“It is my profound conviction that Mozart is the highest, the culminating point which beauty has reached in the sphere of music.” Tchaikovsky utterly revered Mozart’s music. He wasn’t alone. Composers have felt his shadow loom over them for centuries, either as a source of inspiration or a source of anguish. “Before Mozart,” wrote Charles Gounod, “all ambition turns to despair.”
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – along with Ludwig van Beethoven – is probably the most widely recognised of composers. He and Beethoven always vie for top spot in our annual statistics as the most frequently performed concert composer (and in opera houses, his output eclipses Beethoven’s single opera Fidelio). So much of his music is instantly recognisable, pouring forth with such ease, perfectly crafted. His short, turbulent life – especially as dramatised in Peter Shaffer’s play Amadeus – also captured public imagination.
How to select a top ten from over 600 works? An impossible task. I’ve plumped for personal favourites which could provide the newcomer to classical music with compelling evidence why Mozart is, for many listeners and composers, still Number 1. As Rossini said: “Beethoven I take twice a week, Haydn four times, but Mozart every day!”
1Symphony no. 41 in C major, “Jupiter”
When Mozart composed this symphony in the summer of 1788, he could not have known that it would be his last. Nicknamed the Jupiter, it’s a quite remarkable work, especially the finale which truly demonstrates Mozart’s genius. The melody is based on a four-note motif that goes back to medieval plainchant. The motif would have been familiar to symphony’s first audiences from its appearance as an exercise in Fux’s Gradus ad Parnassum.
Mozart weaves together several disparate themes, sometimes in canon, sometimes in fugue, sometimes in inversion. In the movement’s brilliant coda, the motif is layered with four other themes simultaneously. It is so clever, but Mozart makes it sound so easy. Follow the score in the second video, where Martin Gonzalez has colour-coded each motif – the coda is an explosion of colour!
Colour-coded score for finale:
2Piano Concerto no. 20 in D minor
Only two of Mozart’s 27 piano concertos are in a minor key, but the D minor, with its brooding opening that seems to foreshadow the overture to Don Giovanni, is a favourite. Beethoven admired it and had it in his concert repertoire (his first movement cadenza is the regular choice for pianists today). Storm clouds interrupt the the calm of the central Romanze, and there is a restless tone to the Rondo finale before jubilation breaks out in the end.
3Clarinet Concerto in A major
As a (lapsed) clarinettist, Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto was always going to feature high up my playlist. Mozart’s friendship with Anton Stadler and the masterpieces that resulted (the Clarinet Quintet could also have featured here) paved the way for the instrument’s rise in popularity. “Never should I have thought that a clarinet could be capable of imitating the human voice as it was imitated by you,” wrote Mozart to Stadler in 1785. The concerto, composed for basset clarinet a few months before Mozart’s untimely death, is sublime. Its outer movements are buoyant and sunny, while the Adagio is one of the most beautiful melodies he ever composed.
4Le nozze di Figaro
Mozart’s first collaboration with librettist Lorenzo da Ponte is often cited as the perfect opera. I’m not entirely convinced by Act 4, where the succession of arias for minor characters can drag, but the rest of it is superb. And revolutionary. Based on Beaumarchais’ 1778 play, the opera portrays the nobility as, ahem, less than noble and depicts servants gaining the upper hand over their masters – incendiary stuff. Mozart’s finale to Act 2 is exceptionally well constructed, with ever more characters introduced as the scene moves from a duet to a septet.