Hi all,
since I have spotted that there are Gottschalk-fans among us, I have started this thread, in which various topics and questions related to the mentioned composer, Louis Moreau Gottschalk, can be discussed.-
I'll start with a question I cannot answer properly:
@Visitor: I think, you are a marvellous Gottschalkian! And you asked, in the Repertoire-section, for Gottschalk's connection to Portugal, and you added the "Chant Du Martyr" as video:
Thank you! I love al, your posts of Gottschalk and I must go back and study them more
I have unrelated question. I am familiar w his life including early childhood how he eventually ends up,I France after at first not succeeding in going the his. Trriumphant return as an American trained in France and his Rick star career ( indeed many do not know how incredible his tour was, he was probably the most high volume traveling concert pianist and he played in many small remote venues that others ignored).
I follow him to the tropics then eventually to SouthAmerica
However I am trying to make Portugal fit. How does it fit? Did he spend much time there or was influenced perhaps travel there while he studies in France?
This work is mentioned in the book Portuguese Piano Music (2013) [by Nancy Lee Harper]
The listing just tied him to the period in19th century but I try to figure out why include him in a Portuguese piano music book
Any relation? It mentions oops criollos and le Poete mourant
Thanks 
And I'll answer the following way:
Hi visitor!
I appreciate very much that you are a
MARVELLOUS Gottschalkian, it seems!
But being not too accustomed (since I'm German) to colloquial English, I can only try to answer your question as far as I can, here.
At first: The "Chant Du Martyr" is also known as "Grand Caprice religieuse", or even as "Poliuto" (which is a very very rare name of it, but can be found in the OPAC of the "Biblioteca Digital Hispanica". Check it out! )
Furthermore, Gottschalk composed one of my absolute favourite, mindblasting pieces, the "variations on the (must be a former) Portuguese National Anthem", which can be heard here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ISplbgqvb7kand seen here:
https://imslp.org/wiki/Variations_de_concert_sur_l%E2%80%99hymne_portugais,_Op.91_%28Gottschalk,_Louis_Moreau%29About special concerts given in Potugal (or visits there, @visitor,

) , my book-sources don't tell too much. Maybe I have to check the "Notes of a pianist" thoroughly.
___
You are right in other points, too!! Gottschalk was known as a "itinerant" pianist. He was pupil of Stamaty, as was Saint-Saens, too, but in the USA he travelled, e.g., more than 80000 miles, through dangerous areas, via trains, which were attacked by indians or gangsters, he had two special chickering-grands, which he called "mastodons", but which aren't existing today anymore, since they might have sunk in a ship-accident into the ocean, but he was in Europe, too, Switzerland, Spain, France, (in France he had debutated), but you are awfully right: To "Portugal" itself, my sources don't say too much. But there are strong connections to Brazil, a country to which Gottschalk had travelled too, concerning the "Variations on the Portuguese National Anthem".
If you are interested, I will look it up in my book "Bamboula!", by S. Frederick Starr, but many of the connections referring to Gottschalk are difficult and obscure, so it may take a longer time!
But I'm happy, that I found people here, to whom Gottschalk isn't unknown, and isn't unwelcome!!
I hope I could help for a first step, here, and..please let me know about further questions / wishes!
Very cordially, 8_octaves!!!