Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2
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Hungarian Rhapsody Number 2 (S.244/2) is the second in a set of 19 Hungarian Rhapsodies by composer Franz Liszt, and is by far the most famous of the set. Perhaps no other piano solo has enjoyed such widespread popularity, offering the pianist the opportunity to reveal exceptional skill as a virtuoso, while providing the listener with an immediate and irresistible musical appeal.
In both the original piano solo form and in the orchestrated version this composition has enjoyed widespread use in animated cartoons. Its themes have also served as the basis of several popular songs.
Background
The Hungarian-born composer and pianist, Franz Liszt, (1811 - 1886) was strongly influenced by the music heard in his youth, particularly Hungarian gypsy music, with its unique gypsy scale, rhythmic spontaneity and direct, seductive expression. These elements would eventually play a significant role in Liszt's compositions. Although this prolific composer's works are highly varied in style, much of his output is nationalistic in character, the Hungarian Rhapsodies being an ideal example.
Composed in 1847 and dedicated to Count Laslo Teleky, Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 was first published as a piano solo in 1851 by Senff and Ricordi. Its immediate success and popularity on the concert stage soon led to an orchestrated version, arranged by the composer in collaboration with Franz Doppler, and published by Franz Schubert. In addition to the orchestral version, the composer arranged a Piano Duet version in 1874, published by Schubert the following year.
By the late 19th century and early 20th century, the excruciating technical challenges of the piano solo version led to its acceptance as the "unofficial standard" by which every notable pianist would "prove his salt", usually as a smashing finale. It had become an expected staple of virtually every performance of the greatest pianists of the time. Offering an outstanding contrast to the serious and dramatic Lassan, the following Friska holds enormous appeal for the masses, with its simple alternating Tonic and Dominant harmonization, its energetic, toe-tapping rhythms, and breath-taking "pianastics".
Most unusual in this composition is the composer's invitation for the performer to improvise an original Cadenza, although most pianists choose to decline the invitation. A noteworthy example of such a Cadenza is heard in the performance of Marc-André Hamelin. Other pianists have arranged their own versions of the Rhapsody with changes beyond that of simply adding a cadenza, most notably Vladimir Horowitz in 1953.
Eventually the piano solo version of Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 had run its course with audiences. However, it retains the dubious honor of being perhaps the most over-played composition in the entire piano concert repertoire. Nonetheless, the original piano solo remains an exciting musical experience for pianist and audience alike.
Form
The piece consists of two distinct sections.
The first consists of the Lassan, with its brief but dramatic introduction. Although beginning on the C sharp major triad, C sharp minor is soon established as the home key. From this point on, the composer modulates freely, particularly to the tonic major and the relative major. The mood of the Lassan is generally dark and sombre, although marked by playful and capricious contrasts.
The second section is the Friska. It opens quietly in the key of F# minor, but on its dominant chord, C sharp major, recalling a theme from the Lassan. The alternating dominant and tonic harmonies quickly expand in volume, the tempo continuously gaining momentum as the outburst of the Friska's Main Theme (in F sharp major) is approached. At this point, the Friska begins its journey of ever-increasing energy and pianistic bravura, still underpinned by alternating tonic and dominant harmonies. Modulations are limited almost exclusively to the dominant (C sharp major) and the lowered mediant (A major). Before the final whirlwind of sound, a moment of calm prevails in the key of F sharp minor, recalling another of the Lassan's themes, and is followed by the instruction, Cadenza ad lib. Finally, in the key of F sharp major, an overwhelming crescendo of prestissimo octaves, ascending then descending almost the entire range of the keyboard, brings the Rhapsody to an impressive conclusion.
Liszt planned his choice of keys in a remarkably symmetrical fashion. Although the Lassan's principal key is C sharp minor (with the appropriate key signature used throughout) the work opens on the Tonic Major chord, C sharp major. However, by bar 6, the minor tonality is established. This device provides a contrast which intensifies the generally dark and sombre character of the Lassan. This procedure is directly reversed in the Friska. Although the principal key of the Friska is F sharp major, Liszt chooses to begin in the Tonic Minor key, F# minor, which is sustained until bar 51. For practical reasons of notation (i.e., the prolongation of the Tonic Minor key) Liszt chooses the key signature of F# minor, until the arrival of the Main Theme in F# Major. This time, the use of the more serious minor tonality is used as a contrast to the arrival of the playful and jubilant Main Theme of the Friska.
Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in Popular Culture
The Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in C-sharp minor is also well-known due to its frequent use in animated cartoons.
