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  1. Liszt: Sonata in B minor; Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2; Igor Stravinsky: Pétrouchka by Shura Cherkassky released in 1986. Find album reviews, track li...

  2. Versions. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for Liszt: Sonata In B Minor; Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 / Stravinsky: Pétrouchka by Liszt, Stravinsky - Shura Cherkassky. Compare versions and buy on Discogs.

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  3. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1986 CD release of "Liszt: Sonata In B Minor; Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 / Stravinsky: Pétrouchka" on Discogs.

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  4. Mar 1, 1987 · On NIM 5045 are the Liszt B minor Sonata and Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2, and Stravinsky's ''Petrushka.''

    • ‘Nothing But Sheer Racket’
    • Stirring Emotions
    • Four Movements Or One?

    Liszt’s Sonata was publicly played for the first time a few years later in 1857, by one of his students, Hans von Bülow. The two of them grew even closer in the same year, when Bülow married Liszt’s daughter, Cosima. (Bülow was a great champion of compositions said to be unplayable. He also premiered Tschaikovsky’s famous first Piano Concerto in B ...

    Whatever its meaning, the Sonata is an incredibly powerful work, inspiring some performers to excessively emotional performances. One of the most vehement of them was recorded by the German Ludwig Hoffmann in 1977. Here is his playing beginning from the same D major theme where we left off in the previous example, all the way to a tumultuous sectio...

    One of the most fascinating aspects of Liszt’s Sonata is that, depending on how we look at the score (and more importantly, listen to the music), it can be convincingly argued that it abides by two completely different structures – and does so simultaneously! Viewed from one angle, it can be explained as one giant movement in traditional “sonata fo...

  5. May 4, 2013 · Liszt - Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 (Audio+Sheet) [Cziffra] - YouTube. PianoJFAudioSheet. 26.7K subscribers. Subscribed. 9.6K. 1.1M views 11 years ago. György Cziffra, piano 📌 Support my...

    • 10 min
    • 1.1M
    • PianoJFAudioSheet
  6. People also ask

  7. This edition contains some notation errors: The "8" sign under a note always means "add the lower octave" in Liszt's notation. For example, the last note of the sonata should not be removed and placed one octave lower, as rendered in this edition, but the right way is to merely add the lower octave, thus ending the sonata in an octave chord.