Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart I INTRODUCTION Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, an 18th-century Austrian classical composer and one of the most famous musicians of all time, came from a family of musicians that included his father and sister.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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The opera, Mitridati, rè di Ponto (Mithridates, King of Pontus), was produced in 1770 in Milan under Mozart’s direction with success.
Also that year the pope made Mozart a knight of the Order of the Golden Spur.
A Salzburg and Germany
From 1775 to 1780 Mozart was based mainly in Salzburg working for the archbishop Hieronymous von Colloredo.
Although dissatisfied with the low pay and limitedopportunities his employment offered, Mozart composed many works during this period, including his first important piano sonatas (K.
279 to K.
284, 1775).
Despite hismother’s death in 1778 during a trip they made to Paris, he completed his Symphony No.
31 in D Major (Paris, K.
297) and Piano Sonata No.
8 in A Minor (K.
310) during the journey.
In 1780 he received a commission from the court at Munich for an opera seria.
He fulfilled this commission with Idomeneo, rè di Creta (Idomeneo, King of Crete, 1781), the most important opera seria of Mozart’s maturity and perhaps the greatest opera seria ever written.
Demeaning treatment from Colloredo, who had little interest in music, led Mozart to ask for dismissal from his service in 1781.
This Mozart received, along with a kick inthe rear as he departed, delivered by an employee of the archbishop.
Mozart then began a career as a freelance musician in Vienna.
While working in Germany in 1777, Mozart fell in love with a singer, Aloysia Weber.
His father warned him against marriage in a letter: “… it depends wholly on your owngood sense and good conduct, whether you become a commonplace artist whom the world will forget, or a celebrated Capellmeister, of whom posterity will readhereafter in books—whether, infatuated with some pretty face, you one day breathe your last on a straw sack, your wife and children in a state of starvation, or, after awell-spent Christian life, die peacefully in honour and independence, and your family well provided for.” Aloysia did not return Mozart’s feelings, however.
Despiteopposition from his father, Mozart married Aloysia’s sister, Constanze, in August 1782.
Two years later he joined the fraternal order of Freemasonry.
B Vienna
In the years after his marriage Mozart experienced some notable professional successes.
These included an enthusiastic response from Austrian composer JosephHaydn, the dominant figure in music at the time.
Haydn was particularly impressed by a set of six string quartets (K.
387) that Mozart composed in 1785 and dedicatedto Haydn, his admired friend and source of inspiration.
A series of inspired piano concertos that Mozart composed for his own performance began with No.
14 in E-flatMajor (K.
449) in 1784 and culminated in the premiere of No.
24 in C Minor (K.
491) in March 1786.
Moreover, The Marriage of Figaro was first performed later that year in Vienna, Prague (in what is now the Czech Republic), and other cities to enthusiastic public response.
In 1787 the premiere of Don Giovanni in Prague received a similar response.
During the last years of his life Mozart was plagued at times by financial difficulties, as revealed in a series of letters he wrote to his fellow Freemason Michael Puchberg,in which he begged for loans.
The resounding success of The Magic Flute, which had its premiere in late 1791, would have solved these problems, but it came too late for Mozart, who died on December 5, 1791.
He spent his last months in feverish activity.
In September he completed an opera seria, La clemenza di Tito (The Clemency of Titus).
On his deathbed, Mozart labored on the Requiem Mass in D Minor (K.
626), while suffering from delusions that he had been poisoned.
He died with theRequiem unfinished.
The cause of his death is uncertain and has been the subject of much speculation.
III MUSIC
Mozart’s music can be divided into periods of stylistic assimilation and stylistic innovation.
From childhood he showed skill at imitating virtually any type of music,including the sacred style of church music and the so-called galant (courtly) idiom.
The elegant though often superficial galant style dominated much instrumental music of the 1760s and 1770s.
Mozart’s mastery often demonstrates itself in an ability to expand and deepen the stylistic possibilities of the time.
The manner in which heextended the character and form of the concerto, for instance, owes much to his experience in writing operatic arias.
A Musical Expressiveness
Mozart’s Piano Concerto No.
9Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote the Piano Concerto No.
9 in E-flat Major in 1777 at the age of 21.Considered one of Mozart’s first masterpieces, it was composed at a time when he was actively exploring and expandingthe concerto form.
The concerto features one or more solo instruments along with an orchestra.
This concerto exhibitsboth traditional elements and some surprising innovations, as the slides and audio excerpts demonstrate.
It is oftenreferred to as the Jeunehomme after the last name of a virtuoso French pianist for whom it was presumably written.© Microsoft Corporation.
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In the masterful Jeunehomme Concerto of 1777, the slow middle movement in C minor contains passages suggesting vocal recitative (music structured to resemble the tones and rhythms of speech).
The movement’s heartfelt but dignified tragic aura recalls the operas of an earlier German composer, Christoph Willibald Gluck.
The firstand third movements of the concerto brilliantly exploit dramatic contrasts between the piano soloist and the orchestra.
At the beginning of the first movement, thepianist surprisingly answers the orchestra’s opening phrase, although the usual practice called for this section to be given exclusively to the orchestra.
The third andfinal movement of the concerto introduces a lyrical minuet, or dance tune, in the middle of a lively musical form called a rondo.
The rondo, in which musical themesrecur, is played in a rapid tempo, with virtuosic solo passages, called cadenzas, given to the pianist.
Many of Mozart’s most impressive works date from the last decade of his life, 1781 to 1791, which he spent primarily in Vienna.
His comic German opera Die Entführung aus dem Serail (The Abduction from the Seraglio , 1782), which takes place in a Turkish palace, shows an exceptional range of musical characterization.
The “stupid, surly, malicious Osmin,” as Mozart described the overseer of the palace’s seraglio (harem), is depicted in the opera with frenzied music that is intended to sound Turkish; the music’s colorful orchestration (combination of instruments) includes piccolo, triangle, cymbals, and drum.
On the other hand, Constanze, the German woman Osmin holds captive, has an elaborate aria that gives noble expression to her heroic defiance of her captor, no matter what tortures she might suffer.
The aria,“Martern aller Arten” (“Tortures of Every Kind”), is introduced by a long passage of 60 measures, featuring solo parts for flute, oboe, violin, and cello that express arange of emotions.
By the time of Idomeneo and Die Entführung, Mozart had found musical equivalents for an entire spectrum of dramatic events and human responses..
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