
"After Liszt, that was no longer the case a conductor was someone who shaped the music in an intense musical way, who played the orchestra as an instrument."Īnd, of course, Liszt would go on to compose around 1,400 works. "Before Liszt, a conductor was someone who just facilitated the performance, who would keep people together or beat the time, indicate the entries," Hough says. Later on in his life, Liszt became interested in conducting, and he re-defined that role as well: He started to work with individual musicians to help them shape the sounds that he was after. I think he also realized how superficial a lot of audiences' appreciation might be, and he wanted to retire and to do something more meaningful." So, he was never going to be satisfied just with pleasing the countesses. "I mean, he even considered the priesthood in his teens. He was someone who was always searching," Hough says. "He wasn't someone who thought life just consisted of food, drink and all the pleasure you could wring out of it. Even the name "recital" was his invention.īut although his life was the kind many musicians dream of, Liszt walked away from it all in his 30s. Everything we recognize about the modern piano recital - think Keith Jarrett, Glenn Gould, Tori Amos or Elton John - Liszt did first. He was the first performer to stride out from the wings of the concert hall to take his seat at the piano. He'd whip his head around while he played, his long hair flying, beads of sweat shooting into the crowd.

Liszt deliberately placed the piano in profile to the audience so they could see his face. Roger Daltrey as Franz List in Ken Russell's 1975 Lisztomania. He was someone who, like a great speaker, was able to capture an audience." "He was someone who seduced people - not just in a sexual way, but in a dramatic way. "Liszt was a very dynamic personality," Hough says. Like many contemporary classical pianists, Hough is obsessed with Liszt - not only because he was really good, but also because he revolutionized the art of performance. "We hear about women throwing their clothes onto the stage and taking his cigar butts and placing them in their cleavages," says Stephen Hough, a world-renowned concert pianist. It was a phenomenon the great German poet Heinrich Heine dubbed "Lisztomania." Women would literally attack him: tear bits of his clothing, fight over broken piano strings and locks of his shoulder-length hair. In the mid-19th century, Liszt was tearing up the polite salons and concert halls of Europe with his virtuoso performances.

But the classical pianist, born 200 years ago today, was in many ways the first rock star of all time. When you think of rock n' roll, Franz Liszt might not be the first name that comes to mind.
