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Mozart's Letters, Mozart's Life book cover
Mozart's Letters, Mozart's Life
2000
First Published
4.37
Average Rating
495
Number of Pages
"A wonderful collection that gives Mozart a voice as a son, husband, brother and friend." ― New York Times Book Review "Mozart's honesty, his awareness of his own genius and his contempt for authority all shine out from these letters."― Sunday Times (London). " In Mozart's Letters, Mozart's Life, Robert Spaethling presents "Mozart in all the rawness of his driving energies" ( Spectator ), preserved in the "zany, often angry effervescence" of his writing ( Observer ). Where other translators have ignored Mozart's atrocious spelling and tempered his foul language, "Robert Spaethling's new translations are lively and racy, and do justice to Mozart's restlessly inventive mind" ( Daily Mail ). Carefully selected and meticulously annotated, this collection of letters "should be on the shelves of every music lover" ( BBC Music Magazine ). 16 pages of illustrations
Avg Rating
4.37
Number of Ratings
270
5 STARS
52%
4 STARS
34%
3 STARS
11%
2 STARS
2%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Author · 19 books

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791) was a prolific and influential composer of the Classical era. He composed over six hundred works, many acknowledged as pinnacles of symphonic, concertante, chamber, piano, operatic, and choral music. He is among the most enduringly popular of classical composers. Mozart showed prodigious ability from his earliest childhood in Salzburg. Already competent on keyboard and violin, he composed from the age of five and performed before European royalty; at seventeen he was engaged as a court musician in Salzburg, but grew restless and traveled in search of a better position, always composing abundantly. Visiting Vienna in 1781 he was dismissed from his Salzburg position and chose to stay in the capital, where over the rest of life he achieved fame but little financial security. The final years in Vienna yielded many of his best-known symphonies, concertos, and operas, and the Requiem. The circumstances of his early death have been much mythologized. He was survived by his wife Constanze and two sons. Mozart always learned voraciously from others, and developed a brilliance and maturity of style that encompassed the light and graceful along with the dark and passionate—the whole informed by a vision of humanity "redeemed through art, forgiven, and reconciled with nature and the absolute". His influence on all subsequent Western art music is profound. Beethoven wrote his own early compositions in the shadow of Mozart, of whom Joseph Haydn wrote that "posterity will not see such a talent again in 100 years".

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