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Too much Mozart makes you sick
La Scena Musicale ^ | December 14, 2005 | Norman Lebrecht

Posted on 12/19/2005 1:25:59 PM PST by billorites

They are steam cleaning the streets of Vienna ahead of next month's birthday weekend when pilgrim walks are planned around the composer's shrines. Salzburg is rolling out brochures for its 2006 summer festival, which will stage every opera in the Kochel canon from infantile fragments to The Magic Flute, 22 in all. Pierre Boulez, the pope of musical modernism, will break 80 years of principled abstinence to conduct a mostly-Mozart concert, a celebrity virgin on the altar of musical commerce.

Wherever you go in the coming year, you won't escape Mozart. The 250th anniversary of his birth on January 27 1756 is being celebrated with joyless efficiency as a tourist magnet to the land of his birth and a universal sales pitch for his over-worked output. The complete 626 works are being marketed on record in two special-offer super coffers. All the world's orchestras will be playing Mozart, wall to wall, starting with the Vienna Philharmonic on tour this weekend.

Mozart is the superstore wallpaper of classical music, the composer who pleases most and offends least. Lively, melodic, dissonance free: what's not to like? The music is not just charming, it's full of good vibes. The Mozart Effect, an American resource centre which ascribes 'transformational powers' to Austria's little wonderlad, collects empirical evidence to show that Mozart, but no other music, improves learning, memory, winegrowing and toilet training and should be drummed into classes of pregnant mothers like breathing exercises.

A 'molecular basis' identified in Mozart's sonata for two pianos is supposed to have stimulated exceptional brain activity in laboratory rats. How can one argue with such 'proof'? Science, after all, confirms what we want to believe - that art is good for us and that Mozart, in his short-lived naivety, represents a prelapsarian ideal of organic beauty, unpolluted by industrial filth and loss of faith. Nice, if only it were true.

The chocolate-box image of Mozart as a little miracle can be promptly banged on the head. The hard-knocks son of a cynical court musician, Mozart was taught from first principles to ingratiate himself musically with people of wealth and power. The boy, on tour from age five, hopped into the laps of queens and played limpid consolations to ruthless monarchs. Recognising that his music was better than most, he took pleasure in humiliating court rivals and crudely abused them in letters back home.

A coprophiliac obsession with bodily functions, accurately evinced in Peter Shaffer's play and Milos Forman's movie Amadeus, was a clear sign of arrested emotional development. His marriage proved unstable and his inability to control the large amounts he earned from wealthy Viennese patrons was a symptom of the infantile behaviour that hastened his early death and pauper burial. Musical genius he may have been, but Mozart was no Einstein. For secrets of the universe, seek elsewhere.

The key test of any composer's importance is the extent to which he reshaped the art. Mozart, it is safe to say, failed to take music one step forward. Unlike Bach and Handel who inherited a dying legacy and vitalised it beyond recognition, unlike Haydn who invented the sonata form without which music would never have acquired its classical dimension, Mozart merely filled the space between staves with chords that he knew would gratify a pampered audience. He was a provider of easy listening, a progenitor of Muzak.

Some scholars have claimed revolutionary propensities for Mozart, but that is wishful nonsense. His operas of knowing servants and stupid masters were conceived by Da Ponte, a renegade priest, from plays by Beaumachais and Ariosto; and, while Mozart once indulged in backchat to the all-high Emperor Joseph II, he knew all too well where his breakfast brioche was buttered. He lacked the rage of justice that pushed Beethoven into isolation, or any urge to change the world. Mozart wrote a little night music for the ancien regime. He was not so much reactionary as regressive, a composer content to keep music in a state of servility so long as it kept him well supplied with frilled cuffs and fancy quills.

Little in such a mediocre life gives cause for celebration and little indeed was done to mark the centenary of his birth, in 1856, or of his death in 1891. The bandwaggon of Mozart commemorations was invented by the Nazis in 1941 and fuelled by post-War rivalries in 1956 when Deutsche Grammophon rose the from ruins to beat the busy British labels, EMI and Decca, to a first recorded cycle of the Da Ponte operas.

