Why Is Mozart Genius?

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

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  • @InsidetheScore
    @InsidetheScore  10 месяцев назад +10

    Discover more about Mozart in Apple Music Classical, the streaming service for classical music.
    apple.co/InsideTheScore
    You can search for Mozart Essentials or Mozart Undiscovered playlists. They even have a composer page. Enjoy!

    • @KryzysX
      @KryzysX 4 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for this good video!

  • @jongskyjongsky5883
    @jongskyjongsky5883 5 лет назад +3596

    Yes Mozart was a good man. Saw him this morning at the market. He helped me carry my groceries. I'm glad people finally appreciate his talent. Great man.

    • @jo_nm9484
      @jo_nm9484 5 лет назад +13

      Ok

    • @js1.987
      @js1.987 5 лет назад +67

      You could r/wooosh me, coz I don’t get it

    • @Sally-rz6xm
      @Sally-rz6xm 5 лет назад +44

      @@js1.987 its sarcasm you whoooshed hecker uwu

    • @parkslog8975
      @parkslog8975 5 лет назад +11

      This made me laugh

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 5 лет назад +35

      He'd just finished a jam with Elvis, I'll bet.

  • @meirwise1107
    @meirwise1107 4 года назад +1438

    I have studied music deeply for over 50 years and I am convinced that Mozart was the greatest of all. He was a genius touched by the Divine. Beethoven was inspired by him. Mozart composed aged 5 and on his death bed could compose 9 parts simultaneously without correction. How can you compose 600 masterpieces and die at 35? It's unreal.

    • @MrSPIDEY21
      @MrSPIDEY21 3 года назад +24

      I’d honesty put Kanye and Mike up there…they couldn’t play the instruments like he could but they knew what sounds went perfectly together to create new sounds in music…Mike would literally sing the notes and tell them how to compose the music

    • @truescotsman4103
      @truescotsman4103 3 года назад +39

      Arguably his music was "perfect". You could say it needs to be this way or that but you would be wrong. They keep going back to the phrase "without mistakes". They illustrate how perfect his handwriting was on his original compositions without errors or corrections. His music isn't fit to be improved upon or interpreted its beyond anything ever done in the history of music its pristine. I can't listen to it for more than a few minutes or I start having an emotional seizure and begin babbling like a crazy person like Salieri and burst into tears of joy.

    • @nikibronson133
      @nikibronson133 3 года назад +12

      Ok...this comment has a lot of red flags but fundamentally all subjective

    • @wildbill1834
      @wildbill1834 3 года назад +2

      And Frank Sinatra is right next to Mozart

    • @truescotsman4103
      @truescotsman4103 3 года назад +29

      @@wildbill1834 not quite. frank was a singer not a composer and a consummate musician.

  • @peterjongsma2754
    @peterjongsma2754 5 лет назад +1939

    Salieri looked after Constance, Mozart's wife, financially after Mozart died.
    Salieri was a good guy.
    And, as Tchaikovsky said,
    Mozart is Sunshine.

    • @peterjongsma2754
      @peterjongsma2754 5 лет назад +88

      @Malkolm Lind
      Your correct.
      It was Dvorzark who said Sunshine.

    • @peterjongsma2754
      @peterjongsma2754 5 лет назад +62

      @Stream of Consciousness
      I felt the same when I found out.
      Ruining a good man's reputation is cheap and nasty.
      Thanks for your reply.

    • @catlord69
      @catlord69 5 лет назад

      @@peterjongsma2754 question is still the same - what if thats not true

    • @harryrees627
      @harryrees627 5 лет назад +63

      “If anyone should be mentioned in the same breath as Christ, then it is Mozart”
      -Tchaikovsky

    • @peterjongsma2754
      @peterjongsma2754 5 лет назад +6

      @@harryrees627
      Thanks. I'll remember that in future.
      Great quote.

  • @rocky49able
    @rocky49able 4 года назад +650

    Mozart's genius lay in his simplicity. Bach's genius lay in his ability to make complex pieces so outstanding. Beethoven was something else, can't describe him. Vivaldi was a one-album wonder, but still continues to capture the imagination of music lovers. All the 4 are special to me.

    • @maltrho
      @maltrho 3 года назад +36

      I recommend you try listen to Vivaldis La stravanganza, and see if dont feel like taking that comment back. A ‘funny’ thing about Mozarts music is that while we today perveive especially a lost childlike simplicity in it, at the time he started gaining fame in france and italy many people would find in him rather a special deep quite german melancholy, the sound of an inner tiredness...like that warm scent of dusty park road on a rainy spring day i think people associate with him.

    • @rocky49able
      @rocky49able 3 года назад +13

      @@maltrho I have heard La Stravanganza. It is brilliant.

    • @ignacioclerici5341
      @ignacioclerici5341 3 года назад +43

      @@rocky49able many masterpieces of mozart are not simple at all, people confuse balance and beauty with simplicity , it's sad 🤦

    • @hjo4104
      @hjo4104 3 года назад +19

      Beethoven has characteristics of all mentioned... his music is the most accesible and universal. He wrote the music closest to the human being.

    • @Howcanhelaugh
      @Howcanhelaugh 3 года назад +7

      And Liszt just wanted to make people furious

  • @zenmaster16
    @zenmaster16 5 лет назад +923

    One thing to remember about Mozart’s crude humor is that it was very prevalent in that period. Almost everyone had that type of humor and I find it quite hilarious. It would make sense that those people who were expected to hold themselves to such a high standard in every aspect of their lives would find such joy and rebelliousness in crude humor. Opera boxes during that time to were the equivalent of the vip section of a club with many drinks and promiscuous women. We just see the paintings and think that those people were extremely classy, which they were to an extent, but they were also humans and enjoy a good fart joke!

    • @donutello_
      @donutello_ 5 лет назад +39

      Makes me wonder what kind of humor culture were like in different periods

    • @simeonrice6047
      @simeonrice6047 5 лет назад +40

      Kinda like the oldest joke we've ever found inscribed on a stone tablet is a fart joke. No really, it's from 1900 BC in Mesopotamia. It goes like this. "Something which has never occurred since time immemorial; a young woman did not fart in her husband’s lap."
      In case anyone wants a source: www.wlv.ac.uk/about-us/news-and-events/latest-news/2008/august-2008/the-worlds-ten-oldest-jokes-revealed.php
      Edit: tl;dr: The oldest recorded joke we know of is a fart joke.

    • @OmniscientVirtuosity
      @OmniscientVirtuosity 5 лет назад

      Kelly Fischer lol

    • @carlosm.5969
      @carlosm.5969 5 лет назад +1

      if you like that and history check out this video about Mozart and the turkish march ruclips.net/video/D2QFfPskxoc/видео.html enjoy

    • @joyce_rx
      @joyce_rx 4 года назад +5

      And then thy fart said poof! And even God chuckled down the heavens!
      peak comedy

  • @AblackGenie
    @AblackGenie 5 лет назад +5053

    At the age of 5,6,10 and 11, I was making sand castles.

    • @mariorl8927
      @mariorl8927 5 лет назад +266

      At the age of 5,6,10, and 11 I ate the sand

    • @abitoftheuniverse2852
      @abitoftheuniverse2852 5 лет назад +105

      @@mariorl8927 At the age of 5,6,10, and 11 I pooped in the sand, well, actually out in the water just away from the beach. I'd pull my swim trunks down while no one was looking and, you know what, maybe this is just a little too real for a RUclips comment.
      Yes, okay, yes. I watched my poo get swept away by the waves towards the other children at the beach, okay? There, I said it. I'm sorry. It's just, I really had to go. I just wanted to stay out in the water, and the bathrooms at the beach wreaked of urinal cakes and they always had unflushed diarrhea in the stalls.
      Please, forgive me.

