Mozart’s place
- In full:
- Johann Chrysostom Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
- Baptized as:
- Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart
- Born:
- January 27, 1756, Salzburg, archbishopric of Salzburg [Austria]
- Died:
- December 5, 1791, Vienna (aged 35)
- Notable Works:
- song
- “A Musical Joke”
- “Adagio für Harmonika K. 356”
- “Adagio und Rondo K. 617”
- “Bastien and Bastienne”
- “Clarinet Quintet in A Major, K 581”
- “Concerto in A Major”
- “Così fan tutte”
- “Deh! vieni alla finestra”
- “Don Giovanni”
- “Eine kleine Nachtmusik”
- “Exsultate, Jubilate, K 165”
- “Haffner”
- “Idomeneo, rè di Creta”
- “Il sogno di Scipione”
- “Jupiter Symphony”
- “Là ci darem la mano”
- “La clemenza di Tito”
- “La finta giardiniera”
- “La finta semplice”
- “Litaniae de venerabili altaris sacramento”
- “Lucio Silla”
- “Mass in C Major”
- “Mitridate, rè di Ponto”
- “Prague”
- “The Abduction from the Seraglio”
- “The Magic Flute”
- “The Marriage of Figaro”
- Notable Family Members:
- father Leopold Mozart
- On the Web:
- BBC Sounds - Desert Island Discs - Patricia Neal (Dec. 18, 2024)
At the time of his death Mozart was widely regarded not only as the greatest composer of the time but also as a bold and “difficult” one; Don Giovanni especially was seen as complex and dissonant, and his chamber music as calling for outstanding skill in its interpreters. His surviving manuscripts, which included many unpublished works, were mostly sold by Constanze to the firm of André in Offenbach, which issued editions during the 19th century. But Mozart’s reputation was such that even before the end of the 18th century two firms had embarked on substantial collected editions of his music. Important biographies appeared in 1798 and 1828, the latter by Constanze’s second husband; the first scholarly biography, by Otto Jahn, was issued on Mozart’s centenary in 1856. The first edition of the Köchel catalog followed six years later, and the first complete edition of his music began in 1877.
The works most secure in the repertory during the 19th century were the three operas least susceptible to changes in public taste—Le nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni, and Die Zauberflöte—and the orchestral works closest in spirit to the Romantic era—the minor-key piano concertos (Beethoven wrote a set of cadenzas for the one in D Minor) and the last three symphonies. It was only in the 20th century that Mozart’s music began to be reexamined more broadly. Although up to the middle of the century Mozart was still widely regarded as having been surpassed in most respects by Beethoven, with the increased historical perspective of the later 20th century he came to be seen as an artist of a formidable, indeed perhaps unequaled, expressive range. The traditional image of the child prodigy turned refined drawing-room composer, who could miraculously conceive an entire work in his head before setting pen to paper (always a distortion of the truth), gave way to the image of the serious and painstaking creative artist with acute human insight, whose complex psychology demanded exploration by writers, historians, and scholars. The 1980 play Amadeus (written by Peter Shaffer) and especially its film version of 1984 (directed by Miloš Forman), although they did much to promote interest in Mozart, reinforced certain myths—i.e., that even as an adult Mozart remained an inappropriately childish vessel for divinely inspired music and that his premature death was brought about by Salieri. Yet even in this indulgent appropriation of Mozart’s legacy, his full-blooded humanity at times emerges with haunting vividness.
Stanley Sadie The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica