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Mozart's Concerto for Violin & Orchestra No. 3
Analysis of Movement I - Allegro of Mozart's Concerto for Violin & Orchestra No. 3 in G Major, K. 216. -- 885 words; MLA

Mozart's Operas
Discusses the history and significance of four of Mozart's most famous operas. -- 1,150 words;

Mozart's "Magic Flute"
This paper analyzes "The Magic Flute" by Mozart, highlighting the importance of the story's premise. -- 1,125 words;

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
A review of the life and accomplishments of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. -- 1,125 words;

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
An overview of the extraordinary life and achievements of the musical genius, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. -- 1,400 words;

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MOZART

He was 
the son of Leopold Mozart, Kapellmeister to the Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg, and 
much the reason behind's Wolfgang's education. By the age of three he could play the 
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
piano, and he was composing by the time he was five. Mozart's elder sister Maria Anna 
was also a gifted keyboard player, and in 1762 their father took the two prodigies on a 
short performing tour, of the courts at Vienna and Munich. 
Encouraged by their reception, they embarked the next year on a longer tour, 
including two weeks at Versailles, where the children enchanted Louis XV. In 1764 they 
arrived in London. Here Mozart wrote his first three symphonies, under the influence of 
Johann Christian Bach, youngest son of Johann Sebastian, who lived in the city. After 
their return to Salzburg there followed three trips to Italy between 1769 and 1773. In 
Rome, Mozart heard a performance of Allegri's Misere; the score of this work was 
closely guarded, but Mozart managed to transcribe the music almost perfectly from 
memory. 
In 1769 Mozart was appointed concertmaster to the archbishop of Salzburg, and 
later in the same year, at La Scala, he was made a chevalier of the Order of the Golden 
Spur by the pope. He also composed his first German operetta, Bastien und Bastienne, in 
the same year. At the age of 14 he was commissioned to write a serious opera. This work,

Mitridate, re di Ponto, produced under his direction at Milan, completely established an

already phenomenal reputation. The Mozarts returned to Salzburg in 1771. Hieronymus, 
count von Colloredo, the successor to the archbishop of Salzburg, who had died while the

Mozarts were touring Italy, cared little for music. Mozart's appointment at Salzburg, 
Gloss 2
however, proved to be largely honorary; it allowed ample time for a prodigious musical 
output during his next six years, but afforded little financial security. In 1777 Mozart

obtained a leave of absence for a concert tour and left with his mother for Munich. The 
courts of Europe ignored the 21-year-old composer in his search for a more congenial and

rewarding appointment. He traveled to Mannheim, then the musical center of Europe 
because of its famous orchestra, in hopes of a post, and there fell in love with Aloysia

Weber. Leopold promptly ordered his son and wife to Paris. His mother's death in Paris 
in July 1778, his rejection by Weber, and the neglect he suffered from the aristocrats 
whom he courted made the two years from Mozart's arrival in Paris a painful one.
While at home Mozart composed two masses and a number of sonatas, 
symphonies, and concertos; these works reveal for the first time a distinctive style and
a 
completely mature understanding of musical media. In 1781, Mozart's first great stage 
work, the opera Idomeneo, was produced in Munich, where Mozart also wrote his 
Serenade for 13 wind instruments, K361. 
On his return from Munich, however, the hostility brewing between him 
and the Archbishop came to a head, and Mozart resigned. On delivering his resignation
he was verbally abused and eventually, physically ejected from the archbishop's 
residence. Without patronage, Mozart was forced to confront the perils of a freelance 
existence. Initially his efforts met with some success. He took up residence in Vienna
and 
in 1782 his opera Die Entfuhrung aus dem Serail (The abdication from the Seraglio) was 
produced in the city and rapturously received. The same year in Vienna's St Stephen's 
Gloss 3
Cathedral, Mozart married Constanze Weber. Soon afterwards he initiated a series of 
subscription concerts at which he performed his piano concertos and improvised at the 
keyboard. Most of Mozart's great piano concertos were written for these concerts, 
including those in C, K467, A, K488 and C minor, K491. In these concertos Mozart 
brought to the genre a unity and diversity it had not had before, combining bold 
symphonic richness with passages of subtle delicacy. In 1758 Mozart dedicated to Haydn 
the six string quartets that now bear Haydn's name. Including in this group are the 
quartets known as the Hunt, which make use of hunting calls, and the Dissonance, which 
opens with an eerie succession of dissonant chords. Overwhelmed by their quality, Haydn 
confessed to Leopold Mozart, 'Before God and as an honest man I tell you that your son 
is the greatest composer known to me either in person or by name.' The pieces are 
matched in excellence in Mozart's chamber music output only by his String Quintets, 
outstanding among which are those in C, K515, G minor, K516 and D, K593.
Wolfgang's father died in Salzburg on May 28, 1787, at the age of 67. Wolfgang 
had news of his father's illness in April, at which time Constanze was ailing as well.
This 
turn of events left him greatly depressed, and his own health took a turn for the worse.