    • @mariorl8927
      @mariorl8927 5 лет назад +40

      ABitOfTheUniverse What the heck dud?, that was an unnecessary explanation response

    • @abitoftheuniverse2852
      @abitoftheuniverse2852 5 лет назад +15

      @@mariorl8927 Well at least I'm not the one that ate it, or made castles out of it. You guys are grosser. XD

    • @AblackGenie
      @AblackGenie 5 лет назад +11

      @@abitoftheuniverse2852
      😂😂😂 my dude I didn't say I ate it 😂

  • @geraldp.5260
    @geraldp.5260 5 лет назад +2295

    don´t forget mozart died at the age of 35
    bach 65
    beethoven 56
    haydn 77
    mozarts got better and better (e.g. ave verum corpus and the magic flute were among his last pieces)
    now imagine he had lived for 30 more years

    • @saltalgilmour9745
      @saltalgilmour9745 5 лет назад +95

      yeah i cant imagine what more sublime music he would have done!!

    • @L4Vo5
      @L4Vo5 5 лет назад +129

      Mozart is kinda like the Ramanujan of music

    • @miriamdarras9477
      @miriamdarras9477 5 лет назад +132

      Why isn't Chopin ever included? Sure he only composed piano compositions but like, still...

    • @annettegenovesi4012
      @annettegenovesi4012 5 лет назад +6

      not one died in their 40's?????????????

    • @harryjamessmithmusic7762
      @harryjamessmithmusic7762 5 лет назад +7

      That's so right!

  • @abyiii
    @abyiii 4 года назад +925

    At the age of 5, I was searching for spiders to become spiderman

    • @maxwellsequation4887
      @maxwellsequation4887 4 года назад +18

      Relatable

    • @eski-ingilizceci
      @eski-ingilizceci 4 года назад +14

      I was eating raw pasta to become superman (some friend in the neighborhood had said that was the way)

    • @vishnupriyak.p.6316
      @vishnupriyak.p.6316 4 года назад +5

      Yep but it was my bro who got bit by it and I were soo jealous 😅🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @lclaryea5827
      @lclaryea5827 3 года назад +4

      🤣🤣

    • @meanmuggin0384
      @meanmuggin0384 3 года назад +3

      I watched Dora bye- he be composing oml

  • @phpn99
    @phpn99 5 лет назад +1888

    The story of how at 14 he memorized Allegri's Miserere after only two live performances in Rome, tells us everything about his cognitive powers.

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 4 года назад +32

      Yes, I believe he had an idiotic memory.

    • @leonessapientia5645
      @leonessapientia5645 4 года назад +34

      David Copson I D I O T I C

    • @Eyes-of-Horus
      @Eyes-of-Horus 4 года назад +48

      He had a phonographic memory.

    • @michaelheath2866
      @michaelheath2866 4 года назад +44

      @@davidcopson5800 I think you mean Eidetic. Something like a photographic memory though I think people misunderstand exactly what that means. Basically, Mozart may in fact have been autistic in some way which gave him an advantage with music. Thing about autism is even if it gives certain benefits, it's quite harmful too and I get the sense that Mozart could sometimes be his own worst enemy.

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 3 года назад +28

      @@michaelheath2866 Charmed by your serious response. I was only joking with the 'idiotic' memory, I always play around with with words like that. I have this a little bit, I can remember whole chess games and positions from chess games and draw things quite precisely from memory. I'm sure Mozart was on the spectrum somewhere. Guess some must suffer for their art.

  • @tudvalstone
    @tudvalstone 2 года назад +42

    Been listening to classical music for more decades than I care to admit. I didn't always think Mozart was the greatest composer, but in the last few years I am starting to realize that he was the indispensible genius. I could imagine a world where all the works of any one composer would not exist, but not Mozart. We need his music, it enriches humanity like no other.

  • @jameshollen9723
    @jameshollen9723 4 года назад +721

    What is really amazing is that Mozart never had to make a correction on his music. He knew EXACTLY what to put on paper before he wrote it down ! THAT IS GENIUS !

    • @Dreamwarrior64
      @Dreamwarrior64 4 года назад +25

      Outstanding call my friend. You nailed it...that is genius. You knew enough to make the correct call on that so i am assuming that you are pretty well on the ball yourself. Nice.

    • @jackgonzalez7727
      @jackgonzalez7727 4 года назад +57

      Too much Hollywood in your comment.

    • @miguelpereira9859
      @miguelpereira9859 4 года назад +28

      I am 95% sure that isn't true

    • @jameshollen9723
      @jameshollen9723 4 года назад +12

      @@miguelpereira9859 sorry, but it's true. Google his name and check some of his work. some of The original works still exist. Who do we have today that can even come close to his perfection?

    • @miguelpereira9859
      @miguelpereira9859 4 года назад +13

      @@jameshollen9723 But Mozart did make corrections

  • @justinhamilton8647
    @justinhamilton8647 3 года назад +293

    Imagine all the pieces we would have had if Mozart lived to be like 70 or something

    • @porflimbornapilis2556
      @porflimbornapilis2556 3 года назад +17

      or not. MANY talented artists fizzle out after 30. Although others like John Williams create gold into their 70's. So, I guess we'll never know with Mozart. But, that's part of the allure

    • @erik878
      @erik878 3 года назад +6

      Hey I'm caring on mozarts work in the shadow of beethoven, I write spanish operas on my channel. Hired a soprano for the first I sing the 2nd which is written for spanish guitar so I can play it anytime with out hassles. I put english in the description of Donde esta mi Sangre

    • @oibruv3889
      @oibruv3889 2 года назад +11

      @@porflimbornapilis2556 most composers i like got better with time. Mahler, beethoven, schubert (although he hardly lived long) etc.

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays Год назад +1

      He may have become less productive if he lived longer. He may also have became less popular as Beethoven became more well known.

  • @frankscott1708
    @frankscott1708 5 лет назад +728

    I cried as a 14 yr old watching Amadeus. My sympathies were with Salieri; it had become clear to me then that I was mediocre too.

    • @acxezknightnite1377
      @acxezknightnite1377 5 лет назад +9

      I was about that age too when I saw it......and started to frantically listen to radio 3 to absorb more of his genius music. I still live it to this day!

    • @JeremiahAlphonsus
      @JeremiahAlphonsus 5 лет назад +48

      Salieri was NOT a great composer. But he was a competent composer. And that’s ok. Very, very few can be great in any field.

    • @JeremiahAlphonsus
      @JeremiahAlphonsus 5 лет назад +7

      @Nouytre Nji That’s right.

    • @silverdragon710
      @silverdragon710 5 лет назад +10

      literally what everybody thinks when they watch the movie hahaha

    • @silverdragon710
      @silverdragon710 5 лет назад

      Nouytre Nji No.

  • @meygekon
    @meygekon 5 лет назад +2939

    When you have a name WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART you already knew youre a badass

    • @raidx258
      @raidx258 5 лет назад +80

      Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart . How's that for bad ass

    • @PaulTheSkeptic
      @PaulTheSkeptic 5 лет назад +84

      Now that you mention it, it is a pretty badass sounding name.

    • @sore5246
      @sore5246 5 лет назад +52

      back then everyone were badass comparing to nowadays

    • @NisseOhlsen
      @NisseOhlsen 5 лет назад +24

      He didn't. He was christened 'Gottlieb', but tranlated that into latin: "Amadeus" (Lover of God) and took that as his name.

    • @NisseOhlsen
      @NisseOhlsen 5 лет назад +1

      Kelly Fischer right, according to his father: ‘Mozart's father Leopold announced the birth of his son in a letter to the publisher Johann Jakob Lotter with the words "... the boy is called Joannes Chrisostomus, Wolfgang, Gottlieb" ("der Bub heißt Joannes Chrisostomus, Wolfgang, Gottlieb" in German). ‘

  • @acxezknightnite1377
    @acxezknightnite1377 5 лет назад +39

    I always considered Mozart’s music to be almost mathematical, just as the most elegant equations are waiting to be discovered and written, so was his music. Some pieces, I swear he is talking to my soul, eg K466.....an absolute masterpiece.

  • @walthervanlieshout4635
    @walthervanlieshout4635 8 дней назад +3

    Dear people, even now he is loved by his music… it’s timeless. Many notes, that is true.. but then it sounds so nicely, Devine evenly. It’s music from another dimension…. But let me true also… he is my most favorite composer! His time far beyond!

