Classical Music | Piano Music

Franz Liszt

Après une Lecture de Dante  Play

Wayne Weng Piano

Recorded on 07/30/2014, uploaded on 12/10/2014

Musician's or Publisher's Notes

With the gloomy chords of “Kondor Rock,” [by György Kurtág; it preceded Après une Lecture de Dante in the recital] we descend to hell in Liszt’s Après une lecture de Dante.  Even without detailed programmatic descriptions, the imagery projected in this pianistic tone poem is extremely vivid.  The piece features Liszt’s idiosyncratic virtuoso piano writing, containing massive chords and endless octaves, and reflects Liszt’s reaction to Dante Alighieri’s Inferno. The work opens with a series of brassy tritones (an interval that symbolizes death, and in this context, the gates of hell).    The ominous first section eventually takes a fateful turn as it builds up to a triumphant chorale, which turns into an erotic yet tearful portrayal of the episode in the second circle of hell where Dante and Virgil meet Francesca da Rimini and her lover Paolo.  After another stormy section, we get a glimpse of the Paradiso as the piece builds to a victorious conclusion.    Wayne Weng

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Après une Lecture de Dante    Franz Liszt

One of the greatest epic poems in Western literature, Dante Alighieri’s The Divine Comedy inspired two compositions from the pen of Franz Liszt. The composer was introduced to the works of Dante in the 1830s and soon after composed a two-movement piece titled Fragment after Dante, which he premiered in Vienna in 1839. Liszt later returned to the work in 1849, concurrent with the composition of the much grander Dante Symphony, and revised it into a lengthy, single-movement composition. Giving the work a new title, Après une Lecture de Dante, borrowed from Victor Hugo, Liszt made it the last installment in the second volume of his Années de Pèlerinage (“Years of Pilgrimage”).

Liszt termed the work a Fantasia quasi Sonata. Though it is often referred to as the “Dante Sonata,” it is strictly speaking certainly more the former than the latter. Structured quite freely, it is based on two distinct themes, with the second being a transformation of the first. After a menacing introduction of tritones and dissonant harmonies, Liszt arrives at the key of D minor and the chromatic first theme depicting the tortured souls Dante witnessed in Hell. Liszt also used D minor in the Dante Symphony and the key has a rather infamous reputation throughout classical music of being associated with death. This theme is developed to great extent before the arrival of the second theme. Shifting to F-sharp major, Liszt now portrays the joy of those in Heaven. The chromatic first theme also reappears, though greatly transformed, and now appropriate for the heavenly vision. Ultimately arriving at the key of D major, the ending comes not in gentle tones that one might expect of a depiction of Paradise but instead with grandiloquent chords in D major. The final cadence, plagal in nature, concludes with resonant open fifths, hearkening back to the religious works of centuries past.      Joseph DuBose