| Mephisto Waltz No. 1 |
| "[Composed for orchestra as "The Dance in the Village Inn" ("Der Tanz in der Dorfschenke"), the second of Two Episodes from Lenau's "Faust"; Dedicated to Carl Tausig, the most famous of the first generation of Liszt pupils.]" |
| "Liebesträume, 3 Notturnos (Dreams of Love, 3 Nocturnes)" |
| No. 1 in A-flat Major |
| No. 2 in E Major |
| No. 3 in A-flat Major |
| [Piano transcriptions o three Liszt songs, published as a set: No. 1? Hohe Liebe (Lofty Love); No. 2 ? Seliger Tod (Blissful Death), also known by its first line of text: "Gestorben war ich" ("I had died"); No. 3 ? O Lieb (O, Love). Full texts with English translations] |
| Two Polonaises |
| No. 1 in C Minor |
| No. 2 in E Major |
| Fantasia and Fugue on the Theme BACH |
| "[Originally written for organ as Prelude and Fugue on the name BACH. Revised, ca. 1870, and transcribed for piano under the alternate title Fantasia and Fugue on the Theme BACH.]" |
| Valse Oubliée No. 1 (Forgotten Waltz No. 1) |
| [The first of Trois Valses Oubliées. A fourth waltz was discovered in the United States and published there.] |
| "Unstern: Sinistre, Disastro (Unlucky Star: Disaster)" |
| "[Exclamations of adversity of disaster, repeated in the title in German, French and Italian. Also published as Unstern!.]" |
| Nuages Gris (Somber Clouds) |
| Grand Galop Chromatique (Grand Chromatic Galop) |
| Valse-Impromptu in A-flat major (Waltz-Impromptu) |
| La Lugubre Gondola I & II (The Mournful Gondola I & II) |
| 1st version |
| 2nd version |
| "[Impressions of funeral processions by gondola, Venice.]" |
| Czárdás Macabre |
| [a longer version was published in 1954] |
| Gretchen (from A Faust Symphony) |
| [The second of "Three Character Pictures after Goethe" that make up Liszt's A Faust Symphony. (The first is "Faust;" the thrid, "Mephistopheles.") Orchestral score, dedicated to Hector Berlioz, composed in 1854; expanded, 1857. Piano transcription of "Gretchen,".] |
| Rhapsodie Espagnole (Spanish Rhapsody) |
| "[Subtitle: "Folies d'Espagne et Jota Aragonesa." Opening based on "La Folia," a traditional 17th-century air used for continuous variation. The jota is a rapid, triple-time folk dance of northern Spain.]" |