  • @jeanpierrepolnareff8848
    @jeanpierrepolnareff8848 4 года назад +277

    Yo imagine a Bach and Mozart collab though, straight heat🔥🔥

    • @DWHarper62
      @DWHarper62 4 года назад +14

      Constance, his wife actually awakened Mozart's love of fugue and the 41st symphony is a great example of the influence of Bach in Mozart...

    • @ledsabbazepplath3889
      @ledsabbazepplath3889 4 года назад +11

      That piece would shatter into pieces due to too much greatness on it

    • @jackgonzalez7727
      @jackgonzalez7727 4 года назад +5

      Bach and Mozart together would result in a Beethoven.

    • @rlkinnard
      @rlkinnard 3 года назад +9

      You do know that JS Bach's son JC Bach gave Mozart lessons and Mozart 25th symphony was based on a JC Symphony.

    • @chocolatechipbleach8341
      @chocolatechipbleach8341 3 года назад +2

      JEAN PIERRE POLNAREFF WHAT ARE YOU DOING HERE

  • @wolfgangamadeusmozart9826
    @wolfgangamadeusmozart9826 5 лет назад +4287

    you all better watch the movie. Every single minute it shows how i am superior than Salieri.

  • @liontone
    @liontone 5 лет назад +178

    Mozart’s greatness is comparable to Bach or Beethoven. He’s the only one of the big three to write complete masterpieces in every major genre. Symphony, Choral, Sonata, Chamber. Concerto, OPERA? No problem! His later works include elements of Bach, and what will become trademarks of Romanticism.
    He stands shoulder to shoulder with Bach and Beethoven, but never below.

    • @NxDoyle
      @NxDoyle 3 года назад +10

      They are the big three.

    • @johannsebastianbach8471
      @johannsebastianbach8471 3 года назад +8

      Ah that’s not true.

    • @liontone
      @liontone 3 года назад +1

      @@johannsebastianbach8471 lol

    • @Sh0n0
      @Sh0n0 3 года назад +18

      Mozart never made any trance or dubstep so you cant csay he wrote in every major genre...

    • @liontone
      @liontone 3 года назад +2

      @@Sh0n0 That’s true!

  • @leeroger1471
    @leeroger1471 4 года назад +39

    oh my GOD mozart serenade no 10 is such a beautiful piece when i first heard this i was like wow i adore classical music and opera as a black man since i was 17 years old

    • @GOLDWING-x1b
      @GOLDWING-x1b 3 года назад +5

      what does this have to do with u being black my guy

    • @leeroger1471
      @leeroger1471 3 года назад +1

      @@GOLDWING-x1b nothing just expressing myself as a classical music and opera lover that is all

  • @leofelix4063
    @leofelix4063 5 лет назад +111

    He is the greatest composer that ever lived for me. Just imagine if he lived as long as Bach or Beethoven.

    • @davidsalazar2466
      @davidsalazar2466 3 года назад +5

      To me too I absolutely love Mozart he is the greatest of all

    • @mojooftheg5961
      @mojooftheg5961 2 года назад +1

      But Mozart's life was already composed by God.

    • @leofelix4063
      @leofelix4063 2 года назад

      @@mojooftheg5961 it was lousy.

    • @mojooftheg5961
      @mojooftheg5961 2 года назад +1

      @@leofelix4063 What a travesty that Mozart died at such a young age when the scum of society live longer. Musicians were treated as nothing more than servants in royal society at that time.

    • @leofelix4063
      @leofelix4063 2 года назад

      @@mojooftheg5961 so true.

  • @antoniosalieri5407
    @antoniosalieri5407 5 лет назад +9198

    If Mozart was a genius, why is he dead?

    • @muhammadm241
      @muhammadm241 5 лет назад +455

      Antonio Salieri Amazing 😂😂

    • @flytrapYTP
      @flytrapYTP 5 лет назад +69

      Duh

    • @Schnittertm1
      @Schnittertm1 5 лет назад +535

      He was a genius musician, not a genius necromancer, meaning he could not go on beyond death.

    • @muhammadm241
      @muhammadm241 5 лет назад +960

      @@Schnittertm1 Oh thanks for explaining! Very informative.

    • @1986verity
      @1986verity 5 лет назад +38

      Make sense...

  • @thomaskember4628
    @thomaskember4628 4 года назад +916

    I know the quote, I don't remember who said it; Beethoven's music is Beethoven talking to god, Mozart's music is god talking to Mozart.

    • @niccolomachiavelli8763
      @niccolomachiavelli8763 4 года назад +63

      Or Mozart s music is Like Dawn while Beethoven s music is like Twilight. Beethoven is more interesting while mozart s music is more of a perfection...

    • @JEANSDEMARCO
      @JEANSDEMARCO 4 года назад +15

      @@niccolomachiavelli8763 It's like Sinatra, "When he sings,it's like poetry, and when he talks,it's like Hoboken"

    • @Neelamgharal
      @Neelamgharal 4 года назад +4

      Chopin

    • @cinnamongirl7623
      @cinnamongirl7623 4 года назад +9

      Tchaikovsky

    • @jackgonzalez7727
      @jackgonzalez7727 4 года назад +31

      Mozart is the perfection of the simple and superficial.
      Beethoven is the perfection of the complex and deep.

  • @nathanapplegate5374
    @nathanapplegate5374 3 года назад +143

    The genius of Mozart is shown in his musical pranks. He wrote a song called “Come Scoglio” for a singer he really did not like. The song took advantage of her tendency to tilt her head back on high notes and lower her chin on low ones by having constant leaps between high and low notes and thus causing her head to bob like a chicken on stage.

    • @riffsthatkill2180
      @riffsthatkill2180 Год назад +9

      Pretty sure he also wrote a piece for piano that had a very wide left and right hand position, to be played at the same time, with a single note right in the middle of the keyboard between the hands. Obviously, without three hands, that middle note needed to be played with either the nose or... something else.

    • @ianlowery6014
      @ianlowery6014 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@riffsthatkill2180 It was a joke he played on Haydn. He bet Haydn that he couldn't play it. Haydn looked at and told Mozart to play it, Mozart did and played the note with his nose.

  • @moreira7daniel
    @moreira7daniel 5 лет назад +15

    Your video has had me in tears... "as though they had always existed, just waiting to be written down"... That's his genious quality! You describe his music just the way I feel it...

  • @alikhidzam3749
    @alikhidzam3749 5 лет назад +2072

    Wolfgang was just Mozarts rapper name

  • @alt.acc.2067
    @alt.acc.2067 5 лет назад +8526

    *what is Mozart doing in his grave?*
    *decomposing*

    • @abcd-yg2rx
      @abcd-yg2rx 5 лет назад +180

      I hate black humor

    • @argenteuseagle7490
      @argenteuseagle7490 5 лет назад +121

      Should i laugh or not? Idk

    • @aramp
      @aramp 5 лет назад +53

      Go away

    • @metajaji4249
      @metajaji4249 5 лет назад +117

      every other comment hated ur comment but i loved it.. decomposing lmao

    • @aramp
      @aramp 5 лет назад +23

      @@metajaji4249 oh no I loved it aswell

  • @hunterwhittaker9291
    @hunterwhittaker9291 3 года назад +22

    Mozart was a great man I can confirm. He gave me all the answers to my music theory exam. Good man.

