning of Lamartine s ode the night the silence of the peaks the heavenly harp Quand vient la nuit vous couvrir de son aile Si vous montiez sur les sommets deserts Vous entendriez sous la voute eternelle Une musique auguste et solennelle Qui de nos chœurs s epanche dans les airs Nos lyres d or vous chanteraient la gloire De Jehova When night comes to cover you with its wing If you would climb the deserted peaks You would hear under the eternal vault An august and solemn music Which from our choirs pours forth into the air Our golden lyres would sing you the glory Of Jehova Although speculative these suggested readings which refer to the birth of inspiration or more generally to the birth of a music are in any case compatible with the actual musical content of the introduction a continuous transition leading from the seemingly amorphous opening with its displaced meter irregular phrasing and harmonic ambiguity through a very strong dominant preparation to the C major theme mm 35 46 with its regular rhythm and phrasing clear melodic profile and definite expository character 73 Note also that the introduction is not marked adagio or largo or grave which would have made more sense if Liszt had wanted to depict a sombre reflection on death but simply andante Lastly regarding the allegro marziale animato section There is nothing close to a battle and victory in Autran s poems Lamartine does describe a battle in his ode but it is actually a bloody mass grave littered with mutilated corpses the sight of which prompts the poet to withdraw from the world The one perishes whole the other on the dust Like a trunk whose boughs the axe has cut Of its scattered limbs sees the shreds fly And dragging himself still on the dampened earth Marks in streams of blood his bloody trail Suddenly the sun dispelling the cloud Shines with horror on the scene of the slaughter And its pale ray on the slippery earth Uncovers to our eyes long streams of blood Broken steeds and chariots in the quarry Mutilated limbs scattered on the dust The confused debris of arms and bodies And flags thrown on heaps of the dead Except for two verses evoking earlier a trumpet signal including the one used by Carolyne Zu Sayn Wittgenstein in her preface it is difficult to draw a parallel between this gruesome massacre and Liszt s glorious music in C major If this section were to be entitled battle and victory then it is more of a general idea of the triumph of the romantic artist against adversity or the achievement of the artist s self realization along Hegelian lines the reference model always being the finale of Beethoven s 5th symphony 74 17 In addition to the heroic looking themes and military orchestration certain harmonic processes such as the tritone relationship and the successive modulations in ascending thirds whereas other sequences proceeded rather in descending thirds especially the Andante maestoso and the calm after the storm can indeed be associated with an idea of defiance of struggle against adversity of triumph of the will But it may also correspond more prosaically to Liszt s desire with this disguised overture which is also one of his very first orchestral scores to compete with the most spectacular overtures of the time Berlioz Benvenuto Cellini Carnaval Romain 1838 44 Wagner Rienzi 1842 or simply reveal Liszt s taste for martial finales whether it is programme music or not cf Piano Concerto No 1 Piano Concerto No 2 Hungaria Mazeppa The musicologist Alan Walker author of a 3 volume biography of Liszt summarises the discussion as follows First the prefaces were written after the music was composed in such circonstances one might with equal logic talk of programmes about music Secondly there is evidence that Princess Carolyne had a hand in their formulation The conclusion seams clear enough Posterity has probably overestimated the importance of the extra musical thought in Liszt s symphonic poems We should not follow them slavishly for the simple reason that the symphonic poems do not follow them slavishly either 62 Critical reception EditShortly after the creation the critic Eduard Hanslick who believed in absolute music lambasted Les preludes In an 1857 article following a performance in Vienna he denounced the idea of a symphonic poem as a contradiction in terms He also denied that music was in any way a language that could express anything and mocked Liszt s assertion that it could translate concrete ideas or assertions The aggrieved Liszt wrote to his cousin Eduard The doctrinaire Hanslick could not be favourable to me his article is perfidious 75 Other critics such as Felix Draeseke were more supportive 76 Early performances in America were not appreciated by conservative critics there At an 1857 performance of the piano duet arrangement the critic of Dwight s Journal of Music wrote What shall we say of The Preludes a Poesie Symphonique by Liszt The poetry we listened for in vain It was lost as it were in the smoke and stunning tumult of a battlefield There were here and there brief fleeting fragments of something delicate and sweet to ear and mind but these were quickly swallowed up in one long monotonous fatiguing melee of convulsive crashing startling masses of tone flung back and forth as if in rivalry from instrument to instrument We must have been