Années de pèlerinage
Années de pèlerinage (French for Years of Pilgrimage) (S.160, S.161, S.163) is a set of three suites for solo piano by Franz Liszt. Much of it derives from his earlier work, Album d'un voyageur, his first major published piano cycle, which was composed between 1835 and 1838 and published in 1842.[1] Années de pèlerinage is widely considered a masterwork and summation of Liszt's musical style. The third volume is notable as an example of his later style. Composed well after the first two volumes, it displays less virtuosity and more harmonic experimentation.
The title Années de pèlerinage refers to Goethe's famous novel of self-realization, Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship, and especially its sequel Wilhelm Meister's Journeyman Years (whose original title Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre meant Years of Wandering or Years of Pilgrimage, the latter being used for its first French translation). Liszt clearly places the work in line with the Romantic literature of his time, prefacing most pieces with a literary passage from writers such as Schiller, Byron or Senancour, and, in an introduction to the entire work, writing:
Having recently travelled to many new countries, through different settings and places consecrated by history and poetry; having felt that the phenomena of nature and their attendant sights did not pass before my eyes as pointless images but stirred deep emotions in my soul, and that between us a vague but immediate relationship had established itself, an undefined but real rapport, an inexplicable but undeniable communication, I have tried to portray in music a few of my strongest sensations and most lively impressions.[2]
The suites
Première année: Suisse
"Première année: Suisse" ("First Year: Switzerland"), S.160, was published in 1855. Composed between 1848 and 1854, most of the pieces (Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8 and 9) are revisions of Album d'un voyageur: Part 1: Impressions et Poesies. "Au lac de Wallenstadt" (No. 2) and "Au bord d'une source" (No. 4) received only minor revisions, while "La Chapelle de Guillaume Tell" (No. 1), "Vallée d'Obermann" (No. 6), and especially "Les cloches de Genève" (No. 9) were more extensively rewritten.[3] "Églogue" (No. 7) was published separately, and "Orage" (No. 5) was included as part of the definitive version of the cycle.[4]
- Chapelle de Guillaume Tell (William Tell's Chapel) in C major – For this depiction of the Swiss struggle for liberation Liszt chooses a motto from Schiller as caption, "All for one – one for all." A noble passage marked lento opens the piece, followed by the main melody of the freedom fighters. A horn call rouses the troops, echoes down the valleys, and mixes with the sound of the heroic struggle.[5]
- Au lac de Wallenstadt (At Lake Wallenstadt) in A♭ major – Liszt's caption is from Byron's Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (Canto 3 LXVIII – CV): "Thy contrasted lake / With the wild world I dwell in is a thing / Which warns me, with its stillness, to forsake / Earth's troubled waters for a purer spring." In her Mémoires, Liszt's mistress and traveling companion of the time, Marie d'Agoult, recalls their time by Lake Wallenstadt, writing, "Franz wrote for me there a melancholy harmony, imitative of the sigh of the waves and the cadence of oars, which I have never been able to hear without weeping."[6]
- Pastorale in E major –
- Au bord d'une source (Beside a Spring) in A♭ major – Liszt's caption is from Schiller: “In the whispering coolness begins young nature’s play.”
- Orage (Storm) in C minor – Liszt's caption is from Byron's Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (Canto 3 LXVIII – CV): “But where of ye, O tempests! is the goal? / Are ye like those within the human breast? / Or do ye find, at length, like eagles, some high nest?”
- Vallée d'Obermann (Obermann's Valley) in E minor – Inspired by Senancour's novel of the same title, set in Switzerland, with a hero overwhelmed and confused by nature, suffering from ennui and longing.,[7] finally concluding that only our feelings are true.[8] The captions include one from Byron's Childe Harold's Pilgrimage ("Could I embody and unbosom now / That which is most within me,--could I wreak / My thoughts upon expression, and thus throw / Soul--heart--mind--passions--feelings--strong or weak-- / All that I would have sought, and all I seek, / Bear, know, feel--and yet breathe--into one word, / And that one word were Lightning, I would speak; / But as it is, I live and die unheard, / With a most voiceless thought, sheathing it as a sword.") and two from Senancour's Obermann, which include the crucial questions, “What do I want? Who am I? What do I ask of nature?"
- Eglogue (Eclogue) in A♭ major – Liszt's caption is from 'Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (Canto 3 LXVIII): "The morn is up again, the dewy morn, / With breath all incense, and with cheek all bloom, / Laughing the clouds away with playful scorn, / And living as if earth contained no tomb!"
- Le mal du pays (Homesickness) in E minor –
- Les cloches de Genève: Nocturne (The Bells of Geneva: Nocturne) in B major – Liszt's caption is from Byron's Childe Harold's Pilgrimage: “I live not in myself, but I become / Portion of that around me”
Vallée d'Obermann (Obermann's Valley)
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Deuxième année: Italie
"Deuxième année: Italie" ("Second Year: Italy"), S.161, was composed between 1837 and 1849 and published in 1858 by Schott. Nos. 4 to 6 are revisions of Tre sonetti del Petrarca (Three sonnets of Petrarch), which was composed around 1839–1846 and published in 1846.
