
Chapters (497)
- FRANZ LISZT
- CONTENTS
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- I LISZT: THE REAL AND LEGENDARY
- I
- II
- III
- II ASPECTS OF HIS ART AND CHARACTER
- I LISZT AND THE LADIES
- II A FAMOUS FRIENDSHIP
- III LATER BIOGRAPHERS
- III THE B-MINOR SONATA AND OTHER PIANO PIECES
- I
- II
- III
- IV AT ROME, WEIMAR, BUDAPEST
- I ROME
- II
- V AS COMPOSER
- THE BERG SYMPHONY
- TASSO
- LES PRELUDES
- ORPHEUS
- PROMETHEUS
- MAZEPPA
- FESTKLÄNGE
- THE BATTLE OF THE HUNS
- DIE IDEALE
- A FAUST SYMPHONY
- SYMPHONY AFTER DANTE'S DIVINA COMMEDIA
- WEINGARTNER'S AND RUBINSTEIN'S CRITICISMS
- THE RHAPSODIES
- Orchestral Set.
- AUGUST SPANUTH'S ANALYSIS
- AS SONG WRITER
- PIANO AND ORCHESTRA
- CONCERTO FOR PIANO AND ORCHESTRA, No. 1, IN E FLAT
- CONCERTO FOR PIANO, NO. 2, IN A MAJOR
- THE DANCE OF DEATH
- BURMEISTER ARRANGEMENTS
- THE OPERATIC PARAPHRASES
- THE ETUDES
- THE MASSES AND THE PSALMS
- THE RAKOCZY MARCH
- VI MIRRORED BY HIS CONTEMPORARIES
- VON LENZ
- BERLIOZ
- D'ORTIGUE
- BLAZE DE BURY
- OSCAR COMMETTANT
- LEON ESCUDIER
- MOSENTHAL
- MOSCHELES
- DWIGHT
- HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN
- HEINE
- CAROLINE BAUER
- FANNY KEMBLE
- LOLA MONTEZ
- MRS. ELLET
- MINASI
- MACREADY
- AN ANONYMOUS GERMAN ADMIRER
- GEORGE ELIOT
- AN ANONYMOUS LADY ADMIRER
- LADY BLANCHE MURPHY
- KARL KIRKENBUHL
- B. W. H.
- ERNEST LEGOUVÉ
- ROBERT SCHUMANN ON LISZT'S PLAYING
- LISZT IN RUSSIA
- LISZT IN ENGLAND
- EDVARD GRIEG
- RICHARD HOFFMAN'S RECOLLECTIONS
- HENRY REEVES
- LISZT'S CONVERSION
- VII IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF LISZT
- I WEIMAR
- II BUDAPEST
- III ROME
- VIII LISZT PUPILS AND LISZTIANA
- TAUSIG
- ROSENTHAL
- ARTHUR FRIEDHEIM
- JOSEFFY
- OSCAR BERINGER
- CLARA NOVELLO
- BIZET
- SGAMBATI
- BACHE
- RUBINSTEIN
- VIARDOT-GARCIA
- LISZT AS A FREEMASON
- A LISZT SON?
- LISZT ON VIRTUOSITY
- LISZT'S FAVOURITE PIANO
- LISZT AS TEACHER
- VON BÜLOW CRITICISES
- WEINGARTNER AND LISZT
- AS ORGAN COMPOSER
- LISZT'S TECHNIC
- BUSONI
- LISZT AS A PIANOFORTE WRITER
- SMETANA
- RIMSKY-KORSAKOFF
- HIS PORTRAITS
- IX MODERN PIANOFORTE VIRTUOSI
- INSTEAD OF A PREFACE
- INDEX
- BOOKS BY JAMES HUNEKER
- [1]
- [2]
- [3]
- [6]
- [9]
- [10]
- [11]
- [12]
- [13]
- [14]
- [15]
- [18]
- [19]
- [20]
- [21]
- [22]
- [23]
- [24]
- [25]
- [27]
- [28]
- [29]
- [30]
- [32]
- [33]
- [34]
- [35]
- [39]
- [41]
- [43]
- [44]
- [46]
- [47]
- [48]
- [49]
- [50]
- [51]
- [53]
- [54]
- [55]
- [56]
- [57]
- [58]
- [59]
- [60]
- [61]
- [62]
- [63]
- [64]
- [65]
- [66]
- [67]
- [68]
- [69]
- [70]
- [71]
- [72]
- [74]
- [75]
- [77]
- [78]
- [79]
- [80]
- [81]
- [82]
- [83]
- [84]
- [85]
- [86]
- [88]
- [90]
- [91]
- [92]
- [95]
- [96]
- [97]
- [98]
- [99]
- [100]
- [101]
- [102]
- [103]
- [104]
- [105]
- [106]
- [107]
- [108]
- [109]
- [110]
- [111]
- [112]
- [113]
- [114]
- [115]
- [116]
- [117]
- [118]
- [119]
- [120]
- [121]
- [122]
- [124]
- [125]
- [126]
- [128]
- [129]
- [133]
- [134]
- [138]
- [140]
- [141]
- [142]