  • @redram5150
    @redram5150 4 года назад +12

    When I listen, in my mind I try to imagine what the following notes are. Even when one doesn’t understand music, they still can hear sound in their mind. But every time with Mozart, I miss what he’s trying to accomplish. As if he says “Not quite, but let me show you my way”. And it’s far greater than anything I could conjure

  • @Eden_Rubin_Music
    @Eden_Rubin_Music 5 лет назад +43

    Structure and motif development- Beethoven
    Counterpoint master- Bach
    Genius melodies and pure divine music- Mozart

    • @jackjack3320
      @jackjack3320 5 лет назад +1

      Isn't it more like, Mozart = the best all rounder.
      Listen to String Quartet K421 or Fantasie K608.
      Examples of Mozart's counterpoint (number inside brackets indicate the age he wrote them)
      Galimathias Musicum in D major K. 32: Fugue (10): ruclips.net/video/TPcMkmrJams/видео.html
      Missa solemnis in C minor "Waisenhausmesse" KV 139 Gloria (12): ruclips.net/video/XidEZEG3W3s/видео.html
      Missa solemnis in C minor "Waisenhausmesse" KV 139 Credo (12): ruclips.net/video/XidEZEG3W3s/видео.html
      Mass in C major "Dominicus Messe" K66 Gloria (13): ruclips.net/video/rlQJ2bgK3RQ/видео.html
      Mass in C major "Dominicus Messe" K66 Credo (13): ruclips.net/video/rlQJ2bgK3RQ/видео.html
      Te Deum in C major K. 141 [double fugue] (13): ruclips.net/video/3HLGJ7m-66U/видео.html
      Miserere in A minor, [4-part contrapuntal study] K.85 (14) ruclips.net/video/_PxqQOUn1v0/видео.html
      Kyrie in D minor [4-part contrapuntal study] K.90 (16): ruclips.net/video/ZOFFJJ1fAmU/видео.html
      KV125 - Pignus Futuræ Gloriæ (16): ruclips.net/video/dQ77xyyffjA/видео.html
      Missa in honorem Sanctissimae Trinitatis in C major KV 167 Gloria (17): ruclips.net/video/X9T_URjVl5I/видео.html
      Missa in honorem Sanctissimae Trinitatis in C major KV 167 Credo (17): ruclips.net/video/YvCnr15hh78/видео.html
      Missa in honorem Sanctissimae Trinitatis in C major KV 167 Agnus Dei* (17): ruclips.net/video/g2teM5WckzA/видео.html
      String Quartet No. 8 in F major K. 168 (17): ruclips.net/video/3JDrlCG-y_E/видео.html (the slow movement is a canon in F minor)
      String Quartet No.11 in E flat major K. 171 (17): ruclips.net/video/3_jlQ8tD4Uc/видео.html (written in the style of double fugue)
      String Quartet No. 13 in D minor K. 173 (17): ruclips.net/video/q5MVDsqIqCY/видео.html
      Fugue In G Minor KV 401 (17): ruclips.net/video/tXpV-gpgkQw/видео.html
      Missa Brevis in F major K. 192 (18): ruclips.net/video/QprTvKApc8c/видео.html
      Missa Brevis in D major K. 194 (18): ruclips.net/video/_7liw0vQFPI/видео.html
      Litaniae de venerabili altaris sacramento K243 [double fugue] : VIII Pignus (19): ruclips.net/video/U-PDJozhBLI/видео.html
      Misericordias Domini in D minor K.222* (19): ruclips.net/video/o4PQRbBn3OI/видео.html
      Missa Longa in C K262 Kyrie [double fugue] (19): ruclips.net/video/yCDFfN7g_Bk/видео.html
      Missa Longa in C K262 Gloria [triple fugue] (19): ruclips.net/video/yCDFfN7g_Bk/видео.html
      Missa Longa in C K262 Credo (19): ruclips.net/video/yCDFfN7g_Bk/видео.html
      Missa Longa in C K262 Sanctus (19): ruclips.net/video/yCDFfN7g_Bk/видео.html
      Vesperae solennes de confessore in C, K.339 - 4. Laudate pueri Dominum (24): ruclips.net/video/c3rDwFFQ6bQ/видео.html
      Missa solemnis in C, K.337 - 5. Benedictus (26): ruclips.net/video/ghAa3BJ4b5I/видео.html
      Praeludium and Fugue KV 394 (26): ruclips.net/video/m9vVu8rNON4/видео.html
      Suite in C K.399 - I. Overture K399 (26): ruclips.net/video/UHgs7-u7wGQ/видео.html
      Sonata for Keyboard and Violin No. 29 in A Major, K. 402: II. Fuga (26): ruclips.net/video/mMe4MCsH2WY/видео.html
      Trio (Fuga a 3) in G Major, K. 443 (27): ruclips.net/video/UtLOtTDk848/видео.html
      Fugue In E Flat Major KV 153 (27): ruclips.net/video/_2rpWr3etWo/видео.html
      Fugue In G Minor KV 154 (27): ruclips.net/video/2t42ZCeLxlk/видео.html
      Grosse Messe in C minor KV 427 Kyrie: ruclips.net/video/97Twh_q8lQs/видео.html
      Grosse Messe in C minor KV 427 Jesu Christe - Cum Sancto Spiritu [double fugue] (27): ruclips.net/video/97Twh_q8lQs/видео.html
      Grosse Messe in C minor KV 427 Sanctus - Osanna [double fugue] (27): ruclips.net/video/97Twh_q8lQs/видео.html
      Adagio and Fugue for String Orchestra in C Minor, K. 546 (32): ruclips.net/video/PFXF0Aysh4w/видео.html
      Fantasia for mechanical organ in F minor K594 (34): ruclips.net/video/Qka_HMc2ajc/видео.html
      Fantasia for mechanical organ in F minor K608 (35): ruclips.net/video/Jkh8Re4JUCw/видео.html
      Overture to Die Zauberflote K620: ruclips.net/video/c2TGbfzTx2A/видео.html
      Der, welcher wandert diese StraBe voll Beschwerden (35): ruclips.net/video/kB56nw1zx-o/видео.html
      Requiem in D minor K626 Introitus: ruclips.net/video/sGg2AwyNZA4/видео.html
      Requiem in D minor K626 Kyrie
      (35) ruclips.net/video/8ybTabIfLgY/видео.html
      Requiem in D minor K626 Domine Jesu (35): ruclips.net/video/i4DyyUvZws4/видео.html
      +classical counterpoint in string quartets, quintets, symphonies, concertos (K449: ruclips.net/video/NtXTjLLT7Yo/видео.html K459: ruclips.net/video/61ODdVR2DFo/видео.html Canonic Minuet of Serenade for winds in C minor K388 ruclips.net/video/qk0MV_cJfvQ/видео.html )
      Magnificent Counterpoint in the Finale of Mozart's Jupiter Symphony: ruclips.net/video/YTxYykhQZbI/видео.html
      The Ingenious Fugal Finale of Mozart's G Major Quartet, K. 387: ruclips.net/video/uoXDHOyfJ-k/видео.html
      The Incredible Finale of Mozart's K. 590 Quartet in F Major: ruclips.net/video/nkbdUjjfRTQ/видео.html
      Invertible Counterpoint in the Finale of Mozart's D Major String Quintet, K. 593: ruclips.net/video/IQbxsGtyc2g/видео.html
      Mozart: Canon for four voices, in C major, Anh. 191, K 562c: ruclips.net/video/YC9bKfzXC18/видео.html

    • @randymillhouse791
      @randymillhouse791 Год назад

      Makes me hungry for a plate crab canon.

  • @lovelyrain6213
    @lovelyrain6213 4 года назад +9

    I cry everytime I listen or read the end of my Mozart..... The way he was buried... May he rest in peace... his music was and still such great source of energy to me

  • @albrecht205
    @albrecht205 3 года назад +20

    Mozart was always part of my life,
    His music is beautiful,
    Its so sad that he died so young,
    Just imagine what other masterpieces he would’ve created if he didn’t died,

  • @bunnysyt
    @bunnysyt 4 года назад +40

    Okay, but like... As a German, I adore the way you pronounce the German titles of Mozart's pieces.

  • @carl_anderson9315
    @carl_anderson9315 5 лет назад +283

    Why is Mozart a genius?
    (Listens to any random Mozart tune)
    “Ok. Got it” 👍🏼

  • @inturnetexplorer8005
    @inturnetexplorer8005 5 лет назад +81

    There is also an idea that Mozart almost “peeked” into the future. In some of his sonatas there are parts that almost seemed jazzy (k332 f maj that I know of).

    • @marcushendriksen8415
      @marcushendriksen8415 5 лет назад +5

      Ah, the curse of hindsight. It's so all-seeing that it's all too easy to see future planning.

    • @marysylvie2012
      @marysylvie2012 5 лет назад +3

      Inturnet explorer: exactly. Mozart has pieces of music that are a very refined form of jazz.

  • @DWHarper62
    @DWHarper62 4 года назад +11

    "If only I could impress Mozart's inimitable works on the soul of every friend of music, and the souls of high personages in particular, as deeply, with the same musical understanding and with the same deep feeling, as I understand and feel them, the nations would vie with each other to possess such a jewel."

