WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
1756-1791
I:
-- A
French atheist, proud of his atheism, who heard the seven year old
concert pianist in
Paris
exclaimed, “I have seen a miracle.”
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wasn’t a miracle in the biblical sense
of the word; nevertheless, he was a marvel.
Today he couldn’t be exploited and exhibited as he was in his
childhood. (After all, today
people who are highly unusual physically, for instance, aren’t allowed
to be exploited and exhibited in circus side-shows.)
Mozart's father, however, was less wise and therefore less kind.
The elder Mozart, himself a composer and violinist of no little
ability, quickly recognized that his son was extraordinary.
Mozart's sister, Nannerl (five years older), was gifted too.
Father Mozart sent the two children on a concert tour that lasted
three and a half years. Crowds
sat agape as the seven year old boy and his twelve year old sister
played two-piano duets breathtakingly.
Paris
,
London
,
Amsterdam
,
Geneva
,
Lausanne
,
Zurich
,
Winterthur
, Schaffhausen; at last the concert tour was over and the exhausted
children were home again.
Mozart was born 27th January 1756 in the city of
Salzburg
,
Austria
, and was named Johannes Chrysostomos Wolfgangus Theophilos Mozart.
“Theophilos”, Greek for “lover of God”, was Latinized to
“Amadeus”. Thereafter he
was known by his last three names, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
His father began instructing him in music theory when he was
three. By age four he was
playing minuets flawlessly and had composed his first piano concerto.
His father looked at it and remarked that wonderful as it was on
paper, it was so difficult that no one would be able to play it.
Whereupon the four year old played it.
When he was eight he was asked to accompany a singer in an
Italian aria. He had never
heard it before. Still, he
improvised each repetition by developing it from the previous stanza.
When the singer had finished, Mozart kept playing the piece,
fully scored, ten times over, each time with a different variation.
He would have continued playing in his inner transport and
untrammelled spontaneity had not the adults in the room stopped him.
In 1782 Wolfgang married Constanze Weber.
His father vehemently opposed the marriage, vowing he would have
nothing to do with her; thereafter he treated Constanze contemptuously
if he had reason to deal with her at all.
Wolfgang, for his part, wrote his father, “I am just beginning
to live.” Her life
would never be easy. In six
of her nine years of marriage she would be pregnant or either
recovering. (The longest
interval between pregnancies was seventeen months; the shortest (twice),
six months.) In 1789 she was
bedridden for weeks with fever, severe nausea, and lameness.
The pseudo-medical treatment prescribed for her was to bathe her
feet in water in which the entrails of an animal had been boiled.
The child she was carrying died at birth.
Throughout her life she lacked everyday wisdom, homespun “horse
sense”. Despite her
appalling lack of worldly wisdom and her relentless suffering, Constanze
remained unconcerned and uncomplaining.
The young husband and wife were happy.
They were both silly, frivolous, and financially unteachable,
apparently a perfect match. They
moved twelve times in their nine years of marriage, house-rent being one
of the financial items they could never quite manage.
In the social pecking order of eighteenth century
Europe
musicians were generally disdained, being one step (but only one) above
the bricklayer or stonemason or blacksmith; certainly nowhere near the
gentry, let alone the nobility. Constanze
belonged to the same social class and knew it.
She and Wolfgang never strove to leave it.
Whereas Beethoven was socially ambitious and committed notable
social blunders in his zeal for social climbing, Mozart didn't blunder
in that he scorned the game; he never cared a fig for ingratiating
himself with social superiors.
In some respects he never grew up.
Emotional immaturity was as natural to him as musical
sophistication. On one
occasion he was practising the piano in an auditorium when he suddenly
took note of the silence of those who had come to hear him rehearse as
they hung on every note. He
thought these people entirely too serious, entirely too adulatory; after
all, he was only practising. Whereupon
he jumped up on the back of a seat and capered around the room from
seat-back to seat-back, all the while meowing like a cat.
Despite the people who recognized his gifts, and despite his
fondness for partying, Mozart was so very isolated that it hurts even to
read of it. Other musicians
envied him and shunned him. Salieri,
a court-composer of vastly less ability, plotted intrigues to ensure
Wolfgang's non-recognition. As
has already been mentioned, his father detested Constanze.
(Later she burned every letter the older man had sent to his
son.) Nannerl, his sister,
not wishing to alienate her father, took the father’s side and was
barely civil to Constanze.
