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La Campanella I, etude for piano in B minor (Transcendental Paganini Etude No. 3), S. 140/3 (LW A52/3)

 
  • Date: 1838 -1840
  • Composer: Franz Liszt
  • Period: Romantic (1820-1869)

Review

La Campanella is one of the most popular and characteristic of Franz Liszt's huge output of showy piano etudes. As is often the case, it exists in more than one form and is also a setting of music by an earlier composer.

In matters of style and showmanship, Liszt profoundly admired the great Italian violin virtuoso Niccolò Paganini (1782 - 1840). Paganini virtually invented the persona of the touring virtuoso, drawing huge audiences and commanding stellar fees on the basis of his star power. He drew unprecedented technical effects from the violin, often achieved by specially tuning the strings to notes other than standard, allowing himself to create unusual double stops and to allow the violin to ring in resonance on unexpected notes. Liszt similarly built his public performances around a carefully constructed stage persona and an ability to stun the audience with brand-new feats of virtuosity, some taking advantage of technical advances incorporated in newer pianos. He could unleash torrents of chords and whispering or chiming sounds that were new to music altogether, and in general play the part of the creative artist, the new hero of Romantic literature and music.

In 1838 he completed a set of six piano pieces collectively entitled Études d'exécution transcendante d'après Paganini (Etudes of Transcendent Performing Difficulty, after Paganini). It is number S. 140 in Searle's catalog of Liszt's work.

For the third of these etudes, Liszt turned to an earlier work, his 1831 Grande fantasie de bravoure sur La clochette, S. 420. This is an elaborate youthful work based on the finale of Paganini's Second Violin Concerto in B minor. This finale uses an old song called La Campanella (the little bell; "la clochette" in French) and accordingly uses many bell effects both in the violin and the orchestra. Liszt was an inveterate reviser of his own music and by the time he was 27 realized that the Grand Bravura Fantasy on La Clochette was an inflated, unnecessarily elaborate piece blown to overly large proportions by a lot of empty musical air.

For the new Paganini Transcendental Etudes he drastically cut and further refined the music. Even so, he had another go at the six etudes and produced a new revision in 1851 under the title Grandes études de Paganini, S. 141. (He stripped off the adjectival phrase "d'exécution transcendante" and stuck it onto another revision he produced in 1851: The former Vingt-quatre grandes etudes, S. 137 -- of which they were actually only 12 -- became the Études d'exécution transcendante, S. 139, the famous Transcendental Etudes.)

In either of its two forms Liszt's etude is the third in its set and is a dazzling, sparkling piece. It lasts about five minutes. With utmost inventiveness it plays the delightful Paganini-arranged folk theme amidst a continuous ringing of tinkling high notes. Liszt achieves many different bell effects by various means in his writing, which remains exceptionally difficult even in the rather more efficiently written later version. Properly played, it rarely fails to delight. ~ Joseph Stevenson, All Music Guide

Albums with Complete Performances of the Work

Title Date
DeGaetano Plays Liszt 2000
Edition Klavier-Festival Ruhr: Portraits (Recordings 2004 - 2005) [Box Set] 2006
Franz Liszt: Famous Piano Pieces
Für Elise: Piano Favourites 1988
Georges Cziffra: Ses Enregistrements Studio, 1956-1986 [Box Set] 2008
Great Pianists of the 20th Century: The Complete Edition (Box 2) (Box Set) 1999
Grigory Ginzburg: His Early Recordings, Vol. 1 - Liszt, Beethoven, Balakirev & Ginzburg 2008
Grigory Ginzburg: Live Recordings, Vol. 1: Liszt, Ginzburg 2004
Grigory Ginzburg: Live Recordings, Vol. 2, CD 2: Liszt, Mozart, Ravel, Rubinstein 2005
György Cziffra performs Liszt, Strauss, Chopin, Rossini, Brahms & Schumann
Ignace Jan Paderewski: The 1911 / 1930 Original 78s
Ignacy Jan Paderewski 1999
Ignacy Jan Paderewski: Minuet & Other Favourites 2005
Kuzmin Plays Liszt 1993
La Campanella 1973 2009
La Campanella: Favourite Piano Encores 2007
Leo Sirota plays Chopin, Schumann & Others
Levitzki: Complete Recordings, Vol. 1 2002
Liszt: Masterpieces for Solo Piano [Exclusive Free Sampler Included] 2003
Liszt: Piano Concerto No. 1; Hungarian Rhapsodies; Schumann: Sonata No. 2 in G minor 2003
Liszt: Piano Concerto No. 1; Hungarian Rhapsodies; Schumann: Sonata No. 2 in G minor 2003
Liszt: Piano Works 2006
Liszt: Piano Works [Box Set] 2001
Panorama: Passion for Piano, Vol. 2 2001
Piano Collection [Capitol] 1992
Piano Duo 1
The Pupils of Liszt
The Pupils of Liszt: José Vianna da Motta & Arthur Friedheim 2006
Three Great Danish Woman Pianists, Vol. 2 1977
Une vie pour le piano [Box Set] 2008
Welte-Mignon Piano 2001
Young Brendel: The Vox Years [Box Set] 2001

Albums with Excerpt Performances of the Work

Title Date
100 Piano Classics 2005
Geza Anda: Solo Piano Recordings
Selections from the Definitive Collection (Series Sampler) 1998
The Best Of Liszt 1995
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