  • @ejmtv3
    @ejmtv3 4 года назад +9

    6:00 - Mozart - Flute & Harp concerto, K 299 - 2nd movement
    One of my favorite works from him. Actually all the 3 movements from this piece is superb!

  • @fry8h
    @fry8h 5 лет назад +17

    Being a true artist is hard
    Not living physically fulfilled
    But you’ll live forever from your art

    • @Lucky-ny6xk
      @Lucky-ny6xk 3 года назад

      Avicii is another example 😔

  • @mckavitt13
    @mckavitt13 4 года назад +133

    "I tell you before God and as an honest man, your son [Mozart] is the greatest composer known to me personally or by repute. He has taste and, what is more, the most profound knowledge of composition."
    Franz Joseph Haydn

    • @neilpemberton5523
      @neilpemberton5523 3 года назад +10

      I read that quote in a Mozart biography. The author then wrote of Mozart's father: "For once in his life, Leopold must have been truly happy." 😆😆😆

  • @jamesbaldwin7676
    @jamesbaldwin7676 Год назад +16

    When I was a kid, I got hooked on the music of Mozart,. This was before the Amadeus movie. Anyway I decided one afternoon, that I wanted all his albums, like my Doors and Beatles collection. (FYI, that's 6 and 12 studio albums, respectively for these Rock legends.)
    I can't tell how shocked I was to learn, that I was going to have to buy over 3000 records to have a complete Mozart collection.
    I never did get a complete collection, but I did get quite a lot. I'm old now and still listen regularly.

    • @dusanninic5372
      @dusanninic5372 Год назад

      You are great sir.
      Thank you for sharing your story.
      Mozart is my first musical idol.
      Greetings from Serbia...

    • @jamesbaldwin7676
      @jamesbaldwin7676 Год назад

      @@dusanninic5372 Music knows no borders. Somewhere in the world right now, some opera company is performing The Marriage of Figaro and has been since May 1786. The curtain never seems to comes down on this show. The story is silly...The music is devine.
      I'm not a musically-minded person nor do a play a musical instrument but Mozart sometimes makes me cry and without lyrics or any words I understand. Why is that? He's been dead for over 230 years.
      Greetings to you too from Calif USA.

  • @GURken
    @GURken 5 лет назад +159

    The film was made out of _"Mozart and Salieri"_ play written by Alexander Pushkin.

    • @raphaelaschindler4451
      @raphaelaschindler4451 5 лет назад +14

      Yeah, and Peter Shaffer based a novel on it. And then wrote a movie script based on said novel... I think.

    • @sajrocks
      @sajrocks 5 лет назад +7

      @@raphaelaschindler4451 Peter Shaffer's was a stage play first. In the original award-winning run on Broadway, it starred Ian McKellen as Salieri and Tim Curry as Mozart.

    • @raphaelaschindler4451
      @raphaelaschindler4451 5 лет назад +3

      Man, I didnt know that. Thanks!

    • @annettegenovesi4012
      @annettegenovesi4012 5 лет назад +2

      Yes and the director of "Amadeus" went to see that play, expecting another deadly boring story on the life of a composer. He got excited though, realizing Mozart led a fascinating life.

    • @thaliart
      @thaliart 5 лет назад

      There is on yt Little tragedies, russian tv show where you can see that and it is billion times better than crapy amadeus

  • @antonczerny
    @antonczerny 5 лет назад +93

    Have you ever heard about Joseph Bologne Chevalier De Saint Georges? He was a classical french composer who not only excelled at composition, but also at fencing and many other things.
    He was a prolific composer, but 3/4 of his works were lost in the French Revolution and destroyed by Napoleon Bonaparte at the very beginning of the XIX siecle.
    There's even one documentary about his life here on RUclips, but it would be great if you could help to spread his achievements so that more people become aware of his existence and his musical output.
    Please make a video about him.

    • @Witch-King4666
      @Witch-King4666 5 лет назад +1

      Wow! The French really do exist. This guy is epic!

    • @juanthegreat3954
      @juanthegreat3954 3 года назад

      Destroyed by Napoleon? Bro he died June 1799, months before even Napoleon Bonaparte rose to power (September 1799). I mean seriously though, I think you should fix some of your informations in your comment.

    • @juanthegreat3954
      @juanthegreat3954 3 года назад

      Not to mention that there is no mention in any article that Napoleon attempted to destroyed any of his works. As a matter of fact, Napoleon is a patron or huge fan of arts, as was evident during his Italian campaign wherein he brought back some artwork from Italy and during Egyptian campaign (archeology).

  • @jaybird2616
    @jaybird2616 5 лет назад +613

    "Wolfgang" gets an entirely new meaning when pronounced English

    • @stephenroche5194
      @stephenroche5194 5 лет назад +51

      The literal meaning in German is even better : wolf's gait

    • @jaybird2616
      @jaybird2616 5 лет назад +15

      Stephen Roche i know, I’m german

    • @oodon3220
      @oodon3220 5 лет назад +105

      Golfwang

    • @eshnz506
      @eshnz506 5 лет назад +5

      @@oodon3220 I love that 😂

    • @Isabel_Montss
      @Isabel_Montss 5 лет назад +1

      @@stephenroche5194 heeey, what does gait mean? That is not my language :3

  • @NxDoyle
    @NxDoyle 3 года назад +53

    Amadeus (Gottlieb in German, which was Mozart's actual middle name) translates literally as "love God" but actually means, 'beloved by God'.

    • @blakjack3053
      @blakjack3053 3 года назад +1

      Beloved of God.. Same for the name David.

    • @Trazom488
      @Trazom488 2 года назад +3

      If ur gonna be that guy it was technically Theophilus. Plus Mozart actually never really signed his name using Gottlieb, he preferred the French Amade.

  • @AmadeusRel
    @AmadeusRel 4 года назад +27

    Mozart ♥♥♥ ... my favorite composer, and the greatest ever. I had the honor to touch his harpsichord when I visited his house in Salzburg.

  • @MozartJunior22
    @MozartJunior22 4 года назад +276

    "Oh, my ass burns like fire!"
    -W.A. Mozart

    • @sophiadao7325
      @sophiadao7325 4 года назад +18

      So he liked fart-jokes.
      Who doesn't?

    • @g0thicut1e68
      @g0thicut1e68 3 года назад +4

      @@sophiadao7325Flatulence humour is stupid and immature

    • @pog428
      @pog428 3 года назад +10

      I've heard that jokes of the dirty kind was popular among the aristocracy during that time

    • @abbi7025
      @abbi7025 3 года назад +8

      @@g0thicut1e68 don’t care

    • @Menarecuteaaa
      @Menarecuteaaa 3 года назад +10

      @@g0thicut1e68 tell that to one of the greatest composers in history

  • @gill426
    @gill426 5 лет назад +12

    We may not have been alive during the time that Mozart lived but we're alive during the time that Alma lives and that alone is a gift.
    Thank you for this beautiful video! ♡☆

  • @nickgarcia610
    @nickgarcia610 5 месяцев назад +1

    Simply listening to Mozart informs you of his genius. The challenge is getting people to truly listen.

  • @kale991
    @kale991 5 лет назад +9

    The part from serenade for winds sent shivers down my spine. Truly amazing music.

  • @cluckcluck6494
    @cluckcluck6494 5 лет назад +576

    It’s in the name, mozART

    • @marysylvie2012
      @marysylvie2012 5 лет назад +6

      Actually with the German emphasis, it is MO-zart.

    • @whatisthis__95
      @whatisthis__95 5 лет назад +4

      @@marysylvie2012 Besides, art doesn't mean art in german

    • @abcd-yg2rx
      @abcd-yg2rx 5 лет назад +1

      I would have bet my kidney if someone had asked me his name and I would have answered Wolfgang Amadeus then I discovered that he had 4 birth names

    • @mckavitt13
      @mckavitt13 4 года назад +3

      I call him Mostart regularly.