very stupid listeners but we felt after it as if we had been stoned and beaten and trampled under foot and in all ways evilly entreated 77 Nowadays opinions remain divided between some music critics who still accuse certain pages of vulgarity Berry If the brass section could not entirely escape vulgarity that is Liszt s responsibility 78 and musicologists who praise the inventiveness of the writing Tranchefort Ductile and sumptuous the orchestra demonstrates a variety of colours and movements the likes of which have not been heard since Beethoven 37 who highlight many technical innovations and the use of chamber music textures in which small groups of soloists periodically emerge from the orchestral mass forming contrasts among themselves Walker 79 or who emphasize the rigour of a structure based on a complex pattern of key and motivic relationships Johns 80 In any case Les preludes is undoubtedly the most popular of Liszt s 13 symphonic poems as both musicologists 81 and Liszt specialist interpreters such as Leslie Howard 82 have attested Arrangements EditIn the beginning of 1859 Les preludes was successfully performed in New York City 83 Karl Klauser New York made a piano arrangement which in 1863 was submitted to Liszt In a letter to Franz Brendel of 7 September 1863 Liszt wrote that Les preludes in Klauser s arrangement was a hackneyed piece but he had played it through again to touch up the closing movement of Klauser s arrangement and give it new figuration 84 Liszt sent Klauser s revised arrangement to the music publisher Julius Schuberth of Leipzig 85 who was able to publish it in America In Germany due to the legal situation of that time Breitkopf amp Hartel as original publishers of Les preludes owned all rights on all kinds of arrangements For this reason in 1865 or 1866 Klauser s arrangement was published not by Schuberth but by Breitkopf amp Hartel Besides Klauser s arrangement there were further piano arrangements by August Stradal and Karl Tausig Liszt made his own arrangements for two pianos and for piano duet There were also arrangements for harmonium and piano by A Reinhard and for military orchestra by L Helfer 86 In recent times Matthew Cameron has prepared his own piano arrangement of Les preludes citation needed Uses in Media EditThe closing fanfare of Les preludes was used for news bulletins by the Reichs Rundfunk Gesellschaft during the Nazi regime The fanfare would cue the announcer to say Das Oberkommando der Wehrmacht gibt bekannt The supreme command of the armed forces announces before relating the Nazis latest victory Germans were so conditioned by the militaristic usage of Les preludes that there was a de facto ban on the piece after the war 87 Albert Speer related that he was called into Adolf Hitler s salon during dinner He had the piece playing and stated You ll hear that often in the near future because it is going to be our victory fanfare for the Russian campaign Walther Funk chose it How do you like it Hitler had chosen different musical fanfares for each of the previous victories 88 Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe uses the same concluding fanfare from Les preludes over its iconic opening titles and as a heroic theme during many scenes 89 Parts of Les Preludes were used as background music during scene changes in the 1940s radio series The Lone Ranger The music is used for the intro and outro of the Tom and Jerry episode Tom and Jerry in the Hollywood Bowl Les Preludes is used throughout Juzo Itami s ramen western film Tampopo Year s end tradition at Interlochen EditA performance of Les preludes concludes each summer camp session at the Interlochen Center for the Arts In the past the piece has been conducted by the president of the institution although this was never a tradition or requirement and is performed by the camp s large ensembles in the oldest building on the ICA grounds the Interlochen Bowl which dates from 1928 90 Recordings EditConductor Orchestra Year Studio Live Label Time Mengelberg Willem New York Philharmonic 1922 Studio Victrola 15 45 Fried Oscar Berliner Philharmoniker 1928 Studio Music amp Arts Pristine 15 10 Mengelberg Willem Concertgebouw Orchestra 1929 Studio Naxos 15 15 Kleiber Erich Czech Philharmonic 1936 Studio Preiser 13 50Kempen Paul van Berliner Philharmoniker 1937 Studio DG 15 35Weingartner Felix London Symphony Orchestra 1940 Studio Columbia 14 45Knappertsbusch Hans Berliner Philharmoniker 1941 Studio Preiser 15 55Knappertsbusch Hans Berliner Philharmoniker 1941 Live Berlin Andromeda Archipel 16 33Ormandy Eugene Philadelphia Orchestra 1947 Studio Sony 16 00Stokowski Leopold Leopold Stokowski s Orchestra 1947 Studio RCA 16 00Monteux Pierre Standard Symphony Orchestra San Francisco 1950 Live California Music amp Arts 14 38Otterloo Willem van Het Residentie Orkest 1951 Studio Philips 15 03Ludwig Leopold Berliner Philharmoniker 1951 Studio DG Guild 14 17Celibidache Sergiu Wiener Symphoniker 1952 Live Wien Orfeo 17 17Monteux Pierre Boston Symphony Orchestra 1952 Studio RCA 15 40Andre Franz Orchestre Symphonique de la Radiodiffusion Nationale Belge 1952 Studio Telefunken 13 57Golovanov Nikolai USSR Radio Symphony Orchestra 1953 Studio Music Online 15 10Paray Paul Detroit Symphony Orchestra 1953 Studio Mercury 15 43Galliera Alceo Philharmonia