- Sposalizio (Marriage of the Virgin, a painting by Raphael) in E major
- Il penseroso (The Thinker, a statue by Michelangelo) in C♯ minor
- Canzonetta del Salvator Rosa (Canzonetta of Salvator Rosa; this song Vado ben spesso cangiando loco was in fact written by Giovanni Bononcini[9]) in A major
- Sonetto 47 del Petrarca (Petrarch's Sonnet 47) in D♭ major
- Sonetto 104 del Petrarca (Petrarch's Sonnet 104) in E major
- Sonetto 123 del Petrarca (Petrarch's Sonnet 123) in A♭ major
- Après une lecture de Dante: Fantasia Quasi Sonata (After Reading Dante: Fantasia Quasi Sonata) in D minor
- Venezia e Napoli (Venice and Naples). Composed in 1859 as a partial revision of an earlier set with the same name composed around 1840. Published in 1861 as a supplement to the Second Year
- Gondoliera (Gondolier's Song) in F♯ major – Based on the song "La biondina in gondoletta" by Giovanni Battista Peruchini.
- Canzone (Canzone) in E♭ minor – Based on the gondolier's song "Nessun maggior dolore" from Rossini's Otello.
- Tarantella (Tarantella) in G minor – Uses themes by Guillaume-Louis Cottrau, 1797–1847.
Troisième année
"Troisième année" ("Third Year"), S.163, was published 1883; Nos. 1–4 and 7 composed in 1877; No. 5, 1872; No. 6, 1867.
- Angélus! Prière aux anges gardiens (Angelus! Prayer to the Guardian Angels) in E major – dedicated to Daniela von Bülow, Liszt's granddaughter, first daughter of Hans von Bülow and Cosima Liszt and wife of art historian Henry Thode. It was written for both melodeon, piano, or an instrument that combines both, for Liszt wrote "piano-melodium" on his manuscript[10]
- Aux cyprès de la Villa d'Este I: Thrénodie (To the Cypresses of the Villa d'Este I: Threnody) in G minor
- Aux cyprès de la Villa d'Este II: Thrénodie (To the Cypresses of the Villa d'Este II: Threnody) in E minor – The Villa d'Este described in these two threnodies is in Tivoli, near Rome. It is famous for its beautiful cypresses and fountains
- Les jeux d'eaux à la Villa d'Este (The Fountains of the Villa d'Este) in F♯ major – Over the music, Liszt placed the inscription, "Sed aqua quam ego dabo ei, fiet in eo fons aquae salientis in vitam aeternam" ("But the water that I shall give him shall become in him a well of water springing up into eternal life," from the Gospel of John)
- Sunt lacrymae rerum/En mode hongrois (There are Tears for Things/In the Hungarian Mode) in A minor – Dedicated to Hans von Bülow.
- Marche funèbre, En mémoire de Maximilian I, Empereur du Mexique (Funeral March, In memory of Emperor Maximilian of Mexico) in F minor
- Sursum corda (Lift Up Your Hearts) in E major
Recordings
There have been numerous recordings made of the suites, in both complete and incomplete form.
Year | Pianist | Section | Label and number |
---|---|---|---|
1928, 1937, 1928 | Claudio Arrau | Incomplete | |
1939 | Béla Bartók | Sursum Corda (3e année) | |
1947 | Vladimir Horowitz | Au bord d'une source (1ere année) | RCA Victor Red Seal |
1947 | Dinu Lipatti | Sonetto 104 del Petrarca (2e année) | EMI CZS 767163 2 |
1950 | Wilhelm Kempff | 3 pieces from 1ere année, 5 pieces from 2e année, 1 piece from Supplement | Decca / London, once issued on Great Pianists of the 20th Century |
1951 | Vladimir Horowitz | Sonetto 104 del Petrarca (2e année) | RCA Victor Red Seal |
1969 | Claudio Arrau | Incomplete | Philips Classics |
1973 | Jerome Rose | Complete | Vox CD3X 3004 |
1974 | Wilhelm Kempff | 2e année: Italie (minus Dante Sonata) & Gondoliera from Supplement | Deutsche Grammophon |
1975 | Vladimir Horowitz | Au bord d'une source (1ere année) | RCA Victor Red Seal 82876 50754 2 |
1977 | Lazar Berman | Complete | Deutsche Grammophon DGG 4372062 |
1980 | Alfred Brendel | 3e année: Italie (3 pieces: No. 2, No. 4, No. 5) | Philips Classics 9500 775 |
1986 | Zoltán Kocsis | 3e année: Italie | Philips Classics 462312-2 |
1986 | Alfred Brendel | 1ere année: Suisse | Philips Classics 462312-2 |
1986 | Alfred Brendel | 2e année: Italie | Philips Classics 462312-2 |
1986[11] | Tamás Vásáry | 2e année: Italie | BBC music Magazine |
1989, 1984, 1983 | Claudio Arrau | Incomplete | Philips Classics |
