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Amadeus

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Uploaded by on Jan 15, 2007

Secuencia de la película Amadeus de Milos Forman. Visita de Constanza a Salieri

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Uploader Comments (marianmus)

  • Anyone know the name of the first piece of music Salieri hears in his head at 3:50? It's Beautiful!

  • @TheRainbowAngel

    Concerto for flute and harp K 299

  • it's funny how she speaks in a total American accent, yet they're supposed to be European.

  • He must speak German in a total Austrian accent, doesn't he?

  • What is the song at 4:35?? I've never found it.

  • Concerto for two pianos K 365

Top Comments

  • This is one of the most great movie sequence

  • "service deserves service in return"? wtf!! that fucker!! hes using her love for her husband and twisting it for his own pleasures!! somebody shoot him plz!!

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  • Does anybody know the name of the piece at 4:49 please? The one with the lady singing

  • @ulsbolde89 he means for her to go to bed with him but later I assume he changes his mind.

  • "come tonight"

    how greedy! i wonder if that ever happened....

  • @TheRainbowAngel Concerto for flute and harp - Second movement

  • Anyone know the name of the first piece of music Salieri hears in his head at 3:50? It's Beautiful!

  • It's true. When young Mozart was touring in London with his father and sister, Nannerl, herself a gifted harpsichordist, there are accounts that he was proficient in English, albeit with his thick Austrian accent. When he was presented to any royal court, his father was doubly industrious in his son's ability to make an outstanding impression. This was a way for his son to secure a position at one of these courts as a composer, his only means of employment at that time. Thanks for writing!

  • Mozart certainly spoke French and Italian in addition to German but I'm not aware of any evidence he was proficient in English.

  • Mozart, being from Salzburg, would have spoken German in an Austrian dialect. From an early age, he was educated in many other languages so as to enlarge his capacity as a virtuoso. He probably would have been able to communicate in all of the major languages in Europe including English. When his friend and mentor Joseph Haydn left his post at Esterhazy to tour in Europe, Mozart advised him to acquire the skill for languages for which the elder Haydn was not as gifted as his younger colleague.

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