Orchestra 1953 Studio Columbia 16 25Dixon Dean Royal Philharmonic 1953 Studio Westminster 13 35Furtwangler Wilhelm Wiener Philharmoniker 1954 Studio EMI 15 38Argenta Ataulfo Orchestre de la Suisse Romande 1955 Studio Decca 16 25Mitropoulos Dimitri New York Philharmonic 1956 Studio Sony 16 32Silvestri Constantin Philharmonia Orchestra 1957 Studio EMI 15 35Scherchen Hermann Orchester Der Wiener Staatsoper 1957 Studio Westminster 15 35Karajan Herbert von Philharmonia Orchestra 1958 Studio EMI 16 07Fricsay Ferenc Radio Symphonie Orchester Berlin 1959 Studio DG 16 38Andre Franz Orchestre Symphonique de la Radiodiffusion Nationale Belge 1959 Studio Telefunken 15 40Cluytens Andre Berliner Philharmoniker 1960 Studio Erato 17 55Dorati Antal London Symphony Orchestra 1960 Studio Mercury 15 43Benzi Roberto Orchestre des Concerts Lamoureux 1960 Studio Philips 15 55Boult Sir Adrian New Symphony Orchestra of London 1960 Studio RCA 15 10Rozsa Miklos The Hollywood Bowl Symphony Orchestra 1960 Studio Capitol Seraphim 16 55Rozhdestvensky Gennady USSR Radio Symphony Orchestra Grand Symphony Orchestra of All Union National Radio Service 1960 Studio Melodyia 15 35Fiedler Arthur Boston Pops 1960 Studio Mercury 15 23Bernstein Leonard New York Philharmonic 1963 Studio Sony 16 43Ancerl Karel Czech Philharmonic 1964 Studio Supraphon 16 38Mehta Zubin Wiener Philharmoniker 1966 Studio Decca 16 10Karajan Herbert von Berliner Philharmoniker 1967 Studio DG 17 05Haitink Bernard London Symphony Orchestra 1968 Studio Philips 15 00Neumann Vaclav Gewandhausorchester Leipzig 1968 Studio Apex 16 17Paray Paul Orchestre National de Monte Carlo 1969 Studio Concert Hall 15 43Barenboim Daniel Chicago Symphony Orchestra 1977 Studio DG 15 55Solti Sir Georg London Symphony Orchestra 1977 Studio Decca 16 48Masur Kurt Gewandhausorchester Leipzig 1978 Studio EMI 15 03Neumann Vaclav Czech Philharmonic 1979 Live Prague Supraphon 15 18Solti Sir Georg Symphonie Orchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks 1980 Live Munchen Unitel DVD 14 57Casadesus Jean Claude Orchestre Symphonique de la RTL 1983 Studio Forlane 15 50Muti Riccardo Philadelphia Orchestra 1983 Studio EMI 16 33Ferencsik Janos Hungarian State Orchestra 1983 Studio Hungaroton 16 48Joo Arpad Budapest Symphony Orchestra 1984 85 Studio Hungaroton 15 50Karajan Herbert von Berliner Philharmoniker 1984 Studio DG 16 48Conlon James Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra 1985 Studio Erato 16 55Kunzel Erich Cincinnati Pops 1985 Studio Telarc 15 55Nemeth Gyula Hungarian State Orchestra 1990 Studio Hungaroton 16 15Fischer Ivan Budapest Festival Orchestra 1991 Studio Harmonia Mundi 15 03Halasz Michael Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra 1991 Studio Naxos 16 55Solti Sir Georg Chicago Symphony Orchestra 1992 Live Salzburg Decca 15 03Plasson Michel Dresden Philharmonie 1992 Studio Berlin Classics 16 27Jarvi Neeme Orchestre de la Suisse Romande 1994 Studio Chandos 15 03Mehta Zubin Berliner Philharmoniker 1994 Studio Sony 16 07Sinopoli Giuseppe Wiener Philharmoniker 1996 Studio DG 16 13Saccani Rico Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra 1985 2005 Live BPO Live 15 35Barenboim Daniel Berliner Philharmoniker 1998 Live Berlin TDK EuroArts DVD 15 55Fruhbeck de Burgos Rafael Rundfunk Sinfonieorchester Berlin 1999 Studio BIS 16 00Oue Eiji Minnesota Orchestra 1999 Studio RR 17 00Sawallisch Wolfgang Philadelphia Orchestra 1999 Studio Water Lily 16 30Immerseel Jos van Anima Eterna 2003 Studio ZigZag 15 03Noseda Gianandrea BBC Philharmonic 2004 Studio Chandos 16 00Pletnev Mikhail Russian National Orchestra 2005 Live Moscow RNO tv video 14 10Barenboim Daniel West Eastern Divan Orchestra 2009 Live London Decca 15 43Kocsis Zoltan Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra 2011 Live Budapest Warner 14 17Gergiev Valery Wiener Philharmoniker 2011 Live Schonbrunn DG CD amp DVD 15 03Haselbock Martin Orchester Wiener Akademie 2011 Live Raiding NCA Gramola 15 35Thielemann Christian Project Orchestra Franz Liszt 2011 Live Weimar Unitel DVD 15 50Markl Jun Leipzig MDR Symphony Orchestra 2011 Studio MDR 15 30Botstein Leon American Symphony Orchestra 2011 Live ASO 15 38Thielemann Christian Staatskapelle Dresden 2016 Live Dresden Unitel DVD 15 35 Recording year not release year Label may vary with the reissues Not all recordings are currently available Duration given without blank or applause For some older recordings the pitch and the duration may vary depending on the equipment used for the transfer Recordings up to 1956 are in mono with a sound varying considerably from historical in some to fair in others Recordings from 1957 onwards are in stereo some with excellent definition from the end of the 1950s 91 Conceptions and tempi vary considerably from one version to another and sometimes for the same conductor in different years Moreover the various Breitkopf editions of the score contain a few differences the 1908 edition including effects which tend to weigh the performance down molto ritenuto pesante tempo di marcia piu maestoso and of which it is difficult to know whether they come from Liszt s hand or if they were added by the editor these effects are absent from the 1885 edition as well as from Liszt s own transcription for 2 pianos which suggest a more straightforward playing The