In the early decades of the 19th century Liszt broke free of the polyphonic approach in-herited from the keyboard masters of the previous century, inaugurating the broken lines, suspensions of time and poetic harmonies of the piano as we know it today. Guillaume Vincent has chosen more rarely heard works from his prolific output, written shortly after the death in 1849 of Chopin, with whom Liszt had shared a deep friendship and mutual admiration. The chiaroscuro pieces inspiring this programme can be seen as a homage of the poetic imagination made by one pianist composer to another.