So lonely was Mozart that his heart leapt when he found
recognition and affirmation in a bird.
He was passing a pet shop in
Salzburg
when he heard a bird chirping a few notes from one of his piano sonatas.
Now only recently he had decided to attempt a measure of
financial responsibility by writing each expenditure in a notebook,
hoping thereby to see exactly where his money was going and get himself
and his wife beyond their pecuniary precariousness.
The notebook shows careful entries of small sums for pencils or
buttons or food; then a huge entry for the bird.
Mozart had done it again: bankrupted himself unthinkingly, recent
resolution thrown to the wind, as he knew he had to have this bird.
Having dutifully jotted the purchase price in his notebook, he
wrote down the musical notes he heard the bird chirp, indicating that
the bird did not sing a G-sharp and several grace-notes.
Underneath all of this he penned, “Das war schoen” -- “That
was beautiful.” The bird
lived three years. When it
died he mourned it as he was to mourn little else.
A talent as rich as his would always ensure isolation.
His music pioneered new harmonies.
His grasp of counterpoint left people gasping.
(Counterpoint is the art of writing two different melodies in the
one piece of music.) Whereas
many composer/performers wrote a few piano or violin pieces and then
took them on the concert tour, playing them over and over to different
audiences in different cities, Mozart found that the more he performed
the more he was inspired to write. As
a result he frequently wrote new sonatas and concertos for each
performance on a concert tour. When
he did repeat a piano item with orchestral accompaniment, the orchestra,
of course, played the music he had scored for it.
Mozart himself, however, played what he had written for himself
the first night only; from the second night on he improvised, composing
on the spot, nothing written at all, his on-the-spot creation fitting
perfectly into the orchestral score.
Each night there was the same orchestral accompaniment but a
brand new piano rendition, never heard before, and never to be heard
again, since nothing was written and nothing recorded.
Unlike Chopin who had huge hands, Mozart's hands, like his body,
were small. So dextrous were
they nonetheless that they caused the most difficult passages to
resemble “flowing oil”, in the words of the little man himself.
At the same time, his wonderfully able hands were useless for
virtually everything else. At
the dinner table his wife customarily cut up his meat, a knife and fork
being too difficult for him to coordinate.
On one occasion he asked a fellow-composer if he could look over
the latter's new symphony. The
man refused to let Mozart see it. Whereupon
our friend went to a concert hall where it was being performed, heard it
once, returned home and wrote out every note for every instrument.
Despite his financial disasters and his isolation at the hands of
the musical fraternity he never lost his confidence.
In fact he was self-assured in a way that others found
off-putting. When the
Austrian emperor, no less, remarked that an aria had too many notes in
it, Mozart replied (to the emperor), “...there are just as many notes
in it as there ought to be.” (Wolfgang,
remember, wasn’t a social climber.)
Most composers created music at the point of a pencil, writing
and erasing over and over until they got down what they wanted.
Mozart, however, created exclusively in his head; then he wrote
it all out once, once only, never erasing a note.
Not surprisingly, he found the writing
of music mechanical drudgery and a bore.
When asked about his musical inspiration and his manner of
composing he remarked that he had very little to say about it.
“Travelling in a carriage, walking after a good meal, during
the night when I can’t sleep; it’s on such occasions that my ideas
flow best and flow most abundantly.
Whence and how they come I
know not; nor can I force them.... Nor do I hear in my imagination the
parts successively, but I hear them, as it were, all at once.”
As soon as he had heard the full orchestra in his head at once,
all that remained to be done, he liked to say, was mere scribbling.
There was no form of music which he didn’t write superbly.
Symphonies, quartets, trios; piano, violin, cello, clarinet and
trumpet concertos; operas, church music.
Indeed it was as church musician that he acquired what he had
long wanted: a job with a salary and therefore a regular income.
As Master of the Chapel in
Salzburg
he wrote music for the Sunday services.
He and the archbishop, however, could not get along.
Their relationship worsened until in May, 1780, having had the
long-awaited steady job for a year and four months, he was fired.
While our soloist is singing Mozart's church music today and the
congregation several hymn-tunes, relatively little of his church music
is sung in Protestant worship. His
church music is largely the musical setting for the Roman Catholic mass.
