Title | : | Letters of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0486228592 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780486228594 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 320 |
Publication | : | First published January 1, 1928 |
Mozart’s letters are interspersed in this edition with a generous selection of letters from his father. This two-sided, voluminous correspondence shows the close and sometimes conflicting relationship between father and son. Mozart’s letters to his sister are especially playful, exhibiting an impish, lighthearted wit reminiscent of his music, and the letters to his wife are equally revealing. Taken all together, this collection presents an informal and intimately detailed portrait of a genius.
Letters of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Reviews
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Here is a man who, after having an idea for a piece of music, then sees it "almost complete and finished in my mind, so that I can survey it, like a fine picture or a beautiful statue, at a glance. . . For this reason the committing to paper is done quickly enough, for everything is, as I said before, already finished. . . This is perhaps the best gift I have my Divine Maker to thank for." Wow! And he is so gleeful and joyous, signing letters with one thousand kisses and often more.
This book consisted of letters written between Mozart and his father. It did indeed start out joyously, but later there were darker undertones. Mozart was not a good judge of character and associated with people who would praise him, but ultimately use and abuse him financially. This, combined with his lack of ability to take and keep the jobs that would be most profitable to him and his family, resulted in his and his father's constant worry about money. Also, he was less than forthcoming with his father, who had such high expectations for Mozart's career. Then there was the frustrating aspect of watching this genius trying to prove himself to lesser talents. By the end, I tired of reading the father and son make the same arguments to each other, circling around worn pathways of complaint and frustration. I still give it 4 stars because I learned so much about Mozart and his life and the manner in which he composed. I also was reminded that even geniuses have problems, and I realized I suppose I should be happy with my mediocrity, because if a person excels tremendously at something, he or she is bound to be lacking in some other important talent. That being said, Mozart goes on my list of people I wish I could have met. To play music with him, to watch him compose, to attend a debut of The Magic Flute, even to lend him money, just to be a part of his happy little world being greeted with a thousand kisses, that would be magical. -
Mozart is so engaging and so funny in his letters! What a brilliant mind he had.
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It was an interesting book to read. It happens that Mozart it's my favourite composer. And not as a composer and as a human too. I knew about his personality just from the music history books that I have read. I was so exciting when I found out that this books exists.
It was so interesting to see how Mozart thought about things, how he saw life, people, music and work. -
"Deoarece însă (la drept vorbind), moartea este adevăratul scop final al vieții noastre, eu, de câțiva ani, așa m-am împăcat cu acest sincer și foarte bun prieten al oamenilor, încât chipul lui nu mai are nimic înspăimântător pentru mine. Din contră, îmi aduce consolare și liniște. Și îi mulțumesc Dumnezeului meu că mi-a acordat prilejul (dumneata mă înțelegi) să-i fac cunoștință în calitatea sa de cheie a adevăratei noastre fericiri. Nu mă culc niciodată în patul meu fără a cugeta că poate (oricât de tânăr sunt), poate nu voi mai fi a doua zi. Cu toate acestea, niciun om dintre cei ce mă cunosc nu va putea spune că aș fi posac sau trist în societate. Și pentru această fericire, îi mulțumesc zilnic Creatorului meu și i doresc din suflet fiecărui semen de-al meu."
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O carte excepțională, nu numai prin faptul că ne transcende în intimitatea corespondenţei prodigiosului compozitor, ci mai ales pentru că ne descoperă caracterul uimitor al acestui om. Cu "Monsieur, mon très cher Père!" îşi începea scrisorile către tatăl său, căruia îi scria atât de des semnând cu "în veci al dumitale preascultător fiu", iar cele adresate adoratei sale soţii, Constanze, debordau de gingăşie şi tandrețe ("Adio, te sărut de mii de ori. În veci al tău Mozart").
O lectură fascinantă, veselă şi tristă deopotrivă, obligatorie pentru iubitorii muzicii sublime a marelui Mozart! -
Literal shitposting
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An absolute must read for classical lovers; this one has dated and non-dated letters written from this prodigy back in the Classical period days. It was unfortunate he had to pass so young at the age of 36....10 more years of his life, I wonder what types of music he could have produced!!!
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Mozart - you're so funny!
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unbeliveable
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Funny that guy Mozart.
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A true must read!
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These are not the collected letters and exchanges of a musical genius, though he most certainly was, but rather, an insight into the mind of a seemingly overconfident man whose desperation to please his overbearing and insatiable father overshadows every word he writes in vanity. As these are his own letters, his own correspondence over a short life, there is no cause for criticism, no judgment for which I could ever claim disappointment. Despite his enormous talent, a talent he certainly recognizes and echoes in his own self-congratulatory way, over and over and over, Mozart is just a man, conscious of his ongoing financial burdens, as enamored with a bachelor’s life as he is to eventually love and adore his wife, Constance, and thirsty for lighthearted humor at times when undeniable melancholy, heartache, or rage might seem more appropriate.