most lively and fiery versions are generally found in the older recordings when it was not uncommon to perform Les preludes in 14 to 14 30 sometimes less For example Erich Kleiber s 1936 version energetic and driving 92 offering an absolutely exceptional incandescence enthusiasm grandeur without rhetoric and communicativeness 93 while being one of the most faithful to the score 1885 edition in the entire discography Or Monteux in concert in 1950 an amazingly luminous performance despite minor orchestral flaws freer and more fluid than in studio in 1952 94 without any added effects and without a trace of bombast 95 For the Mengelberg case see below In modern sound Kocsis with the Hungarian Philharmonic in 2011 is apparently the only conductor among those whose recordings are easily available to dare such a burning and direct approach The symphonic discs of this Liszt year are clearly dominated by this feverish concert from the Palace of Arts in Budapest The excellent pianist Kocsis has become an equally excellent conductor who seems to be fueled by passion 96 Not to be confused with a 2014 filmed version with a different orchestra circulating here and there less accomplished and dry sounding At the opposite extreme some conductors broaden tempi far from Liszt s indications to bring out a shimmering of orchestral colours like Karajan notably in his 1967 version which strongly divides the critics Both showmanship and refinement characterize Karajan s exciting gorgeously executed Les Preludes 97 Karajan drags the music so painfully at times that the excitement of the music is lost 98 A slow and fabulously traced interpretation overturned in spectacularity and sonorous beauty and which therefore falls into grandiloquence and insincerity 93 Through the spell of nuance Karajan wraps the piece in a dreamy gauze giving the epic the distant feel of legend 99 Karajan s 1958 version is generally considered as more balanced and accurate but rather cool and the 1984 version still impressive but less dreamlike 93 99 Other majestic and contemplative versions include for example Conlon s reading which also divides opinions between boredom and admiration for its elegance the fleshy and balanced sound the fusion of timbres 99 or Oue s a finely sustained noble performance in which the demonstration quality sonics permit fullness of tone without a trace of bombast 100 Some versions are regularly reported for their emotional strength like Furtwangler s which still has strong supporters praising its sense of narrative its effusiveness that avoids grandiloquence the singing quality and the humanistic sense of the phrasing the solidity as well of the naturalness of the construction despite a brass section that sometimes falls short and making one regret not having a live recording 99 93 Or Mitropoulous highly effusive but more dark and tragic vision broad but incredilbly intense spectacular occasionally unkempt but always a source of excitement 99 101 Or in a more luminous style and sound Fricsay s version one of the most frequently recommended a stunningly intense reading 102 which captivates by accentuating the contrasts rather than the continuity between episodes 99 with outstanding effusive carnal and thrilling phrasings 93 and a broad gesture that never compromise the long melodic line 91 in the lyrical sections while proving spectacularly virile and fiery in the final section 99 Some conductors do not hesitate to multiply effects and to take significant liberties with the rhythm like Mengelberg in 1929 with the Concertgebouw orchestra an impassioned performance marked by a flamboyant style in which some commentators imagine an echo of the freedom of interpretation that could exist in Liszt s time Besides huge tempo fluctuations portamenti and degrees of orchestral slides and rubato a terrific tension permeates every bar Solo instruments convey a sweet elasticity in dreamy pages the momentum and intensity increase without ruffling the clarity of lines and the climaxes prove to be absolutely thrilling 93 99 103 104 Not to be confused with a version from 1922 with modified instrumentation and an even more rudimentary sound recording In an equally idiosyncratic but much rougher style Golovanov conducts in 1953 a white hot orchestra in a theatrical epic with a love scene of exacerbated lyricism and a cataclysmic storm with additional instrumentation A performance whose intemperate emotionalism sonic harshness and rushed allegretto may however strongly divide opinions 105 106 Without going to such extremes some conductors fully embrace the work s demonstrative nature Van Otterloo takes up some of Mengelberg s rubati and tempo changes in a contrasting and tense reading without the same charm or singing qualities in the lyrical pages but highly spectacular and sharp in the virtuoso pages Celibidache in his early years offers a staggering vision 107 with pages already marked by its legendary slowness and creating hypnotic soundscapes and others by turns intensely lyrical wild martial and epic making each line sing and staging a real drama 108 109 107 Silvestri s free and rhapsodic reading 110 sometimes inventive and refined at the risk of sounding artificial sometimes fiery literally supercharged in the battle section 93 is particularly ear catching 110 despite