Furthermore, the Protestantism which Mozart was exposed to was
exceedingly dilute. The rich
gospel of the Reformation, addressed to the entire person, had given way
to a dry, cold mental abstraction, little more than an intellectual
parlour game employing a religious vocabulary.
It led Mozart to comment that Protestant Christianity was a
head-trip that left people unmoved, inert.
Another critical observation was even more telling.
The Lutheran recovery of the biblical truth of justification --
namely, that God justifies sinners or puts them in the right with
himself as they seize in faith the crucified one whom God has given as
provision for sinners -- this glorious dimension of the gospel was
distorted and diluted until “justification” was nothing more than
the thinnest coat of whitewash applied to sin, which sin was deemed only
skin-deep and didn't matter anyway.
For this reason Mozart commented that Protestants rarely
understood the core of the Roman mass, “O Lamb of God that takest away
the sins of the world.”
His poverty worsened. In
order to earn money he gave piano lessons to the children of
aristocrats, virtually all of whom were without musical talent.
One fellow, however, pleaded with him for lessons, and Mozart
recognized enormous talent in the youngster; but Mozart's father was
dying and he felt he couldn't spare the time or the concentration which
so promising a pupil needed. He
declined to take on this one outstanding student.
The student's name was Beethoven.
Wolfgang began selling as much as he could part with.
His long, green velvet coat with the flared skirt, plus his red
velvet coat (his favourite), even his viola -- he sold them all, his
viola fetching only a few dollars. Between
major compositions he dashed off little ditties, tunes for what had
become the new rage in
Austria
, mechanical music boxes with revolving metal cylinders.
These music boxes sat on a woman's dresser and tinkled a tune
while she brushed her hair. Surprisingly,
he was well paid for these. Still,
he was so far in debt that he was beyond help.
By now he was not only poor but sick.
His illness worsened rapidly.
In the last year of his life, knowing himself in a race against
death (as he often said), he produced a torrent of glorious music.
At the same time, with only months left to him, he performed 20
two-hour piano concerts in four weeks.
Very ill now, he wrote to a friend in
England
, “I go on writing because composition tires me less than resting.”
A stranger commissioned him to write a Requiem.
He put the finishing touches to his last opera, The
Magic Flute, and began work on his final piece of church music.
Sick unto death, he summoned three men who sat with him for
several afternoons while he hummed the parts and dictated the score.
When he whispered to Constanze, “I have the taste of death on
my tongue”, she summoned a priest.
He died at 1:00 o'clock in the morning, 5th December 1791, aged
thirty-five, and was buried in a pauper's grave, unmarked.
His debts were massive. The
emperor sponsored a benefit concert for Constanze, as did his old friend
Haydn, and the money gave her a small monthly pension.
Her health improved now, and she lived until she was
seventy-nine. Whereupon she
was buried in the grave of the man who had afflicted her for years and
whose letters she had burned, her husband's father.
Mozart's
life was short. His
published works number six hundred and twenty-six.
We shall never know how much more music he wrote which his elbow
knocked onto the floor and a broom later swept up.
And of course we shall never hear the music he played but never
wrote.
Music-experts regard him as the most gifted composer ever.
Leonard Bernstein, American composer, conductor and pianist,
maintains that compared to other outstanding composers Mozart resembles
a deity who kissed the earthy briefly and then departed.
This little deity, however, was humble too.
All his life Mozart was especially fond of people below his
social station. He loved to
play for sick, elderly people in nursing homes.
“The unlearned will appreciate my music without knowing why”,
he commented. They did.
They do. And they
always will.
II:
-- Why
are we honouring Mozart today in a service of worship?
Music isn’t the Word of God. To
cherish Mozart's gift isn’t to relish the gospel.
Then why do we bother with him at Sunday worship?
(i)
In the first place, while music is not the gospel it does assist us in our praise of God.
Architecture also assists us in our praise of God.
Sunday by Sunday we worship God in this building.
It cost much to build and it costs much to maintain.
Yet we continue to maintain it and gather within it inasmuch as
it facilitates our worship of God. Music
does as much.
It always has. Our
Hebrew foreparents knew this. They
used the flute at weddings and funerals; in other words, the flute was
used in services of worship which had to do with the extremes of
elevated joy or piercing grief. The
tambourine was used in conjunction with dancing, and was always
associated with gladness. The
trumpet was used to remind the people of God's summons to spiritual
conflict.
