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W olfgang A madeus M ozart

W olfgang A madeus M ozart. By T aylor Wu. Early Life. Mozart was born on January 27, 1756, in Salzburg, Austria. At age 3, Mozart started playing the keyboard . Mimicking his sister’s plays, Wolfgang quickly began to show a strong understanding of chords, tonality, and tempo.

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W olfgang A madeus M ozart

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  1. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart By Taylor Wu

  2. Early Life • Mozart was born on January 27, 1756, in Salzburg, Austria. • At age 3, Mozart started playing the keyboard. • Mimicking his sister’s plays, Wolfgang quickly began to show a strong understanding of chords, tonality, and tempo. • At the age of 5, Wolfgang started composing minuets. • 1764 wrote his first three symphonies; also met Johann Christian Bach. • By his teenage years, he mastered the piano, violin, and harpsichord. • he can play without mistakes on a cloth-covered keyboard, • Wolfgang had expanded his instrumental skills by being able to play music on the piano, harpsichord, clavichord and organ. • He was proficient on the violin and viola as well.

  3. Mozart age 11 by J. Vander Smissen

  4. His father- Leopold Mozart • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s was the sole-surviving son of Leopold • Leopold was a successful composer, violinist, and assistant concert master at the Salzburg court.  • He introduced music to Mozart at an early age. • Leopold was a devoted and task-oriented teacher to both his children. • He made the lessons fun, but also insisted on a strong work ethic and perfection. • Wolfgang excelled well in these areas. Recognizing his special talents, Leopold devoted much of his time to Mozart’s education in music as well as other subjects. • Wolfgang soon showed signs of excelling beyond his father’s teachings with an early composition at age five. • Leopold was also the author of "The Violin School," one of the best books of its time for the teaching and training of violinists. •  In the end, he surrendered his chances for advancement in his career, preferring to gamble on his children providing for the security of the family.

  5. Mozart in Gala Dress by Lorenzoni 1763

  6. His older sister- Maria Anna “Nannerl” • Was older than Mozart by 5 years • Both children at an early age showed a remarkable musical talent. • Nannerl was a skilled pianist by age 8 when Wolfgang was three-year-old • As Nannerl turned 18, it seems that by this time Nannerl’s professional music career was over. • She was marriageable age and according to the custom of the time, she was no longer permitted to show her artistic talent in public. • She was Mozart’s earliest musical role model. • She died in 1829.

  7. The Mozart family: Maria Anna, Mozart, and Leopold

  8. Early career • In 1762, Wolfgang’s father took Nannerl and Wolfgang, to the court of Bavaria in Munich in what was to become the first of several European "tours." • 1763-1766 toured Europe with his father and sister played for Louis XV at Versailles and George III in London • The siblings traveled to the courts of Paris, London, The Hague, and Zurich performing as child prodigies. • In December, 1769, Wolfgang and his father departed from Salzburg for Italy. During this time Wolfgang also wrote a new opera, Mitridate, re di Ponto for the court of Milan. • Wolfgang wrote two other operas, Ascanio in Alba (1771) and LucioSilla(1772). • Mozart and his father returned from Italy to Salzburg in 1773.

  9. Career in salzburg • Upon his return from Italy, the new archbishop appointed young Mozart as assistant concertmaster with a small salary. • During this time, young Mozart had the opportunity to work in several different musical genres composing symphonies, string quartets, sonatas and serenades and a few operas. • He developed a passion for violin concertos producing what came to be the only five he wrote. • In 1776, he turned his efforts toward piano concertos, culminating in the Piano Concerto Number 9 in E flat major in early 1777.  • Despite his success, Wolfgang was not pleased with his position as assistant concert master and being confined in Salzburg. • In August 1777, Mozart set out on a trip to find more prosperous employment with his mother.

  10. Career (cont.) • Anna Maria (his mother) accompanied Wolfgang on his quest to the cities. • In 1777 toured with his mother hoping to find a court position; traveled to Mannheim where he met and fell in love with AloysiaWeber. • He ran out of funds and had to pawn several personal items to pay traveling and living expenses. • The lowest point of the trip was when his mother got sick and died on July 3, 1778. • After hearing the news of his wife’s death, Leopold negotiated a better post for his son as court organist in Salzburg and Wolfgang returned soon after. • Soon he was summoned to Vienna by von Colloredo. • Mozart was treated as a mere servant and forbidden from performing before the Emperor for a fee equal to half his yearly salary in Salzburg. A quarrel ensued and Mozart offered to resign his post. • Mozart decided to settle in Vienna as a freelance performer and composer.

