Total Members Voted: 75
Although I like both of them very much and probably none more than the other, I chose Liszt.I did this because I have read a lot recently in variour threads (mainly older ones) about Liszt being inferior to many other composers in terms of composition.I am also constantly hearing people say things like 'Liszt composed some nice pieces but very many bad ones'.I don't agree with this, maybe it's just the fact that all of the pieces I have heard have been decent: but the only piece I can think of as being bad is the Burlow March. Leslie Howard also comments on it being boring and predictable in the cover booklet of the 'Liszt - Dances and Marches' Cd.However, other than this piece I would struggle to think of many more that are terrible. Can someone Liszt some for me to see for myself?BestNicko124
The mazeppa poeme symphonique (not the etude) would be pretty high on the crap lis(z)t.
I am also constantly hearing people say things like 'Liszt composed some nice pieces but very many bad ones'.
I guess the reason why I respect Chopin's music more than Liszt's is that in Chopin's, the entire textural body of music keeps moving forward, whereas in Liszt's it is usually a single melody line or area of focus that moves and drags all the harmonic accompaniment along with it.
Haha, yeah I agree. Liszt can be a blast to listen to sometimes. I doubt anyone ever had more fun composing for the piano than he did. There's a reason that all the Chopin "Piano Favorites" or something albums seem to be packed wall-to-wall with pretty, wistful nocturnes and serious etudes and longer pieces - his music is more brooding and serious, and sometimes it's just not as fun to hear. There are a lot more "Dude, that part's SICK" moments per Liszt listening than Chopin, in my personal experience.
I think his work has more depth and power than chopin's. For me, he takes more advantage of the sound of the piano. Chopin was known to make the piano sing, and his pieces always have this soft, singing tone quality. I LOVE Chopin, but it just gets a little boring after a while.
On the other hand, a single listen of the 12 Transcendental Etudes will reveal Liszt' complete mastery of the piano's sound. He treats the piano like a percussion instrument in the Mazzeppa, like little chimes in the Feux Follet, like a singer in the Ricordanza, etc... I just don't see that level of depth in Chopin.
And his sonata speaks for itself.
But personally, I preffer the rich and inventive and sometimes zany harmonic accompaniements, while I think Chopin is too centered on melody.
I think I'm in love with Chopin....Henrah
Definitely Liszt for me. I find that chopin is more one-dimensional; not to say that he only wrote sad pieces such as the nocturnes, but his particular style of composition is practically unvaried. I can hear almost any piece by Chopin and know that it's written by him because they all have this certain sound to them. Liszt, on the other hand, is much more varied, and although he has more showiness in his music, I think the emotion is just as deep. Also, I simply like to listen to Liszt's music much more. I cant really make any comparisons about playing their music though because I have never played a piece by chopin.
You have never played a piece by Chopin? And you want to play a Transcendental Etude and a Scriabin etude? Hahaha. Not to mention your juvenile dislike for Bach, either...
chopin is the better composer, but liszt the better pianistone time liszt was playing a chopin mazurka, and adding loads of his own stuff into it, and chopin waits for him to finish spectacularly before saying "if you can't play my pieces as they were written, then... don't play them at all." he then sits down and plays it, and liszt says, "forgive me, that is indeed how they should be played".
As far as I know the symfonic poems are pieces of high quality. I don't really remember Mazappa but surely these pieces aren't crap. And they are beyond anything that Chopin could have ever done.I would say that Chopin understood the piano better but that Lizzt was the better composer.
Chopin died young. Liszt had about 50 more years to mature as an artist/composer than Chopin did. Had Chopin lived as long as Liszt, there's no way of knowing where he would have gone. I doubt he would have ever composed orchestral music (he didn't even bother to orchestrate his piano concerti), but right around the 4th Ballade and 4th Scherzo you can hear something...different in his music. You have to wonder if his nearing death caused him to write deeper music or if it simply stopped him from writing in what would have become a new style for him. No one will ever know. (I forgot to include up there that I think that during Chopin's lifetime, he was the far superior composer and were it not for his consumption would have been the finer pianist. That being said, I happen to believe that by the end of his life Liszt was a good musician, or at least a far better one than some are willing to believe.)
i found this a while ago https://www.xahlee.org/UnixResource_dir/writ/chopin_liszt.html
I never understand where this weird misconception of Chopin's music came about. Have you listened to the scherzi, the sonatas, many of the polonaises, a significant number of the preludes, etudes, and even parts of some of the nocturnes? A lot of these have nothing "soft" about them and he does, albeit less often, even abandon the singing melodies he's so famous for.
Without melody, you have no music. Anybody with talent at the piano can do the things that Liszt has done. I could go up to a piano, and start playing random chords and difficult finger movements if I've mastered the technique that requires them.
Chopin, when he wrote, would not publish a work that was not perfect. If it was too long, he cropped it... too short, he added to it... not enough melody, he brought the melody out. He would not rest until the song was perfect. Now that takes talent.
While Liszt was considered the best piano virtuoso, Chopin was by far the better musician and pianist. To me... there is no comparison.
Without melody, you have no music.
Anybody with talent at the piano can do the things that Liszt has done. I could go up to a piano, and start playing random chords and difficult finger movements if I've mastered the technique that requires them.
Chopin, when he wrote, would not publish a work that was not perfect.
If it was too long, he cropped it... too short, he added to it... not enough melody, he brought the melody out.
He would not rest until the song was perfect.
Lizst and Chopin had very different personalities. Chopin was a natural, someone with a innate understanding about how a piano should sound. Liszt was an intellectual. He used the power of his mind. He read literature and philosophy. He thought about what music should become and he experimented with harmony.