We sing here Sunday by Sunday just because singing expresses a
devotion, an ardour, a response of the heart so deep that merely spoken
words can’t do justice to it. The
lyrics of our hymns are poetry. But
we don't stand and recite poetry together week after week; we sing
it. Poetry which is sung
comes from depths in us that much deeper than poetry which is said.
Music assists us in our praise of God.
This being the case, it’s only fitting that we recognize
someone who was musically gifted above all others.
(ii)
In the second place Mozart's music is known for its structure,
its order. The order of his
music reminds us that our world remains ordered by God's providence and
God's mercy. To be sure, in
the wake of the Fall the world is disordered;
not superficially disordered, but profoundly disordered.
Sunday by Sunday you hear me illustrate and analyse the world's
disorder and also hear me point, I trust, to its recovery in Jesus
Christ. Disordered as the
world is, however, it’s never as disordered as it could be.
It’s never disordered entirely.
If it were, existence would be impossible.
Everyone knows that life is impossible amidst chaos.
A completely chaotic world would be an uninhabitable world.
Scripture insists over and over that humankind's wickedness
imparts an element of chaos into human existence.
Then as one generation's wickedness is added to another's, why
doesn't chaos mount until it overtakes us and life becomes impossible?
Because God himself, in his goodness and patience and mercy,
constantly keeps chaos at bay as he preserves order enough to let us
live.
The Hebrew mind always thinks concretely.
When it thinks of chaos it envisages water, torrents of water,
both coming down from above and welling up from below.
When the two waters meet, chaos overtakes the world and life is
impossible. It is the
testimony of scripture that God, by his goodness, patience and mercy,
holds the “waters” back and preserves order, order enough to let us
live and work.
When I hear Mozart's music, with its marvellous structure, its
exquisite order, I know it to be a reflection of that order by which God
preserves the world in his mercy.
However fallen the world is, however tarnished, weakened and
vicious it might be, it is never this entirely; if the world were this
entirely, it would no longer be good. But God created it
good and pronounced it good. Its
goodness remains even in the wake of the Fall, for otherwise it
couldn’t be the theatre of God's glory.
Mozart's music embodies an order, intricately worked out, subtle
to be sure, yet always balanced and elemental.
His music is a token of that order by which God preserves a world
which, if left to itself, could only collapse into chaos.
World? Your life and
mine: left to itself, without God’s preservation -- it too could only
collapse into chaos.
(iii)
Lastly, Mozart's music is to be received with thanksgiving simply
because it’s a thing of beauty. Beauty
is a gift of God. Not the
gift (Jesus Christ, with all that he does for us and in us, is the
gift); but a gift nonetheless,
and a glorious gift.
Think for a minute of the Lord's Prayer.
We are commanded to pray for daily bread.
Daily bread is not the bread
of life. (Our Lord is this.)
But to say that daily bread isn’t the
bread of life isn’t to say that daily bread is unimportant.
Indeed, so important is daily bread that we can’t live without
it, and must ask God for it without ceasing.
Just as bread is food for the stomach so music is food for the
mind and heart. Music too is
a kind of “bread” that humankind needs and for which we are to thank
God.
Do you ever think about the cloak which our Lord wore?
It wasn’t a potato sack. It
was beautiful, so beautiful that the soldiers who stripped him didn’t
throw it aside. Instead they
gambled for it, each one wanting to be the lucky fellow to take it home.
Do you recall what Mozart wrote in his notebook about the bird
that could chirp a few notes of his music?
“That was beautiful.” How
much more beautiful was the gift of the man whose piano-playing
resembled “flowing oil” and whose compositions are without peer.
At
one point Mozart's father, exasperated with his son, wrote to Wolfgang,
“It’s always too much or too little with you, never the middle of
the road.” The older man
was correct on one thing: for Wolfgang it was never the middle of the
road. But he was wrong when
he said that with Wolfgang Amadeus it was always either too much or too
little. It was certainly
never too little. Then was
it ever too much? There
can’t be too much of Mozart’s gift.
There
can’t be too much of the gift;
there can’t be too much of the love our Lord poured out upon us at the
cross and continues to pour out. There
can’t be too much of the love we must pour out upon him and upon one
another. Love, like Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart himself, is always a spendthrift.
Victor
Shepherd
January 2006