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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) Mozart s Early Life or, Don t you feel good about yourself now? Born to a court musician, Leopold Could play harpsichord and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart


1
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  • (1756-1791)

2
Mozarts Early Lifeor, Dont you feel good about
yourself now?
  • Born to a court musician, Leopold
  • Could play harpsichord and violin, improvise,
    write minuets, and sight-read perfectly by the
    time he was six.
  • Wrote a symphony at eight
  • Wrote an oratorio at eleven
  • Wrote an opera at twelve
  • Played for Empress Maria Theresa in Vienna, Louis
    XV of France, and George III of England by the
    time he was sixteen
  • Returned to Salzburg when he was fifteen to work
    for a prince-archbishop

3
Mozarts middle life
  • The archbishop would not grant him more than a
    subordinate positions in the orchestra
  • Mozart, already a celebrity, could not tolerate
    being a servant
  • Broke away from the archbishop when he was 25 to
    work freelance
  • His opera Die Enführung aus dem Serail (The
    Abduction from the Seraglio) was very successful
  • Concerts were attended by the emperor and
    nobility
  • Le Nozze di Figaro was hugely successful in
    Vienna and Prague

4
Mozarts Decline
  • Don Giovanni was well received in Prague, but not
    Vienna
  • The Viennese did not like the darker qualities of
    the opera, and so Mozarts popularity began to
    decline
  • In 1791, Mozart published Die Zauberflöte
  • Approached by a mysterious stranger who carried a
    letter commissioning a requiem mass
  • As Mozarts health declined, be began to believe
    the Requiem was his own.
  • Died in 1791 before the Requiem was finished
  • Finsihed, based on vocal parts and continuo
    parts, by Franz Süssmeyer

5
Mozarts Music
  • Composed over 600 works, including
  • 41 Symphonies
  • 48 concertos
  • 18 masses
  • 17 Church sonatas
  • 22 operas
  • 23 String Quartets
  • 36 violin sonatas
  • 18 piano sonatas
  • Lots of other stuff, too

6
Mozarts Musical Style
  • Combines a feeling of ease, grace, and
    spontaneity with balance , restraint, and
    proportion.
  • Mysterious harmonies contrast with is lyricism,
    elegance, and power
  • Excellent writer of opera
  • Wrote mostly comic opera
  • Does not use stereotyped characters, instead uses
    dynamic people who evolve over the course of the
    production

7
Don Giovanni- Introduction
  • Tells the old story of Don Juan, the famous
    Spanish lover
  • Don Giovanni is a charming gentleman, but will
    stop at nothing to fulfill his lust
  • In this scene, Don Giovanni, in disguise, is
    attempting to have an amorous adventure with
    Donna Anna, who does not want him.
  • The Commandant, Donna Annas father, challenges
    Don Giovanni to a duel, and loses

8
Don Giovanni-Leporellos Catalog Aria
  • One of the most famous arias in all of opera
  • He sings to Donna Elvira, who was seduced by Don
    Giovanni and then deserted
  • Shows her the catalogue of all the women Don
    Giovanni has been with
  • In Italy, 640
  • In Germany, 231
  • 100 in France
  • 91 in Turkey
  • But, in Spain, already 1003!

9
A Mozart Symphony- Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K
550
  • Focus on the first movement
  • First theme is a repeated three note pattern in a
    minor key
  • Accompaniment gives a sense of urgency
  • Bridge transitions to the more lyrical second
    theme, which is in the relative major
  • Closing section remains in the major key,
    changing the feel of the first theme
  • Development varies the themes
  • Cuts first theme into smaller and smaller notes
  • Has movement towards a polyphonic texture
  • Shifts between high and low strings
  • With the recap staying in the minor key, the
    second theme becomes more touching and sad.

10
A Mozart Concerto- Piano Concerto in A Major, K.
488, 1st movement
  • Blends lyricism and sadness, emphasized by shifts
    between major and minor
  • Two themes played first by orchestra, then piano
    and orchestra
  • Development based on a new theme!
  • Ends with a cadenza, which Mozart actually wrote
    into the score
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