Transcendental Études, series of 12 musical études by Franz Liszt, published in their final form in the early 1850s. They are highly varied and technically demanding, and they exhibit little of the sense of overall structure that someone such as Beethoven would have employed. These energetic études are Liszt at his most Lisztian.
The Transcendental Études comprise work long in progress: they were begun when Liszt was in his early teens. The final version he dedicated to pianist and composer Carl Czerny, his mentor and one of Beethoven’s students. Ten of the 12 études—including “Wilde Jagd” (No. 8; “Wild Hunt”) and “Harmonies du soir” (No. 11; “Evening Harmonies”)—bear titles that hint at Liszt’s intentions. Most of the pieces are short, perhaps a few minutes in length; only the 9th and 11th are broader in scope, three times more expansive than the others. Taken as a full set, the Transcendental Études cover a wide range of moods and require mastery of a variety of virtuosic techniques.