Hungarian Rhapsody No. 5
Composition by Franz Liszt
Hungarian Rhapsody No. 5, S.244/5, in E minor, is the fifth in a set of 19 Hungarian Rhapsodies by composer Franz Liszt. It is marked Lento, con duolo. The piece was given the nickname Héroïde-élégiaque by the composer himself. It is very different from his other Hungarian Rhapsodies, as it does not follow the intro - lassan - friska structure and can be viewed as the darkest and most melancholic of the set. It was composed in 1847 and later arranged for orchestra.
Sources of the melodies
The tunes in this rhapsody originate from a Hungarian dance by József Kossovits, entitled Hősi elégia.
External links
- Hungarian Rhapsody No. 5: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
- v
- t
- e
Hungarian Rhapsodies by Franz Liszt
- No. 1
- No. 2
- No. 3
- No. 4
- No. 5 (Héroïde-élégiaque)
- No. 6
- No. 7
- No. 8 (Capriccio)
- No. 9 (Pesther Carneval)
- No. 10 (Preludio)
- No. 11
- No. 12
- No. 13
- No. 14
- No. 15 (Rákóczi-Marsch)
- No. 16 (Budapest Munkácsy-Festlichkeiten)
- No. 17
- No. 18 (Ungarische Ausstellung in Budapest)
- No. 19
This article about a classical composition is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e