some occasional rough woodwinds playing a version that stands with the most imaginative and evocative versions available 111 Bernstein has thrilling and brilliant moments 112 but also pages that one might have expected to be more persuasive compared to his burning performance of the Faust Symphony from the same period including a surprisingly dragging andante maestoso In contrast Fiedler is often cited for his fanfares which have seldom had such bite and majesty 113 but does not seem as inspired in the lyrical pages Solti s 1991 concert much more lively and coherent than his 1977 studio version and more flexible and expressive than the 1980 filmed concert has been particularly appreciated There is a special excitement and sense of occasion in this live performance that enhances his very dynamic style and goes well with this work 114 The elderly director takes the thorn out of his former studio performance and despite some overdone effects the execution is of such a high standard and the brilliance color and plasticity of the baton are so prescient that the maestro and his incredible orchestra ultimately triumph 93 Pletnev s sharp uncompromisingly conducting delivers one of the most terrific storms and battles ever recorded as well as an exceptionally vigorous and biting andante maestoso and gives the work a perfect unity but the hasty allegretto that seems to be inherited from Golovanov may again divide opinion Gergiev also offers a rip roaring reading in an especially electric concert in 2011 115 116 sometimes lacking the refinement one might have expected from the Vienna Philharmonic this is an open air recording but bursting with energy throughout the second half of the work Other versions stand out rather for their sense of balance without seeking effects such as Weingartner s a reading of absolute fidelity while never allowing the music to sound hackneyed which maintains excitement without Lisztian hysteria and gives full due to the lyric sections supported by a London Symphony in top form 117 118 Or Monteux s 1952 studio version sharp and luminous letting the inherent drama shine within a context of lyricism with better horns and richer strings but less spontaneity than the 1950 concert where basses and timpani were also better recorded 119 Boult offers an incredibly convincing presentation of the work 120 a reading remarkable for its unity without excess of sentimentality but rich in colour and where the slightly too Elgarian andante maestoso is counterbalanced by a surprising ardour in the storm and battle sections Masur s no nonsense version and Haitink s particularly faithful reading divided the critics the line being thin between rigour and stiffness or coolness 121 112 122 99 although Haitink s improves significantly in the second half of the work 93 More recently Ivan Fischer s clear fresh sometimes chamber like reading avoiding any excessive sentimentality has been particularly appreciated as well as Neeme Jarvi s equally lively and faithful but more brilliant and athletic reading whose climaxes are nevertheless accomplished with a seductive warmth 123 Note that in the allegro marziale animato section what might pass for virtuoso exuberance in some conductors is in fact a strict adherence to the challenge Liszt placed in his score with a gradual acceleration from allegretto pastorale to allegro marziale animato and a suggested equivalence 1 beat of 6 8 1 beat of 2 2 logically leading to a tempo well above 100 alla breve as played by Fried Kleiber Ludwig Muti in 1983 and to a lesser extend Andre Dixon Silvestri Fricsay Benzi Haitink Solti Fischer Gergiev and a few other Some conductors opt for a different tempo equivalence 1 bar 6 8 1 beat 2 2 frantically accelerating the end of the 6 8 section then moving on to a more majestic allegro marziale an option advocated by Mengelberg and taken up by van Otterloo Mitropoulos Karajan Oue Some choose an intermediate solution gradually accelerating the allegretto in a joyful but not frenetic manner then more or less widening the beginning of the allegro marziale like Monteux Furtwangler Boult Kocsis As already mentioned Golovanov and Pletnev play the allegretto as a quasi allegro from the start displaying impressive orchestral playing but depriving the episode of its charm Many conductors remain more cautious here or give priority to the marziale over the animato or prefer to temper Lisztian virtuosity in favour of more detailed architecture Some begin the allegretto in a surprisingly slow tempo to maintain a margin of progression like Paray in 1953 a dry and uncompromising reading giving the work the appearance of a relief in the sculptural sense of the term 99 Some even modify the score by ignoring almost all the indicated acceleration and tempo change between the allegretto and the allegro marziale animato depriving the page of its sense of excitement like Ancerl in a version who seems to abandon any narrative aspect in favour of a study of timbre and architecture a probing reading focusing more on the work s purely musical values than on its implied rhetoric 124 especially appreciated for the Czech musicians warm and round tones and the brass refusal to blow to the point of rasping 125 Or Dorati in a reading with clear lines precise accents and a cheerfull dancing