No, I don't think so.
But I did find this really interesting passage about the Reminisces, taken from the Dover book "Franz Liszt: Piano Transcriptions from French and Italian Operas" and written by Charles Suttoni:
"This great fantasy was written in 1841, and by calling it "Don Juan," Liszt may well have been thinking of the work's elaborate and similarly titled production then current at the Paris Opera. But, whatever its source, the Lisztian vision of "Don Giovanni" (1787) juxtaposes and contrasts three highpoints of the drama. Its opening concentrates on the Don and the slain Commendatore by combining the music of their Act II graveyard scene with that of their awesome confrontation at the opera's climax where the Don is dragged off to Hell. The lyric middle section gives the Don's seductive first-act duet with Zerlina, "La ci darem la mano," followed by variations, and the Don's Act I aria "Fin ch'han dal vino" provides the brilliant finale. This monumental work has, as Busoni noted, "the almost symbolic significance of a pianistic summit." It was first published in 1843 with a revised edition following in 1877."
Well, the point is in the first sentence but I thought I'd post the rest for an even more thorough understanding of the piece (for those who happen to be reading and are not already familiar with Mozart's opera).