Transcendental Etudes

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The Transcendental Etudes (French: Études d'exécution transcendante), S.139, are a series of twelve compositions written for solo piano by Franz Liszt in 1851. Although based on a 1837 revision of an earlier series of etudes composed in 1826.

The first version of the etudes was published in 1826 under the title Étude en douze exercices, when Liszt was 15 years old. In 1837, a second version, Douze Grandes Etudes, was revised by Liszt, and was published the next year simultaneously in Paris, Milan and Vienna. The third and final version (the most often recorded version) was published in 1852 and dedicated to Carl Czerny, Liszt’s piano teacher and a composer who wrote etudes prolifically.

The etudes, particularly in their second-version form, are among the most difficult pieces for piano ever written. Robert Schumann declared that they were playable (at the time) by "at the most, ten or twelve players in the world." Liszt realized that his virtuoso piano technique, which influenced the composition of the etudes, was virtually unsurpassable[citations needed]; consequently the etudes in their final form are less difficult, but still pose incredible physical and technical demands for the performer. The fifth étude, "Feux Follets," is among the most demanding of the set.

The twelve Transcendental Etudes are arranged as follows:

Liszt added these programmatic titles himself (most of them in French), except for numbers 2 and 10 which he left as "Molto Vivace" and "Allegro Agitato" respectively. The titles "Fusées" and "Appassionata" were assigned to these works at a later time and are not commonly used; the original titles by Liszt, "Molto Vivace" and "Allegro Agitato", are generally used instead.

A thorough comparison of the Transcendental Etudes' three versions can be found in Conway, James Bryant. Musical Sources for the Liszt études d'exécution transcendante: A Study in the Evolution of Liszt's Compositional and Keyboard Techniques. D.M.A., Performance, University of Arizona, 1969.

  • Etudes in 12 exercices (first version), Douze Etudes d'Exécution Transcendante (final version) and Douze Grandes Études (second version) were available at the International Music Score Library Project.
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