    • @pog428
      @pog428 3 года назад

      @@marysylvie2012 it's a joke

  • @minorikushieda7998
    @minorikushieda7998 5 лет назад +95

    Mozart's mass in C minor is just incredible😍

    • @stravinskyfan
      @stravinskyfan 5 лет назад +3

      Try to listen to his church sonata!

    • @jackjack3320
      @jackjack3320 5 лет назад

      Also try his other choral works: ruclips.net/video/udAGMaBa7Eg/видео.html

    • @Alessandro90933
      @Alessandro90933 5 лет назад

      Well, a lot of his works are incredibile. I dont know your tastes, but try also some piano concertos.

    • @charlesmartel7502
      @charlesmartel7502 5 лет назад

      The Et Incarnatus Est is without peer.

    • @DanielFahimi
      @DanielFahimi 4 года назад

      @@stravinskyfan Which ones are your favourites?

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 3 года назад +9

    Because Mozart's works are flawless , stellar , immeasurable and unfathomable , and comfortable to the ear and the mind

  • @CalebCarman
    @CalebCarman 5 лет назад +612

    I am a pianist very familiar with classical music, and I have no objection to calling Mozart the greatest composer who ever lived

    • @CalebCarman
      @CalebCarman 4 года назад +6

      @Bigtombowski 🇮🇱 Yes.

    • @CalebCarman
      @CalebCarman 4 года назад +18

      ​@Bigtombowski 🇮🇱 The video claims a practicing musician would never call Mozart the greatest. Not true.

    • @rlkinnard
      @rlkinnard 4 года назад +20

      Bach and Beethoven composed better music for the keyboard. Opera was his speciality

    • @jesusmanriquezsantana1590
      @jesusmanriquezsantana1590 4 года назад +21

      @enigma Liszt and Chopin were the best pianists

    • @Andrew-yr6ig
      @Andrew-yr6ig 4 года назад +15

      @@jesusmanriquezsantana1590 They were among the most skillful pianists but Bach wrote better music for the keyboard. Music is more than virtuosity.

  • @JcFiscus42
    @JcFiscus42 5 лет назад +113

    Will you do a video in this format for Bach and Beethoven as well? I would really love that. Thanks for your efforts :)

    • @ignacioj.t5555
      @ignacioj.t5555 4 года назад +1

      you ll love this channel then, its not about music theory but about musicians lifes told in a very funny way ruclips.net/video/WvouSDxHzxs/видео.html

    • @mralcina8726
      @mralcina8726 4 года назад +2

      Yes Chopin too

  • @David-R.
    @David-R. 5 лет назад +20

    8:32 to 8:41 I loved that description! I had the same thoughts in my head listening to some of Beethoven's compositions!
    The melodies along with the harmony would be so "real" that one would think "there's no way that this was composed one note at a time!!!"
    . It's as if the complete composition was sent as a gift from the universe to the composer to write and bring to life.

    • @annettegenovesi4012
      @annettegenovesi4012 5 лет назад +2

      Composing is like a woman being pregnant. You get the germ of an idea, then it grows and you get excited about it, then you think of it night and day, until one day it's born, and perfect and whole. No magic about it. But without the musical genes this would never happen.

    • @David-R.
      @David-R. 2 года назад

      @@annettegenovesi4012 I understand that what you said is 100% true. (replying 2 years later lol) What I meant was that it's all "in there" and he's just extracting it. His brain produced this music; It had to make sense to HIM not really caring about what anyone thinks. Some motives or phrases amaze me so much that it's sometimes hard for me to believe that he was just experimenting with the keys until he heard something he liked. It sounds to me like it came to him as a whole, and then yeah, he built on it. But even when building on it, it gets better and presents the unexpected. Beethoven did that too, and so all the other great composers like Rachmaninoff, Chopin and others. But he was extremely musically fluent compared to his predecessors, it was a huge jump in composition.

  • @MrHerrJacobsen
    @MrHerrJacobsen 3 года назад +4

    I have yet to listen once to the concerto for flute and harp and not get goose bumps - truly. Every. Single. Time. Like Salieri put it in Amadeus: It's miraculous.

  • @carlosfigueroa790
    @carlosfigueroa790 4 года назад +9

    His name saids everything!!! W.A.M!!! Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Cheers from Central America, Guatemala Guatemala City.

  • @randyventresca4152
    @randyventresca4152 3 года назад +13

    I love that flute & harp concerto:) Mozart touches the soul like no other. The greatness of Beethoven would soon follow. A man inspired so much from Mozart's genius.

  • @HT-zx8dn
    @HT-zx8dn 5 лет назад +340

    If Mozart lived up to his fifties, the world of Music (and our brains) would be much different than today

    • @seskokeksic6041
      @seskokeksic6041 5 лет назад +1

      His music is shit

    • @miguelpereira9859
      @miguelpereira9859 5 лет назад +75

      @@seskokeksic6041 Your mom is shit

    • @Alessandro90933
      @Alessandro90933 5 лет назад +15

      Tell me one musician that you consider better than mozart and make me laugh, please.

    • @ElNightmareYT
      @ElNightmareYT 5 лет назад +4

      @@Alessandro90933 There are plenty of composers that I'd rather listen to instead of Mozart. Classical just isn't my thing, not saying that he wasn't a genius. Chopin, Debussy or Satie I enjoy far more.

    • @Alessandro90933
      @Alessandro90933 5 лет назад +26

      ​@@ElNightmareYTActually i love any kind of music and many, many musicians. I just don't like those people that, without knowing anything about classical music and probably without ever having listened classical pieces with due attention, leave unrespectful comments like "this music is shit". This is just unacceptable, especially for musicians like Mozart, whose greatness has been praised by people like: Tchaikovsky, Goethe, Rossini, Debussy, Miller, Wagner, Beethoven, Stendhal, Flaubert, Busoni, Brahms, Einstein, Grieg... and the list could go on and on...

  • @jeffreypoulos438
    @jeffreypoulos438 3 года назад +6

    Nice work covering the life of Mozart, with such a short life and yet prodigious output, we as a civilization are obliged to keep him alive through exampling and performing his music that fills our senses daily

  • @andersonmao556
    @andersonmao556 5 лет назад +58

    As a classical musician, I dont believe ranks such as best composer or most genius conposer. I think that all the composers had something that other composers did not have which made them unique, or as you said unmatched at their times. All the composers wrote music that are enjoyed by all, which made them all special

    • @annettegenovesi4012
      @annettegenovesi4012 4 года назад +5

      Anderson. Wonderful thought! Reminds me of what I heard years ago = there is a much greater difference between great musicians than there is between mediocre ones.

    • @sophiadao7325
      @sophiadao7325 4 года назад +3

      Yeah, the uploader is being silly. Apparently he doesn't like Mozart as much as Bach or Beethoven. I know many people (familiar with classical music) who do like him as much as, and more than, those others.

    • @d.l.loonabide9981
      @d.l.loonabide9981 2 года назад

      No , no! We have to hype ONE GUY as an absolute icon. That's the law!

  • @richard392
    @richard392 4 года назад +8

    Love videos like this ,thank you so much , it helps us all to get cultured.. we all need it for our soul. What is the meaning of life if not to be fulfilled with incredible experiences.. Mozart was eternally incredible.

  • @Timrath
    @Timrath 5 лет назад +399

    "But it also means literally love God".
    No, it doesn't. "Amadeus" wasn't Mozart's middle name. His name was Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgang Theophilus. "Amadeus" is fake Latin; a grammatically unsound attempt to translate the Greek name Theophilus. Mozart called himself Amadé, not Amadeus. The name Amadeus was popularised after his death; I imagine that was because the French-sounding name was incompatible with the anti-French sentiment in Austria and Germany during the 1790s and 1800s.
    As a final nitpick, Theophilus/Amadeus/Amadé doesn't mean "loves God", but "loved by God". "Loves God" would be Philotheos.

    • @enquiriesgraphology755
      @enquiriesgraphology755 5 лет назад +46

      this is extremely well put, and most concise. I have often thought of the same. He always signed himself "Amadé" Thank you for reminding us of this. I will listen to Mozart until my ears can hear no more, and I am here no more.