  11. LIFE in vienna • Mozart's resignation and his move to Vienna put a strain in his relationship with his father. • Mozart quickly found work in Vienna, taking on pupils, writing music for publication, and playing in several concerts. • In the summer of 1781, Mozart was considering marriage to Fridolin Weber’s daughter, Constanze,younger sister of Aloysia. • His father disapproved but later gave him his blessings. • 1782 he married Constanze Weber in Vienna's St. Stephen's Cathedral.

  12. Mozart’s family • Married Constanze Weber in 1782. • Constanze and Wolfgang had six children, though only two survived infancy. • Karl Thomas Mozart (1757-1786) • Franz XaverWolfgang Mozart (1791-1844) • RaimundLeopold Mozart (1783–1783) • Johann Thomas Leopold Mozart (1786–1786) • Theresia Constantia AdelhaidFriederica Marianna Mozart (1787–1788) • Anna Maria Mozart (1789–1789)

  13. European fame • The opera Die Entführungwas a hit throughout Europe. • With the significant income from concerts and publishing, he and Constanze enjoyed a extravagant lifestyle. • They lived in one of the more exclusive apartment buildings of Vienna • Sent their son, Karl Thomas, to an expensive boarding school, kept servants, and maintained a busy social life. • In 1783, Mozart and Constanze traveled Salzburg, to visit his father and sister. • His father and sister was not happy to see him, because Mozart had disobeyed his father and left his family in Salzburg.

  14. 1780s • Mozart divided his time between self-produced concerts as soloist and presenting three to four new piano concertos in each season. • By the mid 1780s, Wolfgang and Constanze Mozart’s extravagant lifestyle was beginning to take its toll. Mozart was falling into serious financial difficulties. • Toward the end of 1785, Mozart met the librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte, a composer and poet and together they work together on the opera The Marriage of Figaro.  It received a successful premier in Vienna in 1786 and in Prague later that year. This triumph led to a second collaboration with Da Ponte on the opera Don Giovanni which premiered in 1787. • Noted for their musical complexity, the two operas are among Mozart’s most important works

  15. Later years • In December, 1787, Emperor Joseph IIappointed Mozart as his "chamber composer," a post that had opened up with the death of Gluck. • Toward the end of the 1780s, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s fortunes began to grow worse. He was performing less and his income shrank. Mozart began to borrow money from friends. • The two-year period of 1788-1789 was a low point for Mozart, experiencing in his own words "black thoughts" and deep depression. • During this time he wrote his last three symphonies and the last of the three Da Ponte operas, Cosi fan tutte, which premiered in 1790. • Between 1790 and 1791, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart went through a period of great music productivity and personal healing. Some of his most admired works—the opera The Magic Flute and the unfinished Requiem were written during this time.

  16. death • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart died on December 5, 1791 at age 35. • Mozart died of acute rheumatic fever, a disease he suffered from repeatedly throughout his life. • he was buried in a common graveHowever, his memorial services and concerts in Vienna and Prague were well attended. • After his death, Constanze sold many of his unpublished manuscripts to undoubtedly pay off the family’s large debts. Constanzewas able to gain some financial security for herself and allowing her to send her children to private schools. • At the time of his death, Mozart was considered one of the greatest composers of all time.

  17. Influence • At the age of 8 he met Johann Christian Bach in London who had a strong influence on Wolfgang. • While in Rome, Wolfgang heard Gregorio Allegri’sMiserere performed once in the Sistine Chapel. He wrote out the entire score from memory, and only had a few minor errors. • In 1783, Mozart became fascinated with the work of Johannes Sebastian Bach and George Frederic Handel. It resulted in several compositions in the Baroque style and influenced much of his later compositions, for example, Die Zauberflote (The Magic Flute) and the finale of Symphony Number 41. • During this time, Mozart met Joseph Haydn and the two composers became friends. When Haydn visited Vienna, they sometimes performed impromptu concerts with string quartets. Between 1782-1785 Mozart wrote six quartets dedicated to Haydn. • His rival was an Italian composer, Antonio Salieri.

  18. “I pay no attention whatever to anybody's praise or blame. I simply follow my own feelings.”-Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

  19. Legacy • Mozart was considered one of the greatest composers of all time. • His music presented a bold expression, often times complex and dissonant, and required high technical mastery from the musicians who performed it. • His works remained secure and popular throughout the 19th century. • His work influenced many composers that followed, most notably Beethoven in its complexity and depth. Along with his friend Joseph Haydn. • Mozart conceived and perfected the grand forms of symphony, opera, string ensemble, and concerto that marked the classical period • his operas display an mysterious psychological insight, unique to music at the time, and continue to create a fascination for musicians and music lovers today.

  20. bibliography • http://www.mozartforum.com/biography.htm • http://www.biography.com/people/wolfgang-mozart • http://www.its.caltech.edu/~tan/Mozartreq/main.html

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