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  1. Oct 22, 2011 · The classical pianist, who turns 200 today, changed the art of performance forever with his over-the-top concerts, creating a craze that historians have dubbed "Lisztomania."

  2. Aug 17, 2016 · Screaming, cheering, swooning. ‘Lisztomania’ was a term first coined by the 19th Century German poet and Liszt’s contemporary, Heinrich Heine. Romantic heroes. Five more...

  3. Feb 29, 2024 · It was after hearing Liszt perform in 1844 and noting the hysterical, screaming audience, that the German poet Heinrich Heine coined the term: Lisztomania. But the “mania” part was not intended to denote intense emotion or a simple fashion craze in the way we might regard certain celebrated performers today.

  4. Sep 4, 2023 · What did Liszt mean bytranscendent execution”? The phrase indicates, most simply, an overcoming of conventional technical limitations. But the Romantic context of the music...

  5. To make it clear. A virtuoso pianist. In the history of music, few artists have caused as much of a stir as Franz Liszt, the 19th-century Hungarian virtuoso pianist and composer. His talent and skills as a performer gave rise to a unique phenomenon known as “Lisztomania.”

  6. Jan 27, 2015 · Lisztomania: How Franz Liszt Became Musics First Panty-Dropper. Jan 27, 2015 by Maureen Holland. In 1820, at age nine, Franz Liszt performed at his first public concert. Like Mozart, he went on to amaze audiences across Europe with his prodigious talent. His youth and his skill drew many comparisons to Mozart.

  7. Dec 26, 2016 · A century before Beatlemania, there was Lisztomania. Strangeness. Dec 26, 2016 Boban Docevski. When the popularity of the British rock band The Beatles started to grow big and fans all over the world gathered around them, a new term was invented to describe this frenzy: Beatlemania. What is more interesting is that the term “mania”, used to ...

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