- [143]
- [145]
- [146]
- [147]
- [148]
- [150]
- [151]
- [152]
- [155]
- [156]
- [157]
- [158]
- [160]
- [162]
- [163]
- [164]
- [165]
- [166]
- [168]
- [170]
- [171]
- [172]
- [173]
- [176]
- [177]
- [178]
- [179]
- [180]
- [181]
- [185]
- [186]
- [187]
- [188]
- [189]
- [190]
- [192]
- [193]
- [194]
- [195]
- [196]
- [197]
- [198]
- [199]
- [200]
- [201]
- [202]
- [203]
- [204]
- [205]
- [207]
- [208]
- [209]
- [210]
- [211]
- [212]
- [213]
- [214]
- [215]
- [216]
- [217]
- [218]
- [219]
- [221]
- [222]
- [223]
- [224]
- [225]
- [226]
- [227]
- [228]
- [230]
- [231]
- [235]
- [238]
- [239]
- [240]
- [242]
- [243]
- [244]
- [246]
- [247]
- [248]
- [250]
- [251]
- [252]
- [253]
- [254]
- [255]
- [256]
- [257]
- [258]
- [259]
- [261]
- [262]
- [263]
- [264]
- [265]
- [266]
- [267]
- [268]
- [269]
- [270]
- [271]
- [272]
- [273]
- [274]
- [275]
- [276]
- [277]
- [279]
- [280]
- [281]
- [282]
- [283]
- [284]
- [285]
- [286]
- [287]
- [288]
- [289]
- [290]
- [291]
- [292]
- [293]
- [295]
- [296]
- [297]
- [298]
- [299]
- [300]
- [301]
- [302]
- [304]
- [305]
- [306]
- [307]
- [308]
- [309]
- [310]
- [311]
- [312]
- [313]
- [314]
- [315]
- [316]
- [317]
- [318]
- [319]
- [321]
- [322]
- [323]
- [324]
- [325]
- [326]
- [327]
- [328]
- [329]
- [330]
- [331]
- [332]
- [333]
- [334]
- [335]
- [336]
- [337]
- [338]
- [339]
- [340]
- [341]
- [342]
- [343]
- [345]
- [348]
- [349]
- [350]
- [351]
- [352]
- [353]
- [354]
- [356]
- [359]
- [360]
- [361]
- [362]
- [363]
- [364]
- [365]
- [366]
- [367]
- [368]
- [369]
- [370]
- [371]
- [372]
- [373]
- [374]
- [375]
- [376]
- [377]
- [379]
- [380]
- [381]
- [382]
- [384]
- [385]
- [386]
- [387]
- [388]
- [389]
- [392]
- [393]
- [394]
- [395]
- [396]
- [397]
- [398]
- [399]
- [400]
- [401]
- [402]
- [403]
- [404]
- [406]
- [407]
- [408]
- [409]
- [410]
- [411]
- [412]
- [413]
- [414]
- [415]
- [416]
- [417]
- [418]
- [419]
- [420]
- [421]
- [422]
- [424]
- [426]
- [428]
- [430]
- [431]
- [432]
- [433]
- [434]
- [435]
- [436]
- [437]
- [438]
- [439]
- [441]
- [442]
- [443]
- [444]
- [445]
- [446]
- [447]
- [448]
- [449]
- [450]
- [451]
- [452]
- [453]
- [454]
- [455]
- [456]
- [457]
- [458]
- [459]
- [460]
- [461]
- [462]
- [463]
How to Listen
- 1. Click "Listen Free" above
- 2. The book opens in CastReader's browser reader
- 3. Click the play button — AI narration starts with word highlighting
- 4. Use "Send to Phone" to continue listening on your phone
More by James Huneker
FAQ
Is this audiobook really free?
Yes. "Franz Liszt" is a public domain work from Project Gutenberg. CastReader converts it to audio using AI text-to-speech for free. No account or payment needed.
What does the AI voice sound like?
CastReader uses Kokoro TTS, a natural-sounding AI voice. It handles punctuation, names, and dialogue naturally. Most listeners forget it's AI after a few minutes.
Can I listen on my phone?
Yes. Open the book, then use "Send to Phone" to stream audio to your phone via Telegram. No app download needed.