1989 | Jeffrey Swann | Complete | Akademia Records |
1989[12] | Roberto Poli | 2e année: Italie | OnClassical |
1990 | Jorge Bolet | 2e année: Italie | Decca / London ASIN: B00000E2MO |
1990 | Jorge Bolet | 1e année: Suisse | Decca / London ASIN: B00000E2MN |
1990 | Alan Marks | Annees de Pelerinage, Vol. 2 | Nimbus Records |
1991 | Louis Lortie | 2e année: Italie | Chandos Records |
1992 | Jenő Jandó | Annees de Pelerinage, Vol. 1 | Naxos Records 8.550548 |
1992 | Jenő Jandó | Annees de Pelerinage, Vol. 2 | Naxos Records 8.550549 |
1992 | Jenő Jandó | Annees de Pelerinage, Vol. 3 | Naxos Records 8.550550 |
1995, 1996, 1990 | Leslie Howard | Complete | Hyperion Records |
2001 | Frederic Chiu | Italie, Venezia e Napoli | Harmonia Mundi |
2001, 2003, 2005 | Ksenia Nosikova | Complete | Centaur Records |
2003 | Aldo Ciccolini | Complete | EMI Classics 5851772 |
2003 | Yoram Ish-Hurwitz | 2e année: Italie | Turtle Records |
2004 | Yoram Ish-Hurwitz | 1ere année: Suisse | Turtle Records |
2004 | Yoram Ish-Hurwitz | 3e année | Turtle Records |
2004 | Nicholas Angelich | Complete | MIRARE |
2005 | Stephen Hough | 1ere année: Suisse | Hyperion Records |
2008 | Daniel Grimwood | Complete but without Venezia e Napoli, S.162 | sfz music SFZM0208 |
2010 | Louis Lortie | Complete | Chandos Records CHAN10662(2) |
2010 | Mūza Rubackytė | Complete | Lyrinx Records LYR 2216 |
2010, 2011 | Michael Korstick | Complete | CPO 777 478-2 |
2011 | Julian Gorus | Complete | Hänssler Classic 98.627 |
2011 | Alexander Krichel | 2e année: Italie | Telos Music |
2011 | Bertrand Chamayou | Complete | Naive |
2011 | Seung-Yeun Huh | Complete but without Venezia e Napoli, S.162 | Ars Musici 232406 |
2012 | Sinae Lee | Complete | Nimbus Records N16202 |
2012 | Costantino Catena | Venezia e Napoli | Camerata Tokyo CMCD-15133-4 |
2012 | Reiko Kuwahara | 1ere année: Suisse | Denmoukeikaku/DPIC Entertainment |
2013 | Alexei Grynyuk | Sonetti del Petrarca
Complete Sonetti (2e année) |
Orchid Classics ORC100031 |
2013 | Eisuke Nemoto | 2e année: Italie, Venezia e Napoli | Denmoukeikaku/DPIC Entertainment |
2014 | Simone Jennarelli | 1e année: Suisse | CDBaby / SmartCgArt 889211196166 |
Video
- Alfred Brendel (Deutsche Grammophon) DVD
Score
Dover Publications has issued a complete edition in one bound volume. Also included is an appendix of related works including Lyon (from the first book of Album d'un voyageur), Apparitions, Tre sonetti del Petrarca, and the original version of Venezia e Napoli.
In Literature
Haruki Murakami's novel Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage centers on the movement "Le Mal du pays," and derives its title from the Années.
References
- ↑ Hamilton, Kenneth, "Liszt's early and Weimar piano works," in The Cambridge Companion to Liszt, ed. Kenneth Hamiton, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2005.
- ↑ Lucie Renaud, Lucie, translated by Peter Christensen, Notes for the Analekta album Années de pèlerinage – Suisse (Years of Pilgrimage – Switzerland), André Laplante, https://www.analekta.com/en/album/Liszt-Annees-De-Pelerinage-Suisse.591.html, accessed Sept. 8, 2010
- ↑ Hamilton, pp. 66ff.
- ↑ Lucie Renaud, Lucie, translated by Peter Christensen, Notes for the Analekta album Années de pèlerinage – Suisse (Years of Pilgrimage – Switzerland), André Laplante, https://www.analekta.com/en/album/Liszt-Annees-De-Pelerinage-Suisse.591.html, accessed Sept. 8, 2010
- ↑ Watson, Derek, Liszt, The Master Musicians, J.M. Dent & Sons Ltd., London, 1989, p. 244.
- ↑ Watson, p. 244.
- ↑ Hamilton, p. 68.
- ↑ Watson, p. 244.
- ↑ Naxos Direct Archived 2013-09-28 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ "Années de pèlerinage" Ferenc Liszt, Edited by Imre Sulyok, Imre Mezo. (Shanghai Music Publishing House, 2007) ISBN 978-7-80751-029-1
- ↑ published May 1997
- ↑ published 2008
External links
- Première Année: Suisse, Deuxième Année: Italie, Deuxième Année, Supplement: Venezia e Napoli, Troisième Année: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
- Performance of Première année: Suisse by Cecile Licad from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in MP3 format