Transcript Slide 1
MUSIC APPRECIATION
Class #7: Mozart
THE MOZART PROJECT
http://www.mozartproject.org/
WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
1756-1791
GETREIDEGASSE NO.9
FAMILY: LEOPOLD, ANNA MARIA, MARIA
ANNA (“NANNERL”)
PRODIGY*
FIRST COMPOSITION
"This piece was learnt by
Wolfgangerl on 24
January 1761, 3 days
before his 5th birthday,
between 9 and 9:30 in
the evening."
PROOF
Witnesses
Documentation
Opinions
5 years old:
Sight Read
Compose
TOURING
1756
The
“circuit”
Small cities
Paris
Vienna
Ages 5-17
CONCERTS
Harpsichord
& Violin
Improvisations
Stunts!?
2-3
hour concerts
3-4 performances per day
SCHEDULE
Family
friends
Royal
Court
Society
Church
Private
concerts
Musikabend*
Invitations
PAYMENTS
Cash
Gold
Gifts
Clothing
Jewels
EARLY REPORTS
"Everyone is amazed,
especially at the boy,
and everyone whom I
have heard says that his
genius is
incomprehensible."
FATIGUE
1st
illness
“Scarlet Fever”
Tuberculosis
Later
illness
Rheumatoid
Constant
arthritis
COMPOSING
Carriage
rides
Musical memory
PARIS!
(Salzburg to Munich: 71 miles)
MARIE ANTOINETTE*
“Will you marry me, yes or no?!”
1764 (8 YEARS OLD)
London
Handel
Johann
Christian Bach
Haydn (?!)
Royal family
Buckingham palace
REBELLION
Children – pre-teen
Nan
Health
“Woman’s place”
Wolfgang
Composing
Size
Health
RETURN TO SALZBURG
Money
Employment
Stability
Composition
ITALY (14)
Without Nannerl
Formal education
Accademia filarmonica of Bologna
Expulsion
Vatican
Order of the “Golden Spur”
PERFORMER VS. COMPOSER
Child star grows up
Leopold’s pressure vs. Wolfgang’s aspirations
EMPLOYMENT 1771-1781
Salzburg
Konzertmeister
Employer: Archbishop
Fired
“…with a kick in the ass...”
THE LETTERS*
"My pen is coarse and I am not polite”
Daily+
Lifetime
Recipients
Family
Friends
Colleagues
Over 400 preserved and translated
CONTEXT
Various moods and intentions
To family
Respectful, obedient, loving
To colleagues
Professional, frank, encouraging
Tragically humbling
To friends (and cousin)
Playful, witty, naughty
EXAMPLES
"I can only weep. I have far too sensitive a heart.“
"Perhaps if you were with me I might possibly
take more pleasure in the kindness of those I meet
here. But, as it is, everything seems so empty.“
“Dear cuzz-buzz, I miss-piss your heart-part!”
“I beg of you, not for me but for my child, a few
coins, whatever you can spare…”
SIGNATURE
VARIETY
You can see now that I am able to
write any way I want to, beautifully
and wild, straight and crooked. The
other day, I was in a bad humor, so
my writing was beautiful, straight,
and serious; today I'm in a good
mood, and my writing is wild,
crooked and jolly."
“K” NUMBERS*
“Köchel-Verzeichnis”
Posthumous
Non-chronological
For organization and ease of sale
LUDWIG RITTER VON KÖCHEL
ANTONIO SALIERI (1750-1825)
SALIERI FACTS
Wealthy family
Royal appointment from 1774-1824
Wildly popular
Vienna’s favorite composer
Celebrated teacher
Mozart’s son, Franz Xaver
Franz Liszt
Franz Schubert
Ludwig van Beethoven
Long, happy marriage with eight children
Sabotaged performances of Mozart’s “The Marriage
of Figaro”
SALIERI MYTHS
Alone
recognized Mozart’s genius
Therefore, insanely jealous
Secret
patron
Requiem
Mozart’s murderer
When did it begin?
FUN AND GAMES
Truth or Myths with Salieri and Mozart
http://classyclassical.blogspot.com/2005/08/antoni
o-salieri-truth-or-fiction.html
AMADEUS*
Peter Schaffer 1979
London
Broadway
Two Olivier Awards
Three Tony Awards
Milos Foreman 1984
8 Academy awards
Best Movie
MANUSCRIPT
MUSICAL COMPOSITIONS
600+
Age 6 - 1791
Composed in every major existing genre
Symphonies (41)
Sacred Music
Concertos
Violin, Woodwinds (Clarinet)
Piano (#21 in C Major, 2nd movement; March 10, 1785!)
Chamber Music
Requiem
“Eine Kleine Nachtmusik” (Youtube)
22 Operas
Age 11 - 1791
OPERA
“…everything else I write
is just to sustain me
until the perfect libretto
presents itself…”
WHY?
Baroque
opera traditions
Mozart’s goals
“Real” people/emotions
Drama
Subconscious*
1: SINGSPIEL*
Vernacular
Spoken
dialogue
Light subject matter
“The Abduction From
The Seraglio”
“The Magic Flute”
2: OPERA SERIA*
Subject
matter
Melodramatic
Mythological
Religious
Idomeneo
Titus
3: OPERA BUFFA*
Only comedic?
