• Program


    Hungarians in the World - Liszt and Europe 1. / Matinée Concerts
    2

    Hungarians in the World - Liszt and Europe 1. / Matinée Concerts

    There is hardly a more European musician than Franz Liszt, and the concert seeks to answer the question of how European tradition is reflected in Liszt's music.

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    Last event date: Sunday, November 12 2023 11:00AM

    Hungarians in the World - Liszt and Europe 1.
    Matinée Concerts

    Program:
    Beethoven: Symphony No. 5 (in C minor, "Fate"), Op. 67 - excerpts
    Berlioz: Symphonie fantastique, Op. 14 - excerpts
    Liszt: Les Préludes
    Liszt: Rákóczi March

    Born in Doborján in Hungary, he studied in Vienna, lived in Paris, found his true self in Italy, travelled the entire European continent as a concert artist, from Lisbon to Saint Petersburg and from Dublin to Istanbul, and divided the last part of his life between three cities - Rome, Weimar and Budapest. There is hardly a more European musician than Franz Liszt, and the concert seeks to answer the question of how European tradition is reflected in Liszt's music.

    Franz Liszt was a true omnivore in the intellectual sense: he was interested in literature, the fine arts and, above all, music, but his Europeanism and Hungarianism were influenced not only by the arts, but also by the political life of the 19th century so rich in revolutions. At the concert, moderated by Szilveszter Szélpál and with expert assistance from musicologist Gergely Fazekas, we attempt to find traces of these influences in Liszt's music, whilst also seeking answers to questions such as how social conditions were reflected in the symphonic works of the era, what the struggle with fate meant for Beethoven and Berlioz and what Liszt learned from all of this. However, we also look at specific musical phenomena, such as how a single motif can be used to create an entire masterpiece, and how various musical tricks can be used to disguise the fact that a symphonic poem is, in reality, based on a single three-note musical idea. The Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra is conducted by Erkel Prize-winning composer-conductor Ilona Dobszay-Meskó.

    Conductor: Ilona Dobszay-Meskó

    Featuring:
    expert: Gergely Fazekas
    moderator: Szilveszter Szélpál
    Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra

    Age: 9-16 year
    Presented by: Müpa Budapest

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