The Official Lisztomaniac Complete Transcendental Etudes Challenge!

Jul 1 at 2 PM - Jul 31 at 2 PM EDT
Jul 1 at 2 PM - Jul 31 at 2 PM EDT
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This is it, dear piano friends, the ultimate celebration of our love for the piano, and of the 140th anniversary of Franz Liszt ascending to the heavens!

 

You are all invited to submit a recorded performance of one or more Études d'Exécution Transcendante, in whichever iteration you like! (S.136, S.137, or S.139)

 

As of July 1st you have probably learned the notes of your Etude(s), so the following 4 weeks will be to bring it to the most Lisztomanic state possible! 

 

The watch party is set for July 31st, 2026 (the exact date of His 140-year anniversary of death) at 2pm EST.

 

Let's get the dopamine and catecholamines surging like never before!

Looking forward to being dazzled beyond recognition!

210 replies

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    • Noel_Nguyen
    • 3 days ago
    • Reported - view

    Well, I may have reached a milestone. I have just finished memorizing all my repertoire, which means the fingerings are all memorized. Unfortunately, unlike my partner in crime  , figuring out the fingerings is much, much less than half the battle for me. Still, I will savor each victory no matter how microscopic.

      • Pediatrician
      • a_weymann
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Wow! Unbelievable. I’m hideously and hopelessly behind. Although I also don’t have as much repertoire to learn as you do.

      • Akzent oder Diminuendo? • Hanon/Herz student
      • Maria_F
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

         I have memorized my part of Chasse-Neige but am behind on Paysage!

      • Noel_Nguyen
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

       Brava! Less pressure now, since Thurmond already recorded his Paysage anyway. But I'm sure you can do it!

      • Noel_Nguyen
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

        I guess the love for the music helps! The ending of Chasse-Neige is something else! Makes me feel like I have just finished the epic journey of all 12 Etudes, even though I barely played a few bars😅.

      And remember, I'm less than halfway through my learning process, unlike you.

      • Mom, fitness instructor, lover of music
      • Michelle_Russell
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

       great! I find it intriguing how different everyone's learning styles are. Thurmond is a big-picture-first learner, and after he has his vision he then goes back to the details. For him, the details don't make sense until he knows how they fit into the whole.

      I'm really looking forward to hearing all of these etudes in July, especially since I know only a couple of them. Thurmond has a goal of playing them all (eventually), so this has been a good start for him. I think he was planning to actually work on Paysage this month for the unfinished business challenge and make a good recording - the previous recording he made was after less than a week of work, and he'd like to put a little more into it! 

      • Akzent oder Diminuendo? • Hanon/Herz student
      • Maria_F
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

       I usually listen to the entire piece so I have it memorized and then practice it in sections, paying attention to the details. I sometimes learn a page at a time, but I often divide a piece into sections that musically make sense. 

      • Mom, fitness instructor, lover of music
      • Michelle_Russell
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

       I often, but not always, listen to the piece first, then I look for patterns and similarities. Then fingering. When I begin practicing, I group similar sections into practice segments, which often means that I’m bouncing around the piece in my initial practices. I try to memorize as I go along, but that doesn’t really come together until I begin playing larger musically coherent sections. If it’s singable, I’ll sing one line while playing the other(s), on solfège if I’m feeling industrious. And I often add a rhythm layer in as well, even when the rhythms aren’t necessarily difficult, because tapping the rhythms away from the piano helps me when I start putting everything together.

      • Akzent oder Diminuendo? • Hanon/Herz student
      • Maria_F
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

       I almost always listen first; I basically can't read sheet music if I haven't heard the piece first, and listening is also generally how I find pieces to learn.

      I usually automatically recognize patterns, but I also often do an informal semi-analysis of the piece, partially because I enjoy doing it, and partially because it is helpful.

      I also group similar sections together, but I generally have a piece memorized before I start learning it at the piano. The downside is that it can be annoying when my brain has a piece memorized, but my fingers definitely don't!  

      • Noel_Nguyen
      • 2 days ago
      • Reported - view

       I would definitely watch a video of Thurmond sight-reading through the whole set!

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