Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
(1756 - 1791)
Probably the greatest genius in Western musical
history, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg, Austria, Jan. 27,
1756, the son of Leopold Mozart and his wife, Anna Maria Pertl. Leopold
was a successful composer, violinist and assistant concertmaster at the
Salzburg court.
Wolfgang began composing minuets at the age of 5 and
symphonies at 9. When he was 6, he and his older sister, Maria Anna (who
was nicknamed "Nannerl"), performed a series of concerts to
Europe's courts and major cities. Both children played the keyboard, but
Wolfgang became a violin virtuoso as well.
In 1762 the Mozart children played at court in Vienna;
the Empress Maria Theresa and her husband, Emperor Francis I, received
them. From 1763 - 66, the Mozart children displayed their talents to
audiences in Germany, Paris, at court in Versailles, and London (where
Wolfgang wrote his first symphonies and began a friendship with Johann
Christian Bach, whose became a great musical influence on Wolfgang). In
Paris, the young Mozart published his first works, four sonatas for
clavier with accompanying violin (1764). In 1768 he composed his first
opera, La Finta Semplice, which had its premiere in Salzburg. In
1769-70, Leopold and Wolfgang undertook a tour through Italy. This first
Italian trip culminated in a new opera, Mitridate, re di Ponto,
composed for Milan. In two further Italian journeys he wrote two more
operas for Milan, Ascanio in Alba (1771) and Lucio Silla
(1772).
In 1772, Archbishop von Schrattenbach died, to be
succeeded by Hieronymus von Colloredo. The latter, at first sympathetic
to the Mozarts, later became irritated by Wolfgang's prolonged absences
and stubborn ways. In 1772, von Colloredo retained Wolfgang as
concertmaster at a token salary. In this capacity Mozart composed a
large number of sacred and secular works. Wishing to secure a better
position outside Salzburg, he obtained permission to undertake another
journey in 1777. With his mother he traveled to France, where he
composed the Paris Symphony (1778) but he was unable to find a permanent
position. His mother died in Paris.
When he returned to Salzburg he was given the position
of court organist (1779) and produced a splendid series of church works,
including the famous Coronation Mass. He was commissioned to compose a
new opera for Munich, Idomeneo (1781), that proved he was a
consummate master of opera seria. Summoned by von Colloredo to Vienna in
1781 he was dismissed after a series of arguments.
Mozart's career in Vienna began promisingly, and he was
soon commissioned to write The Abduction from the Seraglio
(1782). His concerts were a great success, and the emperor, Joseph II,
encouraged him, later engaging him as court composer. In 1782 the
now-popular Mozart married Constanze Weber from Germany, much to his
father's dismay. The young pair visited Salzburg in 1783; there, the
Kyrie and Gloria of Mozart's great Mass in C Minor, composed in Vienna
and never finished, were performed. Mozart's greatest success was Le
Nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro) (1786), composed for the
Vienna Opera. The great piano concertos and the string quartets
dedicated to his "dear friend" Josef Haydn were also composed
during this period.
Mozart's fame began to disappear after Figaro.
The nobility and court grew increasingly nervous about his revolutionary
ideas as seen in Figaro. He sank into debt and was assisted by a
brother Freemason, Michael Puchberg (Mozart had joined the Masons in
1784 and remained an outspoken member until his death). His greatest
operatic success after Figaro was Don Giovanni (1787),
composed for Prague, where Mozart's art was especially appreciated. This
was followed in 1790 by Cosi fan tutte, the third and final
libretto provided by the Italian poet Lorenzo Da Ponte; and in 1791 by Die
Zauberflote (The Magic Flute), produced by a suburban theater in
Vienna. During this period of financial strain, Mozart composed his last
three symphonies (E flat, G minor, and the Jupiter in C) in less than 7
weeks (summer 1788). These had been preceded by a great series of string
quintets, including the two in C and in G minor (1787).
In 1791, Mozart was commissioned to write a requiem
(unfinished). He was at the time quite ill--he had never known very good
health--and imagined that the work was for himself, which it proved to
be. His death, on Dec. 5, 1791, which gave rise to false rumors of
poisoning, is thought to have resulted from rheumatic fever, a disease
which he had suffered from repeatedly throught his life. After a cheap
funeral at Saint Stephen's Cathedral, he was buried in an unmarked grave
at the cemetery of Saint Marx, a Viennese suburb. Much has been made of
this, but at that time such burial was legally required for all Viennese
except those of noble or aristocratic birth.
Mozart excelled in every form in which he composed. His
contemporaries found the restless ambivalence and complicated emotional
content of his music difficult to understand. Accustomed to the light,
superficial style of rococo music, his aristocratic audiences could not
accept the music's complexity and depth. Yet, with Josef Haydn, Mozart
perfected the grand forms of symphony, opera, string quartet, and
concerto that marked the classical period in music. In his operas
Mozart's uncanny psychological insight is unique in musical history. His
music informed the work of the later Haydn and of the next generation of
composers, most notably Beethoven. The brilliance of his work continued
until the end, although darker themes of poignancy and isolation grew
more marked in his last years, and his compositions continue to exert a
particular fascination for musicians and music lovers.
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