Originally posted by RichardB
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Carl Friedrich Abel (1723-1787) v W A Mozart (1756-1791)
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostBrilliant post Richard - many thanks. It's a good response to my #27.... This also puts me in mind of the G minor Piano Quartet K478, which amazes me every time I hear its symphonic level of expression and complexity: no doubt there are many other examples outside the da Ponte operas.
The piano concertos from K271 onwards, the operas, the symphonies from 28 onwards, his extraordinary chamber music , the Sinfonia Concertante, the wind concertos , the Requiem and Masses, the concert arias , the horn and violin concertos even way above his contemporaries.
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For me there are more than enough "masterpieces" (though I acknowledge that can, in some contexts, be a problematically subjective term)...to justify Mozart's status as a very great, exceptionally great composer.
How many here spent time getting to know the "Haydn" or "Hofmeister/Prussian" late Quartets? Or all of the String Quintets, not just 515/6? Less familiar Wind Serenades (including the tragic-toned one, K388, adapted for String Quintet K406; the K407 Horn Quintet (not just the sublime K452); The Piano Concertos after No.9? Those for Violin or Violin/Viola K364? K457/475 Piano Works?
There a few such prolific composers who leave more than a few great works - ie those of exceptional melodic inspiration, formal innovation and inventiveness - as their legacy.
Noting that the K250 Serenade was probably his first truly mature, entirely personal achievement (though with a serious nod to the "Little G Minor" Symphony K183), I would simply suggest that Mozart left rather more than most.....
But I admit to my own subjective adoration of most of the works I have listed above; as I get older I find myself listening to more Mozart (and JS Bach too), among various more adventurous quests.....
There is something very profoundly special I find in their voices - I can find nowhere else....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 03-12-21, 19:19.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI don’t agree for a moment with the suggestion that the majority of Mozart’s work - certainly from about 19 onwards does not rise above that of his contemporaries ! Only Haydn wrote work anywhere near as great from 1774-1791....
(And agree with Jayne, btw.)
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI don’t agree for a moment with the suggestion that the majority of Mozart’s work - certainly from about 19 onwards does not rise above that of his contemporaries ! Only Haydn wrote work anywhere near as great from 1774-1791 .
The piano concertos from K271 onwards, the operas, the symphonies from 28 onwards, his extraordinary chamber music , the Sinfonia Concertante, the wind concertos , the Requiem and Masses, the concert arias , the horn and violin concertos even way above his contemporaries.
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There are countless really good composers that sound like Mozart, it was the style of the time. But somehow Mozart's works seems deeper, he had a remarkable ability to developed the maternal in unusual and inventive ways and the scoring, again so imaginative, clever and never routine. I listen of a lot of 18th century music and you can find works that come close to Mozart but they never surpass his greatest works.
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