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Funérailles : ウィキペディア英語版
Funérailles

''Funérailles'' is the 7th and perhaps the most famous piece in ''Harmonies poétiques et religieuses'' (''Poetic and Religious Harmonies''), a collection of piano pieces by Franz Liszt. It was an elegy written in October 1849 in response to the crushing of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 by the Habsburgs.
''Funérailles'' has been recorded by pianists such as Claudio Arrau, Vladimir Horowitz, Arthur Rubinstein, John Ogdon, Martha Argerich, Evgeny Kissin, Sviatoslav Richter, Arnaldo Cohen, Arcadi Volodos and Krystian Zimerman.
==Composition==
The piece is composed of four distinct sections, with three main themes repeating throughout. The first section, labeled "Introduzione," is a dark and gloomy adagio movement whose opening bars represent the sound of muffled bells from across a dreary battlefield. Its forlorn right-hand chords are offset by thundering, sforzando left-hand tremolos, which are interrupted and calmed into submission by the sudden call of battle trumpets, leading into the piece's next theme.
In its second section, the piece presents a somber F-minor funeral march that modulates into a stunning ''lagrimoso'' A-major melody, relying heavily on augmented fifths to convey what can be viewed as a sort of dismal sense of hope.
The piece then leads into a heroic, powerful warrior march, whose valiant and triumphant chords are backed by powerful cascades of ''ostinato'' octaves in the bass. This theme builds in intensity until it reaches a fortissimo peak, at which point it breaks suddenly into its conclusion.
It is in this conclusion that Liszt reintroduces each theme from the piece, beginning with the funeral march theme, this time more powerful and emphatic. He then briefly reiterates parts of the A♭-major theme before bringing back the left-hand octave-driven warrior march. However, rather than allowing this theme's intensity to take control again, he limits its duration and ends the piece with a sudden drop into quiet, open staccatissimo chords.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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