Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Wolfgang Wazart Essays - Mozart Family, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  Wolfgang Wazart      Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart  Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)  Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg in Austria, the son of  Leopold, Kapellmeister to the Prince-Archbishop of  Salzburg. By the age of three he could play the piano, and he was  composing by the time he was five; minuets from this period  show remarkable understanding of form. Mozart's elder sister Maria Anna  (best known as Nannerl) was also a gifted keyboard  player, and in 1762 their father took the two prodigies on a short  performing tour, of the courts at Vienna and Munich.  Encouraged by their reception, they embarked the next year on a longer  tour, including two weeks at Versailles, where the  children enchanted Louis XV. In 1764 they arrived in London. Here  Mozart wrote his first three symphonies, under the  influence of Johann Christian Bach, youngest son of Johann Sebastian, who  lived in the city. After their return to Salzburg there  followed three trips to Italy between 1769 and 1773. In Rome Mozart  heard a performance of Allegri's Misere; the score of  this work was closely guarded, but Mozart managed to transcribe the music  almost perfectly from memory. On Mozart's first  visit to Milan, his opera Mitridate, r? di Ponto was successfully produced,  followed on a subsequent visit by Lucia Silla. The  latter showed signs of the rich, full orchestration that characterizes his later  operas.  A trip to Vienna in 1773 failed to produce the court appointment that both  Mozart and his father wished for him, but did  introduce Mozart to the influence of Haydn, whose Sturm und Drang string  quartets (Opus 20) had recently been published.  The influence is clear in Mozart's six string quartets, K168-173, and in his  Symphony in G minor, K183. Another trip in search  of patronage ended less happily. Accompanied by his mother, Mozart left  Salzburg in 1777, travelling through Mannheim to  Paris. But in July 1778 his mother died. Nor was the trip a professional  success: no longer able to pass for a prodigy, Mozart's  reception there was muted and hopes of a job came nothing.  Back in Salzburg Mozart worked for two years as a church organist for the  new archbishop. His employer was less kindly  disposed to the Mozart family than his predecessor had been, but the  composer nonetheless produced some of his earliest  masterpieces. The famous Sinfonia concertante for violin, violo and  orchestra was written in 1780, and the following year  Mozart's first great stage work, the opera Idomeneo, was produced in  Munich, where Mozart also wrote his Serenade for 13  wind instruments, K361. On his return from Munich, however, the hostility  brewing between him and the archbishop came to a  head, and Mozart resigned. On delivering his resignation he was verbally  abused and eventually, physically ejected from the  archbishop's residence.   Without patronage, Mozart was forced to confront the perils of a freelance  existence. Initially his efforts met with some success.  He took up residence in Vienna and in 1782 his opera Die Entf?hrung aus  dem Serail (The abdication from the Seraglio) was  produced in the city and rapturously received. The same year in Vienna's St  Stephen's Cathedral Mozart married Constanze  Weber. Soon afterwards he initiated a series of subscription concerts at  which he performed his piano concertos and  improvised at the keyboard. Most of Mozart's great piano concertos were  written for these concerts, including those in C,  K467, A, K488 and C minor, K491. In these concertos Mozart brought to  the genre a unity and diversity it had not had  before, combining bold symphonic richness with passages of subtle  delicacy.  In 1758 Mozart dedicated to Haydn the six string quartets that now bear  Haydn's name. Including in this group are the quartets  known as the Hunt, which make use of hunting calls, and the Dissonance,  which opens with an eerie succession of dissonant  chords. Overwhelmed by their quality, Haydn confessed to Leopold  Mozart, 'Before God and as an honest man I tell you that  your son is the greatest composer known to me either in person or by  name.' The pieces are matched in excellence in Mozart's  chamber music output only by his String Quintets, outstanding among which  are those in C, K515, G minor, K516 and D,  K593.  Also in 178 Mozart and Lorenzo da Ponte collaborated on the first of a  series of operatic masterpieces. Le nozze di Figaro  (The Marriage of Figaro) was begun that year and performed in 1786 to an  enthusiastic audience in Vienna and even greater  acclaim later in Prague. In 1787 Prague?s National Theatre saw the  premiere of Don Giovanni, a moralizing version of the Don  Juan legend in which the licentious nobleman receives his comeuppance and  descends into the fiery regions    
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