![]() ![]() You can also see in this cast that Liszt’s fingers did not have that characteristic pointed appearance that many pianists possess, instead, Liszt’s fingers were somewhat blunt-ended. It may also account for the astonishing dexterity Liszt displays in his piano music. What singles out Liszt’s hands is the small amount of connective tissue between the fingers that only begins at the very base of each finger making large spans on the piano easily achievable. Liszt’s hands have the appearance of being quite slender. Liszt’s fingers were not long, especially in comparison for example, to Chopin’s fingers. Looking at the cast currently in the Liszt Museum in Weimar, you can see that Liszt’s hands were not, on the surface of it, out of the ordinary. It is this that is thought to have given Liszt his immense facility on the piano. This offers an invaluable window into the structure of Liszt’s hands and provides vital clues to their unusual nature. Throughout Franz Liszt’s life casts of his hands were made. Where the greater interest is contained is not the fact that Liszt’s hands were larger than average but the way his hands were formed. Some claim that Liszt’s hands were not in the realms of Rachmaninov’s but could easily stretch a tenth (C to the E an octave above for example), others that they were larger. Many of his piano compositions are a fine demonstration of Liszt’s facility as a pianist and to have heard him play must have been mesmerizing. To study almost any of his compositions requires substantial skill, impeccable technique, and stamina. What about Franz Liszt? He was in many ways the most famous virtuoso pianist and composer of his day. The result was broken fingers and several painful months in recovery. Beethoven’s hands were not especially big and Schuman invented a hand-stretching device because he felt his hands were too small. Concert pianist Daniel Barenboim, famous for numerous excellent recordings both as pianist and conductor has a span of a 9 th which is for the most part perfectly fine but quite small when compared to Rachmaninov. Even for large hands, this is an incredible span to cover, coming in at roughly 12 inches, but then Rachmaninov was around six feet, six inches tall, so perhaps it is not so surprising that his hands were so large.īy contrast, the pianist and songwriter Sir Elton John can only just stretch an octave, making how he plays the instrument quite characteristic. Rachmaninov, for example, is supposed to have had enormous hands that could stretch a comfortable (for him), 12 th (ie: C to the G an octave above), and include the E flat in between. ![]() For pianists and admirers of famous piano players, the question often arises about hand size and shape.
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