His music from the preceding decade was only sporadically popular, and he eventually 
fell back on his teaching jobs and on the charity of friends to make ends meet. The 
Marriage of Figaro and Don Giovanni, with librettos by Lorenzo Da Ponte, while 
successful in Prague, were partial failures in Vienna. From 1787 until the production of

Cosi fan tutte. 
Gloss 4
Mozart received no commissions for operas. For the coronation of Emperor Leopold II in 
1791 he wrote the opera seria La clemenza di Tito. His three great symphonies of 1788-
no. 39 in E-flat, no. 40 in G Minor, and no. 41 in C-were never performed under his 
direction. While Mozart was working on the singspiel The Magic Flute, an emissary of a 
Count Walsegg mysteriously requested a requiem mass.
This work, uncompleted at Mozart's death, proved to be his last musical effort. In 1788 
he stopped performing in public, preferring to compose. He died, presumably 
of typhoid fever, in Vienna on December 5, 1791.
After Mozart's death, Constanze met and evetually married Nikolaus von Nissen, 
an official in the Danish Embassy, and it was he who raised Mozart's sons. Nikolaus Von 
Nissen died in 1826, and Constanze in 1842. The two boys led fairly uneventful lives. 
Gloss 5
The elder, Karl Thomas, ended up as a minor official on the staff of the viceroy 
of Naples in Milan. He died in 1858. The younger, Franz Xaver Wolfgang, inherited his 
father's musical inclinations, if not all of his talent. He composed and conducted 
extensively throught Europe, but perhaps the last word on this 'Wolfgang Amadeus 
Mozart the Younger' was best spoken by George Bernard Shaw in a letter he wrote in 
1897. 'Do you remember the obscurity of Mozart's son? An amiable man, a clever 
musician, an excellent player, but hopelessly extinguished by his father's reputation.
How 
could any man do what was expected from Mozart's son? Not Mozart himself even.' 
Wolfgang and his father, Leopold had never regained the closeness they had shared in 
earlier days, but they reached a peace with each other, and maintained a steady 
corresponence.
Mozart had an unsuccessful career and died young, but he ranks as one of the 
great geniuses of Western civilization. His large output shows that even as a child he 
possessed a thorough command of the technical resources of musical composition as well 
as an original imagination. His instrumental works include symphonies, divertimentos, 
sonatas, chamber music for a number of instrumental combinations, and concertos; 
his vocal works consist mainly of church music and operas. 
Mozart's creative method was extraordinary, for his manuscripts show that, 
although he made an occasional preliminary sketch of a difficult passage, he almost 
invariably thought out a complete work before committing it to paper. His music 
combines an Italian taste for clear and graceful melody with a German taste for formal 
and contrapuntal ingenuity. Mozart thus epitomizes the classical style of the 18th
century, 
the goal of which was to be succinct, clear, and well balanced while at the same time 
developing ideas to a point of emotionally satisfying fullness. These qualities are
perhaps 
best expressed in his concertos, with their dramatic contrasts between a solo instrument

and the orchestra, and in his operas, with their profound contrasts between different 
personalities reacting to changing situations. His operas achieved a new unity of vocal 
and instrumental writing; they are marked by subtle characterization and an unusual use 
of classic symphonic style in large-scale ensembles.
A master of every form in which he worked, he set standards of excellence that 
have inspired generations of composers.
In 1787 Prague?s National Theatre saw the premiere of Don Giovanni, a 
moralizing version of the Don Juan legend in which the licentious nobleman receives his 
comeuppance and descends into the fiery regions of hell. The third and last da Ponte 
opera was Cosi fan tutte (Women are all the same), commissioned by Emperor Joseph II 
and produced at Vienna's Burgtheater in 1790. Its cynical treatment of the theme of 
sexual infidelity may have been responsible for its relative lack of success with the 
Viennese, who responded with such enthusiasm to the comedy of Figaro. Mozart wrote 
two more operas: the opera seria La clemenza di Tito (The Mercy of Tito) and Die 
Zauberflote (The Magic Flute). The latter was commissioned by actor-manager Emanuel 
Schikaneder to his own libretto. Its plot, a fairy tale combined with strong Masonic 
elements (Mozart was a devoted Freemason), is bizarre, but drew from Mozart some of 
his greatest music. When produced in 1791, two months before Mozart's death, the opera 
survived an initially cool reception and gradually won audiences over. The year 1788 saw

the composition of Mozart's two finest symphonies. Symphony No.40, in the tragic key of G
minor, contrasts strikingly with the affirmatory Symphony No.41 Jupiter. Neither helped
alleviate his financial plight, however, which after 1789 became critical. An extensive
concert tour of Europe failed to earn significant sums. A new emperor came to the
Austrian throne but Mozart was unsuccessful in his bid to become Kapellmeister. He was
deeply in debt when in July 1791 he received an anonymous commission to write a Requiem.
(The author of the commission was in fact Count Franz von Walsegg, who wished to pass off
the work as his own.) Mozart did not live to finish the Requiem. He became ill in autumn
1791 and died on December 5; his burial the next day was attended only by a gravedigger.
Rumours that Mozart had been poisoned abounded in Vienna after his death, many suggesting
that rival composer Antonio Salieri was responsible. Many now believe a heart weakened by
bouts of rheumatic fever caused his death. 

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