Franz Liszt, a famous Hungarian composer, pianist, conductor and master of romanticism, is one of the most outstanding representatives of early romanticism.
Born in Reading, Hungary, he began to learn piano at the age of six and was a disciple of many famous pianists. Settled in Paris at the age of sixteen. Liszt developed piano skills to an unparalleled degree, greatly enriched the expressive force of the piano, created the effect of orchestral music on the piano, and also pioneered the recitation method. He also won the reputation of "the king of the piano" because of his great contribution to the piano and above.
Liszt turned the side facing away from the audience into one, which made it easier for players to communicate with the audience and formed a brilliant and romantic piano playing style with great personality. Together with Chopin, who was also in Paris, he pushed the piano art to an unprecedented height.
Music works and their influence;
Twelve exquisite etudes, nineteen hungarian rhapsody etudes, six Paganini etudes, three collections of piano music in travel years, gorgeous toe dance, and a large number of opera fantasia, such as The Joker adapted by Verdi, The Memory of Don Juan adapted by Mozart, The Memory of norma and The Memory of the Devil Robert.
Liszt created symphonic poems, which integrated the content and emotional expression of poems into symphonic music, further expanded and deepened the connotation of title symphonic music, created a new artistic form for orchestral music, and adopted a single movement structure and theme deformation technique, which had an extremely important influence on later music creation.