allegretto which curiously segues into a slower allegro marziale an elegant version that some may have nevertheless judged animated without great conviction 126 This is also the option chosen by Neumann in studio in Leipzig a version otherwise remarkable for its musicality and structural unity but the conductor offers a much more lively free and captivating reading in concert in Prague at least in the first part of the work while benefiting again from the suggestive colours of the Czech woodwinds Or by Noseda whose recording was however praised for his clarity acuity and absence of bombast 127 Some versions are especially noted for their orchestral qualities for example the brilliance which some may have considered excessive 99 of the Philadelphia Orchestra with Muti a highly controlled reading that accentuates contrasts between subtle balances in finely chiselled episodes and furious tempi in others 128 129 Or the luxurious opulence of the Berlin Philharmonic with Mehta who achieves a better control here than in his previous recording in Vienna weighed down by overly Wagnerian trombones 130 99 93 The Vienna Philharmonic for its part offers all the sumptuousness of its colours and the magic of its strings with Sinopoli in a recording which however alternates between more or less successful moments 131 93 Barenboim s recording with the Chicago Symphony has been highly regarded for its orchestral perfection and for its control and architectural achievement 93 But the conductor offers perhaps more effusiveness and lyrical emotionality in his 1998 Berlin concert 93 Or in his 2009 London Concert where the less sumptuous but enthusiastic young orchestra 132 makes the music sing and surge with freedom and freshness 133 and highlights the lyrical allure of the work 134 in an overall conception that still favours control rather than ardor at least compared to the more fiery versions Conversely other versions may be worth a visit for the conductor s personality despite more or less obvious orchestral weaknesses such as Scherchen s ardent enthusiastic and highly contrasted reading 135 136 Lastly some conductors have proposed recordings on period instrument favouring the transparency of the textures and highlighting the woodwinds like van Immerseel perhaps lacking a more generous string sound in the lyrical moments more convincing in other pages 99 93 Note that there are apparently no versions by some conductors who have left notable recordings of other Liszt works and who might have been expected in this one such as Toscanini Reiner Martinon Markevitch Kubelik Version for 2 pianos transcription by Liszt Georgia Mangos amp Louise Mangos 1993 Studio Cedille 14 03 Budapest Piano Duet Tamas Kereskedo amp Zoltan Pozsgai 1995 Studio Hungaroton 15 32 Tami Kanazawa amp Yuval Admony 2007 Studio Naxos 15 15 Martha Argerich amp Daniel Rivera 2010 Live Lugano Warner 15 00 Marialena Fernandes Ranko Markovic 2011 Studio Gramola 15 58 Martha Argerich amp Daniel Rivera 2012 Live Rosario Argentina 15 32 Leslie Howard amp Mattia Ometto 2016 Live Padova Brilliant classics 14 39 Giuseppe Bruno amp Vincenzo Maxia 2019 Studio OnClassical 16 50References EditNotes Muller Reuter 1909 p 266 a b Bonner 1986 pp 98 106 Johns 1997 pp 145 147 In books that are not specifically devoted to Liszt Walton Basic Forms in Music Alfred Music 2005 p 192 Leikin The Mystery of Chopin s Preludes 2016 p 46 Or in the foreword of some editions of the score Liszt Les Preludes orchestral score Kalmus Alfred Music 1999 There still does not seem to be a critical edition in 2022 Bonner 1986 Johns 1997 p 145 Cormac 2017 pp 11 amp 70 Bonner 1986 pp 98 103 Bertagnolli 2002 Haraszti 1953 pp 117 122 Bonner 1986 pp 103 107 Johns 1997 p 54 amp p 147 Moortele 2017 p 38 40 Moortele 2017 p 109 a b Moortele 2017 p 149 a b Searle 1970 p 281 a b c d Taruskin 2010 Chap 8 Midcentury The symphony later on a b Haraszti 1953 p 121 a b c Taruskin 2010 Chap 8 example 8 1 Johns 1997 p 54 Bonner 1986 pp 103 105 Bonner 1986 pp 103 106 Haraszti 1953 pp 121 122 Bonner 1986 pp 105 106 Haraszti 1953 p 122 Haraszti 1953 p 118 Johns 1997 p 147 Berlioz 1846 Walker 1989 Book Three Liszt the conductor Paragraph III eBook Johns 1997 p 26 p 33 amp Table 4 p 36 Haraszti 1953 p 118 120 Taruskin 2010 Chap 8 Example 8 1 Haraszti 1953 p 122 a b Johns 1986 p 89 Bonner 1986 p 107 Abraham 2017 a b Tranchefort 1986 p 420 Johns 1986 p 80 Johns 1997 p 55 Cormac 2017 p 273 note 77 Taruskin 2010 p 423 Taruskin 2010 pp 424 427 Haraszti 1953 p 136 Walker 2009 Book Three Liszt and the Orchestra Paragraph I eBook Walker 1987 Book Four The Beethoven Monument Unveiled in Bonn 1845 eBook Walker 1989 Book Three Growing achievement Note 58 eBook Cormac 2017 p 142 Cormac 2017 p 12 Walker 1987 Book Four Marie d Agoult Becomes Daniel Stern Paragraph IV eBook Ironically Les Preludes owes more to the William Tell Overture than to Leonore no 3 and conductors who fail to understand this don t do well with the work Shoemaker Paul Franz Liszt Symphonic Poems Complete in MusicWeb International 2002 classrev 2002 dec02 liszt symphonicpoems htm Bonner 1986 p 107 Ramann 1896 This English version is taken from vol I 2 of the complete edition of Liszt s musical works of the Franz Liszt Stiftung Walker 1989 p 307 n 13 Walker 1989 p 297 Muller Reuter 1909 p 300 