Liszt has been played for over a hundred years now. I wanted to do something faithful to the original. I haven't yet heard a manual performance that doesn't have all kinds of tempo variations - typically a slowing, especially around the ascents in the sections herewith. Liszt marked certain other sections "scherz." or "Capricciosamente" where one might take more liberties. But, yes, using MIDI, sequencers, digital pianos, soft synths, etc. it is possible to create a performance that otherwise would not be heard.Sincerely,Jim Ritchie
Goldberg, thanks for your frank reply. Of course it's sequenced - I did it myself.Liszt has been played for over a hundred years now. I wanted to do something faithful to the original. I haven't yet heard a manual performance that doesn't have all kinds of tempo variations - typically a slowing, especially around the ascents in the sections herewith. Liszt marked certain other sections "scherz." or "Capricciosamente" where one might take more liberties. But, yes, using MIDI, sequencers, digital pianos, soft synths, etc. it is possible to create a performance that otherwise would not be heard.Sincerely,Jim Ritchie