
Composers and Their Favorite Drinks
What happens when history’s greatest composers meet the bar menu? Today, we’re swapping batons for bar spoons and turning the concert hall into a tasting
The World is weirder than you thought.

What happens when history’s greatest composers meet the bar menu? Today, we’re swapping batons for bar spoons and turning the concert hall into a tasting

Before Franz Liszt came along, concerts were chaotic mashups with no headliners and no structure. But in the 1840s, Liszt flipped the script—turning the piano recital into a solo spectacle packed with improvisation, charisma, and pure 19th-century drama. From coining the word recital to making fans faint mid-performance, Liszt didn’t just change how concerts worked—he turned them into events. This article explores how Liszt’s “flex parties” transformed classical music forever.