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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LisztomaniaLisztomania - Wikipedia

    Lisztomania or Liszt fever was the intense fan frenzy directed toward Hungarian composer Franz Liszt during his performances. This frenzy first occurred in Berlin in 1841 and the term was later coined by Heinrich Heine in a feuilleton he wrote on April 25, 1844, discussing the 1844 Parisian concert season.

  2. Sep 4, 2023 · Lisztomania Enters the Twenty-first Century | The New Yorker. Onward and Upward with the Arts. The Greatest Showman. Liszt defined musical glamour. But pianists now see substance behind the...

  3. Lisztomania is a 1975 British surreal biographical musical comedy film written and directed by Ken Russell about the 19th-century composer Franz Liszt. The screenplay is derived, in part, from the book Nélida by Marie d'Agoult (1848), about her affair with Liszt.

    • £1.2 million or £603,249
    • 10 October 1975
  4. Jan 29, 1976 · With Roger Daltrey, Sara Kestelman, Paul Nicholas, Ringo Starr. Composer and pianist Franz Liszt (Roger Daltrey) attempts to overcome his hedonistic life-style while repeatedly being drawn back into it by the many women in his life and fellow composer Richard Wagner (Paul Nicholas).

    • (3K)
    • Biography, Comedy, Music
    • Ken Russell
    • 1976-01-29
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  6. 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."

    • 3 min
    • NPR Staff
  7. May 25, 2009 · Lisztomania. Phoenix. Track 1 on Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix. Producers. Phoenix & Philippe Zdar. Thom signals his abandonment of romance with a diss to Romanticism, the 19th Century artistic ...

  8. Apr 25, 2024 · Phoenix’s hit song “Lisztomania” is a tribute to Franz Liszt, a Hungarian composer and pianist from the 19th century who was known for his virtuosic performances and passionate following. Lisztomania, the phenomenon that the song is named after, referred to the hysteria that swept audiences during Liszt’s concerts, where fans would ...

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