    • @OALM
      @OALM 5 лет назад +6

      Teófilo is a very common spanish name I didn’t know its meaning before 😯

    • @miguelpereira9859
      @miguelpereira9859 5 лет назад +15

      Damn you know your stuff

    • @sokkvabekkr5973
      @sokkvabekkr5973 5 лет назад +1

      thank u i was bothered by that as well lol

    • @ayingchanda
      @ayingchanda 5 лет назад +1

      @@enquiriesgraphology755 what?

  • @rainess6456
    @rainess6456 4 месяца назад

    Piano Concerto 21 is the most beautiful piece of music I have ever heard. I listen to it while meditating and to me it the sound of peace, joy and harmony.

  • @pacolastra2374
    @pacolastra2374 3 года назад +27

    The more I learn from Mozart the more I love him

    • @evelynzlon9492
      @evelynzlon9492 4 месяца назад +1

      Me too. I personally think he was a vampire whose alter egos include Adolf Hitler. Both were boastful ethnocentric prodigies. Mozart's wife nicknamed him Wolfie and Hitler's friends called him Wolf. I remembered I was supposed to deplore Hitler too late after I already worshipped another of his identities.
      It's interesting to learn that Mozart was also scatological. According to Hitler's maid he did #2 on Eva Braun in their private quarters. Maybe it was like, practice for his Gone Girl strategy where he faked his own death but he killed her f'real f'real. She tried to commit suicide twice during their relationship and it could not have been unfounded. Maybe after awhile she was just his captive. Nobody really knows what became of her but trust me he lives.

    • @evelynzlon9492
      @evelynzlon9492 4 месяца назад

      ...If Eva Braun eventually became Hitler's spider web prisoner, that may explain why she let her looks go so badly. Oooh wee did that go downhill fast.

    • @evelynzlon9492
      @evelynzlon9492 4 месяца назад

      Let's put it all together now, everything we've learned about Eva & Adolf's relationship. He secretly enslaved her at gunpoint, crapped on her and murdered her. What a cad.

  • @duncanmckeown1292
    @duncanmckeown1292 3 года назад +41

    I think it is highly debatable that Mozart was a lesser genius than Bach or Beethoven! I am in awe of the genius of all three, but Mozart produced masterpieces in every single musical genre of his era. Where are the great operas of Bach? Remember that this was the primary test of skill in an 18th century composer...Beethoven's Fidelio contains some sublime music...but as an opera? You see with Mozart we get two geniuses in one...an absolute master of pure music, and a dramatic genius of the stage whose theatrical grasp of the force of music is unsurpassed...and at its most mature rivals Shakespeare in profundity.

    • @shadbolt4687
      @shadbolt4687 2 года назад +2

      ...and Handel composed 40 plus operas.

  • @otavioferraripiaskowski2705
    @otavioferraripiaskowski2705 5 лет назад +6

    And another great video... Congratulations from Brazil!
    Keep up the good work!

  • @anEyePhil
    @anEyePhil Месяц назад +1

    Every time I hear the slow movement of his Piano Concerto in A, Opus 23, I am inspired. Such a simple piano melody, followed by a beautiful if a little melancholic, orchestral tapestry. Find it a listen to it.

  • @gregalexander7296
    @gregalexander7296 5 лет назад +15

    I will argue that Mozart was the greatest in that he excelled in all forms of music Opera, Symphony, Chamber, Church, and on, while the other, as great as they are, limited by choice or chance to only specific areas.

    • @coleforfangphan9769
      @coleforfangphan9769 3 года назад

      @Jeb Clar Yeah but Coronation Mass in C is a masterpiece.

  • @waynejohanson1083
    @waynejohanson1083 2 года назад +10

    He is a genius. The Abduction of Seraglio is proof of that. All those violins playing on that was so sweet it send chills down my spine. Only a genius can come up with that kind of sound.

  • @mr-wx3lv
    @mr-wx3lv 5 лет назад +10

    Mozart brings a lump to my throat, and you described him perfectly in this video. One always feels like you've returned home listening, to his music from some long term adventure. Probably everybody's favourite composer.

    • @soniamacdonald9193
      @soniamacdonald9193 3 года назад +1

      No, he's not everyone's favourite, but for me - no matter what the piece - his music just seems to bring some sunshine back into my world.

  • @muskmadness1
    @muskmadness1 Год назад +1

    Incredibly well done video with all the musical bits for better understanding a genius lost to us too soon. Yesterday, I finished reading some of the letters exchanged between him and his father. It was heart touching.

  • @FigmentHF
    @FigmentHF 2 года назад +14

    My interpretation - he had a freakishly high spec brain, similar to someone like Newton, maybe not quite that much of an extreme outlier, but some part of his brain was simply capable of creative supernovas.
    He also had a very privileged upbringing, that was able to nurture and facilitate those raw creative powers in the form of musical composition.
    This allowed him to have novel ideas that built on what came before him, so we got a decade or so of constant mini eureka’s!, he aggressively moved music forward. Or at least he happened to be the first brain that had new insights with regards to musical composition, that broke new ground and allowed all other brains to start entertaining new ideas that simply hadn’t occurred to them.
    There are many just like him, before and after, that have achieved similar things in other genres of music, and other disciplines. It has to be someone, after all. Usually it’s more incremental and attributed to a “wave”, it often feels like it came directly from the zeitgeist itself. But on occasions like these, it’s more explosive and localised to one mind.
    It’s just a perfect storm - the right brain at the time in the right place with the right tools.

    • @lennybuenrostro1351
      @lennybuenrostro1351 2 года назад

      He was in fact autistic, just like Newton, which explains his freakishly high spec brain lol

  • @cloudsponge6839
    @cloudsponge6839 5 лет назад +411

    “That prize might go to...”
    Me: PAGANINI!
    “Beethoven or...”
    Me: Vivaldi?
    “Bach”
    Me: oh... Im good with that

  • @18661873
    @18661873 3 года назад +4

    My favorite Mozart piece is Laudate Dominum, when he rips those wicked riffs on his Fender Stratocaster.
    RIP Wolfgang, you were definitely a genius.

  • @marwansammakia5330
    @marwansammakia5330 Месяц назад

    Displace one note, and it will be diminishment , displace one phrase, and the structure will fall…
    These are the best words I’ve heard by salièrie , it describes exactly the music of Mozart…

  • @douglasburnside
    @douglasburnside 5 лет назад +34

    "It's people like that who make you realize how little you've accomplished. It's a sobering thought, for example, that, when Mozart was my age, he had been dead for two years."
    Tom Lehrer

    • @nirfz
      @nirfz 4 года назад +1

      Well, he accomplished staying alive way longer... and maybe even not becomming broke?

  • @shayanmardanbeigi2697
    @shayanmardanbeigi2697 Год назад +10

    I have no idea why Mozart is not considered by many the greatest of all time, he laid the foundation for Beethoven and mastered every musical form that came before him in a sublime fashion, I certainly consider him the best ever and there is no question in my mind

    • @ART_IS_EVERYTHING
      @ART_IS_EVERYTHING Год назад

      bach is greater than both mozart and beethoven

    • @shayanmardanbeigi2697
      @shayanmardanbeigi2697 3 месяца назад

      @@ART_IS_EVERYTHINGBach did not master every genre, but yes he is a genius too

  • @David-R.
    @David-R. 2 года назад +11

    In order to understand how he's a genius, you need to study, or at least listen, to his predecessors, and then hear what he did different and the beauty of it. It's amazing!!

  • @riccello
    @riccello 3 года назад +1

    The narration in this video has so much passion for the subject that it made me cry.

  • @TheRTM
    @TheRTM 4 года назад +77

    In disagree. I believe Mozart is the greatest composer who ever lived.

    • @jackgonzalez7727
      @jackgonzalez7727 4 года назад +1

      And You're wrong.

    • @TheRTM
      @TheRTM 4 года назад +8

      @@jackgonzalez7727 I’m right (you are wrong) you don’t know Jack.

    • @jackgonzalez7727
      @jackgonzalez7727 4 года назад +1

      @@TheRTM no, son.
      You are completely wrong.

    • @MrMielten
      @MrMielten 4 года назад +8

      He was! Jack Gonzalez lacks taste!

    • @jackgonzalez7727
      @jackgonzalez7727 4 года назад +1

      @@MrMielten no, he wasn't.
      Mozart lacks spirit.

