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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Clarinet Concerto in A Major

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Uploaded by on Nov 4, 2008

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Clarinet Concerto in A Major
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, full name Johann Chrysostom Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (27 January 1756 5 December 1791) was a prolific and influential composer of the Classical era. His more than 600 compositions include works widely acknowledged as pinnacles of symphonic, concertante, chamber, piano, operatic, and choral music, and he is among the most enduringly popular of classical composers.

Mozart was born in Salzburg into a musical family and showed indications of prodigious abilities at a very young age. When he was five years old, he could both read and write music and had precocious skills as a keyboard and violin player. Much of his childhood and adolescence was taken up with tours, which included performances before many of the royal courts of Europe. In 1773, aged 17, he accepted a post as a court musician in Salzburg, but was unhappy with his low pay and limited opportunities. Over the next eight years, he frequently traveled in search of a better position and composed abundantly. This situation continued until his dismissal from Salzburg in 1781 by his employer, the Prince-Archbishop, and his subsequent departure for Vienna.

He spent the rest of his busy life in Vienna, where he achieved relative fame. However, his finances remained precarious, with periods of prosperity and of penury. In 1782, he married Constanze Weber against the wishes of his family; six children were born, of whom two survived infancy. Musically, this was a period of outstanding creativity which saw the production of many of his best known symphonic, concertante and operatic works, and his final, incomplete Requiem. The circumstances of his death, at the age of 35, have been much mythologized, but were most likely commonplace.

In his youth, Mozart had used his gifts of imitation and mimicry to learn from the works of others. From these lessons, in maturity, he fashioned a style that ranged in mood from the light and pleasant to the dark and violent, from a vision of humanity "redeemed through art, forgiven, and reconciled with nature and the absolute". His influence on all subsequent classical music has been profound. Beethoven wrote much of his early music in Mozart's shadow. Joseph Haydn, sometime mentor and later friend and admirer, wrote, "Posterity will not see such a talent again in 100 years". Others claim that, more than two centuries after his death, his talent remains unsurpassed.

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  • This is the most beautiful video about natural scene I have every seen. Thanks for sharing.

  • Perfect.

    Beautiful video.

    Magnific music.

    Tanks my friend Antonio.

    Vilma

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  • This video is incredibly beautiful both musically and visually! The ending is very spiritual! Thanks for sharing the experience!

  • This fills my heart! In Peace.

  • ... No. Words. Said.

  • The waterfall is just too amazing for words............

  • Ever since the movie 'Out of Africa' i have loved this music.

  • how wonderful this world is!!!!

    thank you very much!!

    And in the end, at 6.22, left to the sun, it looks like God himself

  • Beautiful Video Thanks For Sharing!!! :-)

  • wonderful!!!!! thank you for sharing.

  • Please! I beg someone tell me why this music is making me cry so much. Is there a doctor on this page?

  • @bebster07

    It's the music, it's Mozart. You listen to it, close your eyes and tears just come out. It's divine.

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