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12081 LP Qualiton – LPX 1261 Romantizam Franz Liszt A Strana Psalm 13 "Herr, Wie Lange Willst Du So Gar Vergessen" Franz Liszt (22 October 1811 – 31 July 1886) Hungarian composer, virtuoso pianist, conductor and teacher of the Romantic period. Franz Liszt (1811–1886) was a Hungarian composer and the 19th century’s most celebrated piano virtuoso. He revolutionized classical music by creating the "rock star" persona, a phenomenon known as Lisztomania. During his concerts, fans displayed unprecedented hysteria, fighting over his personal items and locks of hair. He fundamentally changed the stage by inventing the solo recital and was the first to play entirely from memory, turning the piano sideways to showcase his profile to the audience. Beyond his performance fame, Liszt was a radical innovator. He broke away from traditional symphonic structures to invent the Symphonic Poem, a single-movement work inspired by literature or art. His piano compositions, such as the Transcendental Études, were so technically demanding that they were initially considered unplayable. This "superhuman" technique was aided by his unique physiology, including an immense hand span and extraordinary finger flexibility. In a dramatic life shift, the man once known for high-profile scandals moved to Rome in 1865 to receive minor orders in the Catholic Church. Known thereafter as Abbé Liszt, he dedicated his later years to reforming sacred music, blending dramatic emotionality with religious devotion in works like Psalm 13. Throughout his career, he remained a selfless mentor, teaching hundreds of students for free and using his wealth to support fellow composers like Richard Wagner and Hector Berlioz.