In the
Romantic age, due to a fascination with everything
Medieval, the aspect of fantastic or grotesquely macabre
irony often replaced the original moral intent. A musical example of such irony can be found in the last movement of the
Symphonie fantastique by
Hector Berlioz which quotes the medieval (Gregorian)
Dies Irae (
Day of Judgment) melody in a shockingly modernistic manner. In 1830 Liszt attended the first performance of the symphony and was struck by its powerful originality. Liszt's
Totentanz (Dance of Death), a set of
variations for piano and orchestra, also paraphrases the
Dies Irae plainsong. Another source of inspiration for the young Liszt was the famous
fresco "Triumph of Death" by
Francesco Traini (at Liszt's time attributed to
Andrea Orcagna and today also to
Buonamico Buffalmacco) in the
Campo Santo,
Pisa. Liszt had eloped to Italy with his mistress, the
Countess d’Agoult, and in 1838 he visited Pisa. Only ten years later, Liszt's first sketches materialized into a complete version of his
Totentanz. Revisions followed in 1853 and 1859, and its final form was first performed at
The Hague on 15 April 1865 by Liszt's student
Hans von Bülow, to whom the work is dedicated. == Stylistic innovations ==