The first such appearance was as part of a piano solo by Mickey Mouse in The Opry House in 1929 where he has to deal with an animated piano intent upon making life difficult for him. Another notable early appearance was in the 1937 Max Fleischer cartoon A Car-Tune Portrait, featuring a lion attempting to conduct an orchestra of animals playing a variety of instruments. As the music progresses, the orchestra falls into disarray (to the conductor's despair) and eventually ends with all the animal musicians attacking one another. The rhapsody made another early appearance, as one of several classical pieces, in Disney's Farmyard Symphony (1938).
It became a permanent part of cartoon history with its use in Friz Freleng's Rhapsody in Rivets (1941), where the construction of a skyscraper is synchronized to the rhapsody. Freleng used the piece in several other Warner Brothers cartoons, most notably Rhapsody Rabbit (1946), which featured Bugs Bunny as a concert pianist playing the solo piano version. This film was clearly inspired by its first use in 1929 because many of the gags are similar. However, controversy followed this short's release. Within weeks, MGM released Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera's Tom and Jerry short, The Cat Concerto, which won the 1946 Academy Award for best cartoon. The short featured an almost identical plot, and the same Hungarian Rhapsody, being played by Tom the cat this time. Freleng was convinced that MGM stole the idea from him, and Hanna and Barbera were just as convinced that they were the victims of plagiarism. Ironically enough, the rights to the Tom and Jerry shorts would later be acquired by WB.
Freleng continued to use the piece, though, featuring it in Back Alley Oproar (1948) and in an animated sequence for the Doris Day movie My Dream Is Yours. In the 1988 film Who Framed Roger Rabbit, director Robert Zemeckis pays tribute to "Number 2"'s cartoon heritage by using the piece for the "dueling pianos" scene featuring Daffy Duck and Donald Duck. Warner Brothers also used it in the Tiny Toon Adventures episode C Flat or B Sharp? (1990), in which Buster Bunny, Plucky Duck and Hamton must take the piano that is on top of the Acme Looniversity's main tower to the concert room, following orders of Yosemite Sam. The soundtrack of this episode is a shorter version of the composition, and no lines are spoken.
Also, Woody Woodpecker's episode "Convict Concerto" features this music as Woody tries to tune a piano under the aim of a bank robber's gun
The rhapsody was also used several times in the movies of the Marx Brothers. In A Day at the Races and A Night in Casablanca, Chico Marx plays it as an introduction to his main number on the piano with an orchestral accompaniment; in Races it is played with a full philharmonic orchestra with Harpo conducting comically; in Casablanca, it is played with a smaller jazz orchestra, and opens Chico's 'classical number... the second theme from the Beer Barrel Polka'. Later on, Harpo plays the rhapsody as his harp solo.
In 1949 Stephen Weiss and Bernie Baum composed "Music! Music! Music!". By 1950 it became a "number one hit". Its bridge (lyrics: "Closer, my dear come closer! The sweetest part of any melody..."), melodically and harmonically, is a direct plagiarism of the second theme from the Friska of the Rhapsody.
Most recently, Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 was used in the "Ice-Skating Priests" advertisement for the lager Stella Artois.
The 1982 cult film documentary, The Atomic Cafe features, in its final minutes, chilling scenes using the rhapsody as the accompaniment to a nuclear war. The "Hungarian Rhapsody" #2 was also the basis for a popular song, "Ebony Rhapsody" by Sam Coslow and Arthur Johnston, introduced in the 1934 film Murder at the Vanities. In the film, it was played by Duke Ellington and his Orchestra, who also recorded it. This swing version of the rhapsody was a major influence on several aspiring arrangers, including Billy Strayhorn (who later became Duke Ellington's composing partner) and Billy May (who later recorded "Ebony Rhapsody" with Nat King Cole.)
With a different set of lyrics, "Hungarian Rhapsody" became the Capitol children's record "Daffy Duck's Rhapsody," sung by Mel Blanc in his Daffy Duck persona, and still another cartoon connection for the rhapsody.
The Trans-Siberian Orchestra re-worked Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in their song "Wish Liszt (Toy Shop Madness)" on their The Lost Christmas Eve album.
References
Eric Blom: "Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians"", 5th edition; St. Martin's Press, New York, 1954; Library of Congress Catalog Number 54-11819
James Friskin and Irwin Freundlich: "Music for the Piano", Dover Publications, Inc., New York, 1973; ISBN 0-486-22918-1
John Gillespie: "Five Centuries of Keyboard Music", Dover Publications, Inc., New York, 1972; ISBN 0-486-22855-X