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The Mozart Delusion
January/February 2013

In an attempt to make sense of the hysteria, I took up the cudgels for the Pierre Boulez slogan that Mozart was a regressive force who added nothing to the development of music. The inventors and energisers in music history were Bach, Haydn, Beethoven, Wagner, Mahler and Schoenberg; all else was entertainment. Boulez, as music director of the New York Philharmonic in the 1970s, replaced Mozart with Haydn on its programmes.

His case still holds, up to a point. Al- though some find prescience in a Schoenbergian 12-note row at the cold heart of Don Giovanni, Mozart pushed no musical form forward beyond existing borders. He was conformist to a fault, a conservative com- poser. On the plus side, he contributed two dozen works to what one might term general human civilisation, the common stock of culture—from “A Little Night Music” to the last notes of a Requiem he never lived to finish. That’s two dozen out of 630 works, but it’s a dozen more than Haydn and it is a rush of works that arouse instant warmth and acceptance from an audience.

Andrew Ford, the Australian composer and broadcaster, reinforces this point in a new collection of essays, Try Whistling This (Black Inc., £21.95). Mozart, he writes, “knows how to keep us close to the edge of our seats”, something few composers ever achieve. Ford goes on to acknowledge, how- ever, that once we start to believe that his music is “a sonic panacea from God, we might well lose our ability to listen at all”.

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David Chowes
December 29th, 2012
5:12 PM
(I don't need to comment that Mozart was one of the greatest composers of all time.) I saw the Forman film AMEDEOUS about 10 times. One of his Requim Mass appears in Stanley Kubrick's EYES WIDE SHUT. Both Mozart and Kubrick are artistic geniuses but the employ divergent media.

tony in san diego
December 29th, 2012
3:12 PM
SHORTER: So Mozart was an unoriginal hack, contrary to popular belief.

Abba D. Babba
December 29th, 2012
12:12 PM
Haydn and Mahler were "inventive and energizing forces"?? Boulez is (or was) far more narrow than I took him for.

Allen Esterson
December 29th, 2012
8:12 AM
Is this the same author who wrote a book on Mahler subtitled : "How One Man and Ten Symphonies Changed the World."? Even more efficacious than Mozart, apparently - and replete with worthy causes: "His First Symphony tackled child mortality. His Second denied Church dogma… the Third addressed ecological damage and the Fourth proclaimed racial equality." http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/bookreviews/7916688/Why-Mahler-...

Seb
December 24th, 2012
9:12 AM
If there's an exception to every rule, then the one to counter your understandable aversion to Mozart anniversaries is surely the wonderful Guido Cantelli Cosi from La Scala, on Jan 27 1956, a few months before the conductor's untimely death. http://www.amazon.com/Mozart-Cosi-Fan-Tutte-Cantelli/dp/B000066SIH

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