A portrait of the young Franz Liszt in Hungarian national dress, reflecting the cultural identity and musical imagination that inspired the Hungarian Fantasy. ℹ️ Work Information Composer: Franz Liszt Title: Hungarian Fantasy Original Title: Fantasie über ungarische Volksmelodien Catalogue Number: S.123 Year of Composition: 1852 Premiere: 1853, Budapest (then Pest) Genre: Fantasy for Piano and Orchestra Period: Romanticism Key: D minor – D major Duration: Approximately 15 minutes Instrumentation: Solo piano and symphony orchestra ___________________________ Some works reveal Franz Liszt the virtuoso , dazzling audiences through technical brilliance and pianistic spectacle. Others reveal Liszt the visionary composer , fascinated by history, culture, and the search for musical identity. The Hungarian Fantasy belongs unmistakably to both worlds. Composed in Weimar in 1852, during a period when Liszt had largely withdrawn from the exhausting life of a touring ...
An interior space opening toward the light of Provence, where traces of human presence linger quietly, shaping a space of memory and reflection. There are works in which everything is revealed. The stage fills, the characters speak, the narrative advances through visible action. Meaning emerges through what is presented, through what can be followed, named, and understood. L’Arlésienne unfolds in another direction. From the outset, something essential is withheld. The central figure—the one around whom all attention gathers—never appears. There is no moment of recognition, no encounter that confirms her presence. And yet, the work never feels incomplete. This absence does not create a gap. It creates a field .