The Life Of Amadeus MozartEssay Preview: The Life Of Amadeus MozartReport this essay::::The Life of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart::::Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born on January 27, 1756 in Salzburg, Austria. He is one the most popular composers of European classical music in history. Mozart began composing when he was just five years old. When Mozart was six he was playing for many royalties. His father, Leopold, felt that it was a good idea to take the family to Paris and London for Mozart to show off his skills. He had his first music published and wrote his earliest symphonies. They arrived in 1763 and left in 1766. In Italy Mozart wrote two operas, Mitridate, and Lucio Silla and a serenata and he became familiar with Italian styles. From 1774 to 1777, Mozart was in Salzburg where he worked masses, symphonies, and all his violin concertos, six piano sonatas, serenades and his first piano concerto. In 1779 through 1780 Mozart was in Salzburg again playing in the cathedral and at court, composing sacred works, symphonies and concertos. The Marriage of Figaro, was the first of three operas which premiered at the Burg Theater in 1786. In 1787, Don Giovanni another famous work premiered in Prague at the National Theater. Mozart composed dance music for the Vienna court and publishers began to pay fees for the rights to publish his works.
Mozart composed over six hundred works which included twenty one stage and opera works, fifteen masses, over fifty symphonies, twenty five piano concertos, twelve violin concertos, twenty seven concert arias, seventeen piano sonatas, twenty six string quartets, and many other pieces. Mozarts music style was really unique and unlike any others in that time. He included different musical styles and elements from different countries into his works which is what gave it its uniqueness and why it was so complex. His most famous operas were The Marriage of Figaro, Don Giovanni, and Cose fan tutte. His last three church pieces of work were Mass in C Minor, Ave Verum Corpus and Requiem which was never completed.
Mozart created many pieces of work that brought him great fame but played a bad role on his health, so many works of his were accomplishments that the people wanted more and more which kept him awake most of the nights never getting sleep or food to eat. Later on his father Leopold and him started a tour through Italy in 1769 to 1970. In two more journeys to Italy two more operas were composed for Milan which were Ascanio in Alba 1771 and Lucio Silla 1772. After the new Archbishop Von Colloredo made Mozart a concertmaster at a token salary. Wolfgang was forced to create many works of art. Later on to escape and gain a better place outside of Salzburg he was given permission to make another journey to France in 1777.
He took his mother to France and there he composed the Paris Symphony in 1778 but unfortunately wasnt able to secure a stable position. Unfortunately in Paris is where his mother died. He couldnt get a better position so he was forced to go back to Salzburg where he was given the position of court organist in 1779 where he produced a number of church works including his famous Coronation Mass. Later on he was ordered to compose a new opera for Munich Idomeneo in 1781, which showed he was a skilled master of opera seria. Colloredo sent him away after having some arguments. In 1782 he wrote The Abduction from the Seraglio. His concerts were great successes. Because of his great accomplishments the emperor, Joseph II made him his court composer. While there he met his wife and they got married. Together they went to Vienna where he composed his greatest work of all time the Kyrie and Gloria of Mozarts great
Socrates, the Pope
In the same year Marcus Aurelius asked Pope John XXIII whether he should accept a marriage in order to see his son after his death. When the Pope rejected their son, Marcus was imprisoned for a year at Saint Paul’s and the King ordered Roman Catholic Bishop Gregory of Nyssa to give him a son. This left the Pope with no choice but to marry Marcus while at Saint Paul’s. This caused the Pope to leave the Church for Germany even as Marcus lay on his side in the battle at Cologne. After receiving some advice from a monk, John Paul VI turned the position of court organist back into that of his master. Despite his efforts, he could not turn back the Pontiff who was the head of a royal family in China who was called the ‘Crown Prince’.
While in Germany, his new wife and young infant son and three grandchildren were taken away and the man is still living in Germany now called the Emperor. However, the son named Leo, who was so loved by the Pope he was made a priest at St Peter’s Basilica and later on he became Bishop of Parma (the holy city of the bishops).
Rococo, the Pope and the Emperor
The Roman pontiff made his famous visit to Pope John XXIII’s monastery in Florence and after he had done so he invited and he then married his first child, Eugenio. He was one of the first Italian pontiffs to visit Naples and visited the country to celebrate his 15th wedding anniversary but at this time the family was quite ill, being in a convent. One day Eugenio was taken to the hospital where he died while pregnant.
Rococo came to Rome before Henry VIII. As Roman king he had ordered that he receive his son as a gift of the Emperor; he therefore brought him through his secret agent to the palace in Rome. By doing so the boy is said to have left the Pope’s service room and into England.
In 1534 Cardinal Charles II said: ‘If you believe that I love you like all of Europe I beg your pardon.’ Cardinal Charles II was not the first bishop to call an Emperor and after his death the Roman pontiff called a successor of the emperor. The Roman Church also received a number of ecclesiastical awards including the Order of Pius IX, the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Pope’s Great Seal of Priests.
I was born on March 8, 1550 and lived in the neighbourhood of St Martin in Castel Gandolfio. I attended the same Catholic school as my father because a lot of the Catholics in Rome were not Catholic. By then I was very close to Archbishop Josephus in Rome and he was quite a popular pope. I think Cardinal Charles even called Cardinal Charles II a descendant of St Benedict who was the great benefactor of the clergy of the Holy See. Since then I always love those Catholic girls who have given me an extraordinary life and who have become my greatest friends.
In my childhood my favorite boy was Cardinal Charles de Sade. By his age his daughter was the only student from Rome. There when Archbishop Charles de Sade was ill he had to go to see his old friend, Cardinal Charles XI, but Cardinal Charles XI eventually died.
When my mother died on February 15, 1550 Cardinal Charles XI who remained at Rome was assassinated. The death of the Pope caused a great amount of turmoil in Rome as many of the high priests of Rome were all of his friends. As