Mozart’s Music

Mozart the Composer

Mozart wrote a tremendous amount of music in his short lifetime. In fact, he wrote more than many composers who lived to be twice his age. His compositions number well over 600, amounting to about 200 hours of music. Some pieces last less than a minute; others can take more than three hours to perform. Mozart wrote just about every kind of music there was in his time: symphonies, operas, concertos, sonatas, serenades, divertimentos, masses, and much, much more.

Perhaps you have heard of The Magic Flute, Don Giovanni, or The Marriage of Figaro, some of his greatest operas, or of the serenade Eine kleine Nachtmusik, or the incredibly beautiful Clarinet Concerto.

Music for Everyone

Mozart is often referred to as the most universal composer. This means that people everywhere, of all ages, can enjoy his music. Even if you know nothing about music, you can still enjoy most of it at first hearing. It has that magical combination of lightness, joy, elegance, and rhythmic motion. Mozart seems to be in touch with each one of us, making our hearts and minds feel things in ways words or pictures cannot. The magical effect that Mozart’s music has on us, more than two centuries after his death, has not diminished.

Before Mozart’s time, the symphony was a short, light, entertainment piece. Mozart transformed it into something grand and important, something you really wanted to listen to. One of his first masterpieces was Symphony No. 29, written in Salzburg after he had returned from a trip to Vienna. Until then, Mozart had been content using three movements for a symphony, but now, under the Viennese influence, he started using four. Listen to Symphony No. 29. Does the fourth movement suggest a hunting party to you?

Another masterpiece Mozart wrote about the same time as this symphony was his Violin Concerto No. 5, K. 219. Its subtitle, “Turkish,” refers to a passage in the third movement where the music suddenly becomes more aggressive and rhythmic. Here Mozart cleverly suggests the sound of instruments associated with Turkish music – cymbals, triangles, bass drum – without actually using them!

The String Quintet in G Minor is one of Mozart’s supreme masterpieces. It is written for two violins, two violas, and a cello. This work has an unusually dark, sombre quality and is full of emotional tension and, at times, deep sadness. It belongs to the category of chamber music: compositions for two to nine instruments to be played at home among friends or in a small concert hall or chamber.

One of the most popular – and beautiful – pieces of chamber music ever written is Mozart’s Clarinet Quintet. Mozart simply loved the clarinet (a woodwind instrument) and featured its warm, expressive tone in this composition, which is not, despite its name, a work for five clarinets, but rather for four string instruments plus clarinet.

Activity: Köchel (K.) Numbers

In 1862, 71 years after Mozart’s death, a man by the name of Ludwig von Köchel published a catalogue listing every single piece of music he could find by Mozart – 626 to be exact. He assigned a number to each composition in chronological order. Beside each Mozart composition we now use a “K.” number (Köchel number) to help identify it.

Find out what K. number Ludwig von Köchel assigned to Symphony No. 29.

Listening Guide

What do you listen for when a piece of music is playing? Here are some ideas to help you:

Melody: This is the part of the music you can hum, whistle, or sing to yourself. You might call it a tune. Mozart’s Sonata in A has a beautiful melody you can easily sing or play on your recorder. Some melodies bounce all over the place, which may make them difficult to sing, but easy to play on an instrument like the violin or piano. The very opening of Mozart’s Clarinet Quintet is a perfect example of a beautiful melody you can sing or hum.

Meter: This is the part of the music you can tap your foot to. You will usually find that the main pulses fit into groups of twos, threes, or fours. A march is “in two” (ONE-two ONE-two) while a waltz is “in three.” Count a fast “ONE-two” for the last movement of Symphony No. 29; count a “ONE-two-three” for the third movement of the Clarinet Quintet.

Tempo: This is the speed of the music. The speed may vary from very slow to very fast. Most composers use Italian words to describe the tempo: adagio, for example, means very slow; andante, moderate; allegro, lively; and presto, very fast. The first movement of Violin Concerto No. 5 is allegro, the second movement is adagio.

Dynamics: Dynamics refer to how loudly or softly the music should be played. Sometimes the dynamics change abruptly, sometimes gradually. The second movement of the Clarinet Quintet is quite soft, while the third movement is rather loud. The end of Symphony No. 29 is very loud indeed!

Timbre: The specific kind of sound each instrument makes is its timbre. A flute sounds different from a violin, even if it’s playing exactly the same note. Notice at the beginning of the String Quintet in G Minor how the theme sounds when the violin plays it, and how it sounds when the viola plays it a few seconds later. You can mix timbres, just as you can mix colours in painting. If you mix red and yellow, you get orange. If you mix a flute and a violin, you get a particular mixture of timbres. Listen to the difference the clarinet makes when it is added to the four strings in the Clarinet Quintet.

Harmony: Underneath the melody are clusters of notes called chords, each of which sound different. These chords can stand alone, or they can support a melody. Some chords sound gentle and pleasant; some may sound harsh or unpleasant. The composer uses these to create the kind of mood he wants at each moment. At the beginning of Violin Concerto No. 5, the harmony stays the same for a few beats, then abruptly changes at the first loud chord.