Franz Liszt Influences

1844 Words4 Pages

Liszt was the inventor of modern day music. When you think of rock n' roll, Franz Liszt might not be the first name that comes to mind; But the classical pianist, born 200 years ago, was in many ways the first rock star of all time (“Staff”). On his piano he was a master and he wrote an Dimick 2 enormous amount of influencing pieces that most of modern musicians use. The influences that shape new musical trends are diffuse, complex, and impossible to codify, but if one person can be credited as being the fountainhead of modern music it is Franz Liszt. According to The Telegraph by Stephen Hough A clearer and more direct path first navigated by Liszt was the stark rhythmic primitivism heard in some of the late piano …show more content…

Schubert was a remarkable talent. Melodies poured out of him. He wrote 600 songs, and, like today's songwriters, his intention was to write music that would be instantly enjoyable. Schubert came to many of the same conclusions as modern songwriters – that writing random song after song is no use, that creating 20 songs and a journey is a much more satisfying form. And so that's what he did with his song cycles. They are longer pieces where people go on a journey and each song forms the next bit of the story He wrote songs about love and negative things just like most metal musicians (“Art …show more content…

The term “Art rock” is arguably interchangeable with “Progressive rock” Progressive rock bands pushed “rocks technical and compositional boundaries” by going beyond by going beyond the standard rock or popular verse-chorus (Introduction). Additionally, the arrangements often incorporated elements drawn from classical, jazz and world music. Progressive rock bands sometimes used “concept albums that made unified statements, usually telling an epic story or tackling a grand overarching theme.”(Introduction)
Early progressive rock groups expanded the timbral palette of the then-traditional rock instrumentation of the guitar, organ, bass, and drums by adding instruments more typical of jazz music. Some unique instruments from the jazz period - most noticeably the Moog Synthesizer and the Mellotron - have become closely associated with the Progressive rock genre of music (Jazz-rock 1) Drawing on their classical, and jazz experimental influences, progressive rock artists are more likely to explore time signatures other than the usual 4/4 and tempo changes (an Introduction 3). Melody and harmonies in Progressive rock are often supplanted by jazz and classical influences. Melodies are more likely to be modal than based on the pentatonic scale, and are more likely to comprise longer, developing longer more in depth ones rather than short catchy ones. Album art and packaging is often an important

Open Document