  • @MyNaday
    @MyNaday 5 лет назад +4

    Thank you so much for this great work.
    I'm sure that one of Mozart's greatest symphonies, if not the best, that shows us his tremendous talent and gift is k. 466.
    And as Salieri said in Amadeus : "...if you only change a single note, Mozart's works will be not the same".

  • @joels6172
    @joels6172 5 лет назад +4

    Don't suppose an introduction to opera is coming in the future?
    This is such a fantastic channel! Thank you!

    • @InsidetheScore
      @InsidetheScore  5 лет назад

      It absolutely is - within the next month. To be honest I didn't expect this mozart one would turn into a two-parter so that's shifted my schedule a bit. I wish I could employ some people to help me with all the work I juggle lol

  • @thehagification
    @thehagification 3 года назад +2

    5.56 begins the most beautiful piece of music ever written. He has written beauty as an artist would paint it.

  • @yeahokbuddy2510
    @yeahokbuddy2510 5 лет назад +269

    Me at age 11: eating legos and discovering i had pubic hair for the first time
    This dude Mozart at age 11: *WRITES HIS FIRST OPERA*

    • @Dominique632
      @Dominique632 4 года назад +24

      No offense, but you should kind of worry if you still eating Legos at the age of 11🤣

    • @BodilessVoice
      @BodilessVoice 4 года назад +4

      Which he conducted himself at its premier!

    • @yeahokbuddy2510
      @yeahokbuddy2510 4 года назад +4

      Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart you clearly have no idea what flavor is

    • @tobotron
      @tobotron 4 года назад

      To be fair, Mozart’s operas weren’t the best things he made.

    • @domogenesisqwertz
      @domogenesisqwertz 4 года назад +1

      Yo, if your dad makes you learn music from infancy on and you are already heavily exposed to acoustics in your mothers womb (Leopold was a pro musician) which is nothing other then waves/frequencies that your ear gets accustomed to...

  • @teelucksarvesh9209
    @teelucksarvesh9209 5 лет назад +54

    Please do more videos of the lives of other composers ! Wonderful video ! Thank you !

    • @Highinsight7
      @Highinsight7 5 лет назад +1

      very well done!

    • @gabrielkaz5250
      @gabrielkaz5250 5 лет назад

      No

    • @gabrielkaz5250
      @gabrielkaz5250 5 лет назад +1

      Not well done at all, he says 2 things, the history if mozart, which is useless cuz anyone Can go on wikipédia, and he says that music of mozart is simple but pure expressive and we can memorize melody easily, first of all maybe he says good things but he has no argument so wdc, what he says is that Mozart 's music was pure... ? It means nothing, he says it's expressive... not the most expressive music of all Time, and it's due to classical period which had too many rules that it was blocking expressivity. By the way, saying it's simple music isn't an argument ... For many reasons, first of all, if hé said cause of the simpleness his music was expressive is not an argument a looooot of composers did "simple" music expressive, making simple music doesn't make u a genius and the music of Mozart isn't simple ...
      So that vidéo makes u learn informations that
      We already know about
      Or are false or useless
      Sry for my poor vocabulary but i'm french, my screen has bug of typing and there's automatic correction

    • @Highinsight7
      @Highinsight7 5 лет назад

      @@gabrielkaz5250 this is for the "common" folk... Can't dig tooo deep for them... REALLY, at least in the states... this is about as far as he can go... sad... BUT true!

    • @gabrielkaz5250
      @gabrielkaz5250 5 лет назад

      @@Highinsight7 if he can't explain or teach us anything, why do a vidéo ?

  • @legoguy23451
    @legoguy23451 4 года назад +8

    8:32 thank you. i feel this statement heavily when creating music. it's a strangely spiritual thing i feel like.

  • @Mulugeta48
    @Mulugeta48 4 года назад +2

    Thank you so much. you did a great presentational video. this is my first time to hear more about Mozart's genius works. it was really emotional to hear.
    Thank you again.

  • @der0hund
    @der0hund 5 лет назад +24

    Hi! I would be glad i you were able to do a video about the first choral of the johannes passion by j.s. Bach ("Herr unser Herrscher"). It just blows my mind.

    • @michaelwu7678
      @michaelwu7678 5 лет назад +1

      The texture is so amazing and multilayered. I love it

    • @zarathustra8789
      @zarathustra8789 5 лет назад +1

      The whole piece gives me goosebumps but the final chord of the choral makes my eyes well up.

  • @ElioCarra
    @ElioCarra 5 лет назад +29

    Mozart is that F# on C major.
    Love forever.

    • @cosmicsprings8690
      @cosmicsprings8690 5 лет назад +1

      Thomas K. Anderson beautiful discussion and so true..

    • @annettegenovesi4012
      @annettegenovesi4012 5 лет назад +5

      And just why is it dangerous for a blind man to cross a road? Because you must C sharp or you will B flat!!

    • @cosmicsprings8690
      @cosmicsprings8690 5 лет назад

      Annette Genovesi ✨✨✨😂😂😲😆✨✨✨ only a good musician could enjoy that joke thank you for the wonderful laughter ✨✨✨☘️🇬🇧🍀✨✨✨

    • @abcd-yg2rx
      @abcd-yg2rx 5 лет назад

      And the psychopath bypolar who keeps switching from major key to minor every three seconds

    • @abcd-yg2rx
      @abcd-yg2rx 5 лет назад

      @@cosmicsprings8690 I liked it too

  • @bb1111116
    @bb1111116 4 года назад +8

    There are many great classical composers. What sets Mozart apart was that he was brilliant in every form of classical music. For instance he was a great opera composer. Bach and Brahms never wrote an opera. Beethoven struggled to write one. Mozart wrote some of the greatest such as the Magic Flute and Don Giovanni.

    • @NDnf84
      @NDnf84 Год назад

      My perspective is something like opera is a too nice to matter in this discussion. Opera is not universally or even widely appreciated on a global scale by the average person compared to so many other works in these composers' catalogs. Mozart is not a household name because of his operas.

    • @bb1111116
      @bb1111116 Год назад

      @@NDnf84 ; in the USA the average person knows little about any classical music. No classical composer is a household name in the majority of US households.
      For those who do know a lot of what classical music is, opera is an important part of that because many great composers wrote operas.

  • @bonnymcdermott1240
    @bonnymcdermott1240 Год назад +2

    Absolutely incredible!! So well presented! I was captivated from the beginning! And learned new things! I know theres a lot of exclamation marks but thats because i really mean it! This was superbly presented.

  • @jacquesmolay3676
    @jacquesmolay3676 4 года назад +6

    Mozart is not just a genius, he is a 1time phenomenon

  • @fredericchopin8831
    @fredericchopin8831 5 лет назад +4

    Man, I really love your channel

    • @ignacioj.t5555
      @ignacioj.t5555 4 года назад

      you ll love this channel too then ruclips.net/channel/UCiCrlXJVelkTnLuIb753JzA have a look!

  • @Bell_Cat639
    @Bell_Cat639 2 года назад +6

    Mozart was limited by so many things yet he was able to climb up the latter with ease and reach positions that only people like Bach and Beethoven was able to now imagine if he could've reached his full potential he could've very well become the best of the best

  • @Ranca666
    @Ranca666 Год назад

    What a fantastic video. The storytelling was simply excellent, and a delightful selection of parts to analyze! I'll watch the second one right away!!

  • @drandrewtan
    @drandrewtan 5 лет назад +4

    Thank you for dimming the screen so that we could focus on the elements of his music that you have raised to our attention.

  • @stevenbeoethy4049
    @stevenbeoethy4049 3 года назад +5

    I love how Staze, his wife in the Movie, calls him Wolfie...

  • @ninavasiliadou1831
    @ninavasiliadou1831 3 года назад +4

    I really admire Mozart as a composer! It is not a coincidence that he was recognised as a genius! Intelligent and ambitious but with a heart of a little child!

    • @howardgilman5698
      @howardgilman5698 Год назад

      The freedom and heart of a little child that broke through ennui of adulthood ways of expression. Mozart inherited simple entertainment and made complex adventures. No wonder his favorite form was opera.