Haraszti 1953 p 128f Muller Reuter 1909 p 301 La Mara ed Letter no 180 to Eduard List 24 March 1857 La Mara ed Letter No 108 To Dr Franz Brendel January 28th 1854 Cormac 2017 p 12 a b Walker 1989 Book Three Liszt and the orchestra Paragraph I eBook Main 1979 p 141 143 Johns 1986 p 79 Johns 1997 p 55 Johns 1997 p 147 Haraszti 1953 p 124 130 Johns 1997 pp 145 148 Main 1979 p 141 De Louit Paul Liszt Les Preludes Histoire interpretation discographie comparee in Diapason no 677 pp 40 44 Main 1979 p 133 148 Bonner 1986 p 107 Bonner 1986 p 104 Johns 1997 p 148 Walker 1989 p 363 Gibbs 2010 pp 485 7 Cited in Modolell 2014 p 13 Berry 2009 Walker 1989 Book three Liszt the Conductor Paragraph I Johns 1997 pp 54 55 Tranchefort 1986 p 418 Howard 1996 See Liszt s letter to Julius Schuberth of 9 March 1859 in Jung ed Franz Liszt in seinen Briefen p 165 La Mara ed Liszts Briefe Band 2 translated to English by Constance Bache No 20 Liszt s letter to Brendel of 7 September 1863 as cited above Raabe Liszts Schaffen p 299 Sound Matters Essays on the Acoustics of Modern German Culture Alter Nora and Lutz Peter Koepnick Editors Berghahn Books 2004 69 amp 71 Zalampas Sherree Owens 1990 Adolf Hitler A Psychological Interpretation of His Views on Architecture Art and Music ISBN 9780879724887 Kinnard Roy and Tony Crnkovich R J Vitone The Flash Gordon Serials 1936 1940 A Heavily Illustrated Guide McFarland 2015 138 Les preludes at Interlochen 2014 a b Hurwitz David Fricsay s Classic Dvorak Dvorak Liszt Smetana ClassicsToday CD review no 7166 review review 7166 Woolf Jonathan In Memoriam Erich Kleiber in MusicWeb International 2006 classrev 2006 Oct06 Kleiber TAH581 htm a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lopez Vargas Machuca Fernando Los Preludios de Liszt discografia comparada in the authors blog flvargasmachuca 2009 2009 07 los preludios de liszt discografia html Gutmann Peter Pierre Monteux in San Francisco in ClassicalNotes 2017 columns monteux html Tuttle Raymond Sunday Evenings with Pierre Monteux in ClassicalNet 2007 recs reviews m m amp a01192a php Huss Christophe Vitrine du disque 28 octobre 2011 in Le Devoir culture musique 334634 vitrine du disque 28 octobre 2011 Distler Jed Liszt Panorama in ClassicToday 2001 review no 5665 review review 5665 Wright David Franz Liszt Symphonic poems Fantasia on Hungarian Folk Melodies CD review in MusicWeb International classrev 2000 dec00 liszt Panorama htm a b c d e f g h i j k l m De Louit Paul Liszt Les Preludes Histoire interpretation discographie comparee in Diapason no 677 pp 40 44 Hurwitz David Bolero in ClassicsToday CD review no 3921 review review 3921 Cowan Rob Dimitri Mitropoulos The Complete RCA and Columbia Album Collection in MusicWeb International 05 2022 classrev 2022 May Mitropoulos complete 19439888252 htm Levi Erik Liszt s Symphonic Poems conducted by Kubelik and Karajan CD review in ClassiclMusic reviews liszts symphonic poems conducted kubel k and karajan Distler Jed Berlioz Liszt Weber Mengelberg Reruns in ClassicsToday CD review no 8411 review review 8411 Lemco Gary Willem Mengelberg Conducts CD review in OpusKura 09 2007 review AASP htm Distler Jed Great Conductors of the 20th Century Nikolai Golovanov in ClassicsToday CD review no 7978 review review 7978 Barnett Rod Great Conductors of the Twentieth Century volume 8 CD Review in ClassicalNet 2002 classrev 2002 may02 golovanov htm a b Franck Remy Historische Aufnahmen mit legendaren Dirigenten CD review in Pizzicato 08 06 2020 historische aufnahmen mit legendaren dirigenten Friedrich Stephane Onze chefs pour le majestueux 40e anniversaire du label Orfeo in ResMusica 16 August 2020 2020 08 16 onze chefs pour le majestueux 40e anniversaire du label orfeo Gauthier Sebastien Franz Liszt Les Preludes Maurice Ravel Concerto pour la main gauche CD review in ConcertoNet 04 14 2013 scripts cd php ID cd 2867 a b Rousseau Jean Pierre Deconfine in Le Blog de Jean Pierre Rousseau director of the Radio France Occitanie Montpellier Music Festival 17 05 2020 2020 05 17 deconfine Hurwitz David Breathtakingly Cosmically Sensationally Fabulous Silvestri Box CD review in ClassicsToday review breathtakingly cosmically sensationally fabulous silvestri box a b Warrack John Liszt amp Mussorgsky Orchestral Works in Gramophone 1991 reviews review slug liszt mussorgsky orchestral works Hurwitz David ed Prokofiev Liszt Boston Pops Fiedler ClassicsToday CD review no 3814 review review 3814 McLellan Joseph Two years after retiring Sir Georg Solti continues at a prolific pace in The Washington Post November 28 1993 Sanderson Blair Summer Night Concert Schonbrunn 2011 Review in Allmusic album summer night concert schonbrunn 2011 mw0002173719 Liang Chang Tou Summer Night Concert Schonbrunn 2011 CD Reviews from The Straits Times August 2011 Davis Dan Great conductors of the century Felix Weingartner in ClassicsToday CD review no 9914 review review 9914 Clarke Colin Great Conductors Of The 20th Century Felix Weingartner in MusicWeb International 04 2004 classrev 2004 apr04 weingartner htm Gutmann Peter Pierre Monteux in San Francisco in ClassicalNotes 2017 columns monteux html Freed Richard Happy Birthday Sir Adrian in The Washington post 04 08 1979 archive entertainment books 1979 04 08 happy birthday sir adrian 9b2bb45d d318 40d1 abf1 154a1881397e Sanderson