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  1. 11 de nov. de 2020 · What singles out Liszt’s hands is the small amount of connective tissue between the fingers that only begins at the very base of each finger making large spans on the piano easily achievable. It may also account for the astonishing dexterity Liszt displays in his piano music.

    • Franz Liszt

      Franz Liszt Biography. Franz Liszt (1811 – 1886) was a...

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  2. 26 de jul. de 2019 · How far could the great pianists stretch their hands? We take a look at just how big the hands of the star virtuosos were, from Rachmaninov to Liszt and Barenboim to Lang Lang.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Franz_LisztFranz Liszt - Wikipedia

    Franz Liszt [n 1] (22 October 1811 – 31 July 1886) was a Hungarian composer, virtuoso pianist, conductor and teacher of the Romantic period. With a diverse body of work spanning more than six decades, he is considered to be one of the most prolific and influential composers of his era, and his piano works continue to be widely performed and ...

  4. 13 de sept. de 2022 · Read full article here: https://www.cmuse.org/franz-liszt-hands/For pianists and admirers of famous piano players, the question often arises about hand size ...

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    • CMUSE - Music News and Entertainment
    • Play Liszt's Consolation
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    • Rachmaninoff Had Huge Hands
    • Some Composers Were Not Pianists

    b7 ("flat seven") is the black key in between 6 and 7 Franz Liszt must have had extra long and unusually strong little fingers. His work relies on the little fingers of both hands constantly. He does this in a way that other composers do not feature. And his hand was very large. Liszt, along with Rachmaninoff, is said to have had Marfan's Syndrome,...

    Franz Schubertdid not have large hands. Thus his accompaniment patterns can be downright maddening to learn. Many teachers have told me that Schubert never really had a piano teacherand figured it all out by himself. I seem to remember the term, "aberrant technique" being bandied about in reference to Schubert's piano music. But listen to the Schub...

    Brahms was an accomplished pianist, and much of his piano figuration is brutally uncomfortable. This leads me to believe that he had some peculiarity of anatomy that made such uncomfortable positions easy for him. Chopin had, by all accounts, not large hands, but used what he had to tremendous advantage. Of all the piano composers, Chopin's demands...

    Pianists, who say his music requires a "chimpanzee" to play properly, often joke about Rachmaninoff. It's a remark probably due to the huge size of a chimp's hands, and is a tremendous compliment to chimpanzees everywhere. Schumann, of course, destroyed his hand in a misguided attempt to strengthen his fourth finger. Weakness in the fourth finger i...

    Remember finally, that of all the great classical composers, only Berlioz and Wagner were not great pianists as well. Berlioz, genius composer of the monumental Symphonie Fantastique, was said to be able to play only three chords on the guitar. That was the entirety of his physical musical expertise! Maybe fingers don't matter at all!

  5. Franz Liszt (Raiding, Imperio austríaco, 22 de octubre de 1811-Bayreuth, Imperio alemán, 31 de julio de 1886) fue un compositor austrohúngaro romántico, [1] un virtuoso pianista, director de orquesta, profesor de piano, arreglista y seglar franciscano.

  6. Franz Liszt, initially condemning Thalberg's use of this technique, later adopted it himself, for example in his Grandes études on themes of Paganini. By 1840, Felix Mendelssohn, inspired by hearing Thalberg play, was occasionally using this technique in his own compositions.