Mozart Composer Highlight

Mozart was born on a wintry day in January 1756 in the town of Salzburg, Austria.  His father was Leopold Mozart and his mother was Anna Maria Pertl.  Leopold and Anna had seven children together, only two of whom survived infancy (the 4th child Maria Anna, also known as Nannerl, and the 7th child Wolfgang Amadeus).  Mozart’s father, Leopold was a well known violinist, composer, and author (of a book on how to play the violin).

 

When Nannerl and Wolfgang were young their father gave up his [1]“ambitions as a pedagogue and composer [and devoted] himself to the nurturing of his extraordinary children.  Leopold believed that his son was a divine miracle whose God-given genius it was his duty to foster.”

Mozart learned his first piano piece at the age of five (Jan. 1761) and began performing in public only 9 months later (Sept. 1761).  At the age of 13 Mozart became the Konzertmeister at the Court.  Mozart spent many years traveling in Europe with his family, providing concerts and composing.

In June 1781 Mozart fell in love with Constanze Weber.  They were married in the summer of 1782.  Together they had 6 children, though most of them died in infancy.  As a result, [2]“there were endless doctor’s bills and endless funeral bills.”  Additionally, “the couple moved twelve times in nine years.  They fell deeper and deeper into debt.”  Though Mozart’s adult life was filled with many personal trials it [3]“never seemed to dam up the flood of music that poured from his happy-talking pen.”  Mozart composed over 600 works in his lifetime, including operas; symphonies; concertos; various instrumental compositions; ballet; chamber music; piano sonatas, variations, minuets, fantasias, marches, and duets; organ works; masses; requiems; oratorios; cantatas; and vocal songs.

 

Mozart fell ill in late November 1791 and doctors Closset and Sallaba attended to him.  Though he briefly felt better in early December he ultimately lost his life on December 5, 1791 at the young age of 36 years old.  Mozart [4]“was given a third-class funeral and buried in an unmarked pauper’s grave, [but] the music he left to the world is strictly first-class.”  Mozart’s legacy is profound.  Hardly a person in this world does not know who Mozart is or some of his musical compositions.  Today many of his works are tremendously famous and used in films, commercials, and even as lullabies.  One such piece is Variations in C Major, K. 265, better known today as “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star.”

“Mozart is the human incarnation of the divine force of creation.”
— Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 

 


[1] Landon, H.C. Robbins. The Mozart Compendium: A Guide to Mozart’s Life and Music. Spain: Thames and Hudson, Ltd,London, 1990.

[2] Kidd, Leonice Thompson. They All Sat Down: Pianists in Profile. Florence,Kentucky: The Willis Music Company, 1986.

[3] Kidd, Leonice Thompson. They All Sat Down: Pianists in Profile. Florence,Kentucky: The Willis Music Company, 1986.

[4] Kidd, Leonice Thompson. They All Sat Down: Pianists in Profile. Florence,Kentucky: The Willis Music Company, 1986.

Provide students with a fun and exciting way to practice elementary theory terms.  This crossword puzzle includes 10 early elementary music terms and definitions — tie, whole note, repeat sign, quarter note, half note, bar line, slur, double bar line, measure and staff.