Blair Liszt Les Preludes Review in Allmusic album liszt les preludes mw0001859064 Warrack John Liszt Symphonic Poems Masur 2 different reviews in Gramophone 10 1994 review liszt symphonic poems 0 and review liszt symphonic poems 1 BBC Music Magazine Liszt Piano Concerto No 1 Piano Concerto No 2 Les Preludes Mazeppa in Classical Music 20 January 2012 reviews orchestral liszt 82 Carr Victor Under the Radar Ancerl in Shostakovich and Bartok Concertos Liszt Shostakovich Bartok in ClassicsToday CD review no 11644 review review 11644 Riley John CD Reviews 25 Liszt Les Preludes Ancerl Czech Philharmonic in DSCH Journal cd reviews 25 Marnat Marcel Discographie in Rostand Claude Liszt Seuil 2d ed 1988 1st ed 1960 Morrison Brice Liszt symphonic poems vol 1 in Gramophone 2005 review liszt symphonic poems vol 1 Leonard James Muti 1812 Bolero Les Preludes CD review in Allmusic album muti 1812 bolero les preludes mw0001805750 Frank Remy Riccardo Muti Balance zwischen temperamentvoller Dramatik und romantischer Gefuhlswarme in Pizzicato 16 06 2021 riccardo muti balance zwischen temperamentvoller dramatik und romantischer gefuhlswarme Carr Victor Mehta s Liszt in classics today CD review no 4303 review review 4303 Gramophone Liszt Orchestral Works Sinopoli in Gramophone 13 1997 reviews review slug liszt orchestral works Lemelle Reinhardt Symphonie fantastique Les Preludes CD review in RondoMagazin 10 08 2013 kritiken php kritiken id 8434 Hayes Malcolm Berlioz Liszt CD review in ClassicalMusic 7 09 2013 reviews orchestral berlioz liszt orch oct 13 Norris Geoffrey Barenboim s Fantastique live from the 2009 Proms CD review in Gramophone 10 2013 review berlioz symphonie fantastique liszt les preludes Carr Victor Scherchen Liszt in ClassicsToday CD review no 7847 review review 7847 Puccio John J Liszt Hungarian Rhapsodies CD review in ClassicalCandor 2016 2016 01 liszt hungarian rhapsodies cd review html SourcesAbraham Gerald One Hundred Years of Music After Beethoven and Wagner Routledge 3rd edition 2017 Berlioz Hector Lettre a Joseph d Ortigues Prague 16 avril 1846 in The Project Gutenberg eBook of Correspondance inedite de Hector Berlioz last accessed 13 August 2022 Berry Mark PROM 48 Liszt Wagner and Berlioz London 21 8 2009 concert review MusicWeb International 2009 Bertagnolli Paula A Amanuensis or Author The Liszt Raff Collaboration Revisited in 19th Century Music 26 1 23 51 2002 Bonner Andrew Liszt s Les preludes et les Quatre Elemens 1986 in 19th Century Music 10 2 1986 87 pp 95 107 Cormac Joanne Liszt and the Symphonic Poem Cambridge University Press 2017 Haraszti Emile Genese des preludes de Liszt qui n ont aucun rapport avec Lamartine in Revue de musicologie 35 1953 p 111 140 Howard Leslie Les preludes Poeme symphonique liner notes for Hyperion Records CDA67015 1996 accessed 2 January 2015 Johns Keith T A structural analysis of the relationship between programme harmony and form in the symphonic poems of Franz Liszt Thesis University of Wollongong 1986 Johns Keith T The Symphonic Poems of Franz Liszt 2d edition Pendragon Press 1997 1st edition 1987 Jung ed Franz Liszt in seine Briefen Athenaum 1988 La Mara ed Letters of Franz Liszt Volume 1 From Paris to Rome Years of Travel as a Virtuoso translated into English by Constance Bache lt ref gt Main Alexander Liszt apres Lamartine Les Preludes Music amp Letters 60 2 1979 pp 133 148 Modollel Jorge L The Critical Reception of Liszt s Symphonic and Choral Works in the United States 1857 1890 Master s Thesis University of Miami 2014 accessed 2 January 2015 Moortele Steven Vande The Romantic Overture and Musical Form from Rossini to Wagner Cambridge University Press 2017 Muller Reuter Theodor Lexikon der deutschen Konzertliteratur 1 Band Leipzig 1909 Raabe Peter Liszts Schaffen Cotta Stuttgart Berlin 1931 Ramann Lina Franz Liszt als Kunstler und Mensch Band 2 Zweite Abteilung 1848 1886 Leipzig 1894 Taruskin Richard Music in the nineteenth Century Oxford Oxford University Press 2010 ISBN 9780195384833 pp 411 442 Taruskin Richard Liszt and bad taste Arti Musices 49 1 3 32 2018 Tranchefort Francois Rene Franz Liszt Les Poemes symphoniques in Guide de la musique symphonique Fayard 1986 p 418 423 Searle Humphrey ed Alan Walker The Orchestral Works in Franz Liszt The Man and His Music New York Taplinger Publishing Company 1970 Walker Alan Franz Liszt The Virtuoso Years revised edition Cornell University Press 1987 Walker Alan Franz Liszt The Weimar Years 1848 1861 Cornell University Press 1989 Orchestral ScoresLiszt Les preludes Breitkopf 1885 Liszt Les preludes Breitkopf 1908 edited by Franz Liszt Stiftung Liszt Les preludes Breitkopf 1908 edited by Otto Taubmann reprinted by Kalmus Each have slight different tempi or phrasing indications PoemsAutran Joseph La Terre Les Aquilons Les Flots Les Astres in Liszt Choral Works for Male Voices CD Hungaroton HCD 31923 Lamartine Alphonse Les Preludes in Œuvres completes de Lamartine 1860 Tome 1 Les Preludes Wikisource last accessed 13 August 2022External links EditLes preludes Orchestral version 3 different editions Solo piano version Two piano version Piano duet version Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Les preludes amp oldid 1144785140, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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