For every letter to his father, his salutation was predictably and consistently endearing, “I kiss your hands a thousand times,” a line that only makes sense in retrospect, in looking over all that he wrote, a conclusion that for all that he accomplished, even posthumously, Mozart only ever became what he became because of that relationship with his father, strained though it was on the elder side. -
This collection of letters is a great reminder of how similar we are as humans, regardless of the time in which we are born. The love of family, and angst with the family are on full display. One cannot doubt the love between Wolfgang and his father, sister, and his wife when reading these personal letters.
It is a stunning reminder that hard work and talent are not necessarily enough to achieve financial rewards. It is heart breaking to see how rosy Wolfgang frequently saw the future for himself and his family; and to understand that the future he saw was never manifest in his own lifetime. One wonders what further heights he might have reached if a few different decisions had been made along the way. -
Nu am fost niciodată fan al memorialisticii. Am început câteva cărți pe care nu le-am putut duce la bun sfârșit, dar scrisorile lui Mozart pur și simplu nu am putut să le las din mână.
Un lucru interesant care m-a atras a fost semi monologul cărții, 90 % fiind scrisorile lui adresate către tatăl, repsectiv soția sa, prea puțin apare și corespondența celorlalți, așadar poți doar deduce ceea ce a primit ca răspunsuri. Deasemenea tonul și jovialitatea lui te cuceresc de la început până la sfârșit iar scrisorile adresate soției sunt un adevărat festin literar. Cumva asta te face să vrei să citești mai departe și în același timp să simți că pur și simplu invadezi intimitatea oamenilor.
Da o recomand cu toată căldura!!! -
I‘ve started my obsession with W.A. Mozart as a little child, I enjoyed listening to his music and watch the ‚Little Amadeus‘ animated TV show where i btw collected all the DVDs. Reading his letters and getting a glimpse of him was defintely present in this small book and I am grateful that these letters have been released and that I bought the book the second I saw it
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Huh, mozart be kind of a manipulative asshole
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Mozart's letters are all the joy, cheer, brilliant wit and love of life that is expressed in his music put into words. The letters are primarily between the composer and his father. It is easy to see the optimist, naive, little boy with a wicked sense of humor who never quite grew up. All of his letters to his father are gushing about the latest friends he has made ("Count so and so loves my work he is going to commission me to write so many sonatas if I will travel to Italy with him etc...")
And his father's response: "Are you out of your feather-headed mind?! I told you to stay in Vienna where you can get a real job with a commission at the court."
I'm paraphrasing, but you get the idea.
Back and forth it goes. We learn a lot about the aristocracy and how they treated the little guy. Mozart was apparently a little guy. He was always strapped for funds and even though many wealthy patrons enjoyed his music, they weren't always intelligent enough to truly understand the genius behind it. They often treated him disrespectfully.
For the rest of my review cut and paste the link to my blog post:
http://sharonhenning.blogspot.com/201... -
Appena terminato...e mi invade la sensazione di quanto già lo consideri imprescindibile nella mia esperienza di ascoltatore. Certo, se non l'avessi mai letto avrei continuato a godere di Mozart come una delle più belle esperienze di questa vita...ma ora ne godo con una qualità in più, una consapevolezza diversa, un panorama più vasto e più specifico allo stesso tempo.
Sono solo parole del compositore, dell'uomo, nessuna mediazione, nessuna interpretazione. Un patrimonio il cui valore più inestimabile, a mio avviso, consiste nell'offrire a chiunque la possibilità di perdersi e volare a modo proprio, nello spazio che si descrive fra l'uomo e la sua musica. -
Good general collection of Mozart's letters, some of which I'd seen before, others not. I had previously only read letters between Mozart and his father, so it was interesting to see a change of tone on Mozart's part depending on who he was writing. However, while there were letters from Leopold to his son included, and some from Mozart's mother, I wish there had also been letters from Mozart's wife. At least near the end.
(Also, this edition of his letters from Everyman's Library is really pretty…) -
I liked that this was purely correspondence, not colored by anyone's opinions of what was meant by this, that and the other. More interesting as it goes along, Mozart grows older, tries to please his father while simultaneously trying to break free. Near the end you get a real sense of his desperation, and a feeling of almost, almost, almost...
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Picked up at the Big Book Sale!