Character development
LORENZO DA PONTE* (1749-1838 NYC)
DA PONTE QUICK FACTS: PROFESSIONAL
Writer
Playwright
Poet
Librettist
Royal Court Appointment by (Franz) Joseph II
Close personal and professional friendship with Salieri
DA PONTE QUICK FACTS: TRIVIA
Personal life
Born Jewish, converted to Catholicism
Priest
Married his mistress
Defrocked, opened a brothel
Moved to New York
US Citizen
Philadelphia grocer
Columbia University professor
Founding member of the Library of Congress
PIERRE BEAUMARCHAIS* (1732-1799)
BEAUMARCHAIS FACTS
Watch-maker, inventor, musician, politician, fugitive, spy,
publisher, arms-dealer, and revolutionary (French and American)
Playwright (“The Figaro Trilogy”*)
The
Barber of Seville
The Marriage Of Figaro
La Mère coupable
THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO*
CHARACTERS
Aristocracy*
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Count Almaviva
Dr. Bartolo
Don Basilio
Rosina (Countess Almaviva)
Marcellina
Don Curzio
Commoners*
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Figaro
Susanna
Cherubino*
Antonio
Servants
*Trouser role
REACTION TO “THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO”
Napoleon:
“Everything you need to know in order to
understand the spirit of (French) Revolution is
contained in the truths found in Figaro.”*
Banned in France by Marie Antoinette
Why?
And by her brother, Franz Josef, in Austria?
(FRANZ) JOSEPH II (1741-1790)
DROIT DE SEIGNEUR*
Right
Of The Lord
“Right of the First Night”
“FIGARO”S APPEAL TO MOZART
Conflict
Social
Political
Character development
Subconscious*
Repressed/unspoken thoughts
Susanna
Cultural standing
PRODUCTION CONFLICTS
Librettist (Da Ponte) is working for the censor of
the script (Franz Joseph II).
Librettist is hired to write for the composer’s
“rival” (Salieri).
RESOLUTIONS
Da Ponte’s deal with (Franz) Joseph II
Subject matter
Politics removed
Only a “bedroom farce” is left
“Time off” to be repaid
TWO SCENES
Act II
Finale*
Act III
“Recognition” sextet*
TWENTY+ UNINTERRUPTED MINUTES!
1.
Susanna
1.
Solo
2.
Count & Countess
2.
Duet
3.
add Susanna
3.
Trio
4.
add Figaro
4.
Quartet
5.
add Antonio
5.
Quintet
6.
remove Antonio
add Marcellina,
Bartolo, Basilio
6.
Quartet
Octet
“Recognition” sextet
Allegiances reverse
Musical “laughter”
Plot completely changes
Authority challenged, thwarted, defeated
PIANO SONATA IN C MAJOR K.
330; 3RD MOVEMENT
Vladimir Horowitz*
Horowitz in Moscow (1986)
1787: DON GIOVANNI*
Legend of Don Juan
“Or The Rake (Cad/Heel) is Punished”
LIBRETTO
Lorenzo da Ponte
Dramma
Giocoso*
Anti-Hero*
DON GIOVANNI CHARACTERS
Aristocracy*
Don Giovanni
Donna Anna
Don Ottavio
Commendatore
Donna Elvira
Commoners*
Leporello
Zerlina
Masetto
REVOLUTIONARY, IN JUST 10 MINUTES!
Overture*
Opening
Ending?
Leporello’s opening rant
“I don’t want to be a servant anymore!”
(Attempted) rape
Sword fight (musical)
Murder
Trio for three basses
VIVA! VIVA LA LIBERTA!*
Political statement
Out of context (and this is Mozart/Da Ponte?!)
Every character
Eight repeats
FINAL SCENE
Don Giovanni’s last party?
Donna Elvira’s entrance and exit
Thunder
Screams
Knocks/steps
Confrontation*
Music from the overture
Good vs. Evil
Choice!
1791
Die Zauberflöte (Magic Flute)*
Papageno/Papgena duet
La Clemenza di Tito
Requiem*
Lacrimosa*
Myths vs. Facts
Mozart’s final completed composition
Franz Xaver Süssmayr
DECEMBER 5, 1791
On the day of his death he asked for the
score to be brought to his bedside. 'Did I
not say before, that I was writing this
Requiem for myself?' After saying this, he
looked yet again with tears in his eyes
through the whole work ... They were at
the first bars of the Lacrimosa when
Mozart began to weep...
LACRIMOSA*
Tearful that day,
on which will rise from ashes
guilty man for judgment.
So have mercy, O Lord, on this man.
Compassionate Lord Jesus,
grant them rest. Amen.
THE TORCH IS PASSED
Ludwig van Beethoven made his appearance in
Vienna as a youthful musician of promise in the
spring of 1787, but was only able to remain there a
short time; he was introduced to Mozart, and
played to him at his request. Mozart, considering
the piece he performed to be a studied show-piece,
was somewhat cold in his expressions of
admiration. Beethoven remarking this, begged for a
theme for improvisation, and, inspired by the
presence of the master he reverenced so highly,
played in such a manner as gradually to engross
Mozart's whole attention; turning quietly to the
bystanders, he said emphatically, “Watch that
young man; he will make himself a name in
the world! When I am gone, he will teach you
all something!”
CARL MARIA VON WEBER* (178601826)
CD#1, TRACK 16
Clarinet Concerto #2*
Which movement?
Why?
Listen for…
Cantabile* solo passages
Predictable rhythm
Secondary, accompaniment for the orchestra