The 1991 bicentennial of Mozart's death turned Salzburg into a swamp of bad taste and cupidity. The world premiere of a kitsch opera, Mozart in New York, had me checking my watch every five unending minutes. The record industry, still vibrant, splattered Mozart over every vacant hoarding and a new phenomenon, Classic FM, launched in 1992 on the Mozart tide, ensured that we would never be more than a fingerstretch away from the nearest marzipan chord.

What good all this Mozart does is disputable. For all the pseudoscience of the Mozart Effect I have yet to see a life elevated by Cosi fan tutte or a criminal reformed by the plinks of a flute and harp concerto. Where ten days of Bach on BBC Radio 3 will flush out the world's ears and open minds to limitless vistas, the coming year of Mozart feels like a term at Guantanamo Bay without the sunshine. There will be no refuge from neatly resolved chords, no escaping that ingratiating musical grin.

Don't look to mass media for context or quality control. Both the BBC and independent channels have rejected any critical perspective on Mozart in the coming year, settling for sweet-wrapper documentaries that regurgitate familiar clichés. In this orgy of simple-mindedness, the concurrent centenary of Dmitri Shostakovich ö a composer of true courage and historical significance ö is being shunted to the sidelines, celebrated by the few.

Mozart is a menace to musical progress, a relic of rituals that were losing relevance in his own time and are meaningless to ours. Beyond a superficial beauty and structural certainty, Mozart has nothing to give to mind or spirit in the 21st century. Let him rest. Ignore the commercial onslaught. Play the Leningrad Symphony. Listen to music that matters


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: austria; classicalmusic; mozart; music
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1 posted on 12/19/2005 1:26:00 PM PST by billorites
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To: sitetest


2 posted on 12/19/2005 1:26:15 PM PST by billorites (freepo ergo sum)
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To: billorites

My goodness, the author is certainly not a fan of Mozart.


3 posted on 12/19/2005 1:28:36 PM PST by Bahbah (Free Scooter; Tony Schaffer for the US Senate)
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To: MozartLover

Thought you might want comment........


4 posted on 12/19/2005 1:29:25 PM PST by b4its2late (Eye souport publik edekashun two.)
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To: billorites

Huh???? I love Mozart... he was clearly one of the greatest of all time.


5 posted on 12/19/2005 1:29:49 PM PST by CurlyBill (Democratic Party = Surrender Party)
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To: Bahbah
Musical genius he may have been, but Mozart was no Einstein. For secrets of the universe, seek elsewhere.

Sounds like the sour grapes of someone extremely untalented.

6 posted on 12/19/2005 1:30:09 PM PST by steelcurtain
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To: billorites; 1rudeboy; 31R1O; afraidfortherepublic; Andyman; Argh; baa39; Bahbah; bboop; ...

Dear billorites,

Yeah, I'd seen this article - didn't think to post it.

Here's a Classical Music Ping List ping!

If you want on or off the list, let me know via FR e-mail. Thanks!


sitetest


7 posted on 12/19/2005 1:33:22 PM PST by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: billorites

Well, I'm not sure this is really news. More of a cultural thing.

Here, we have a writer who is bored with Mozart. Tough nuts for him.

While Mozart is fairly simple to understand, there's much to like in his music. As a musician, I have always enjoyed playing Mozart, whether it's on the piano or performing his oboe concerto, which I've done only once in public...and to a forgiving audience.

It's silly to write a blast against this composer. No, he's not a modern composer. No, he doesn't understand 12-tone music. He's what he is, and a composer who wrote for his time, not for a future he could never have known.

Not every composition of his is earthshaking. Some, however, are. The same can be said of every composer from Bach to Bruchner.

If this writer dislikes Mozart, then I'd suggest he avoid listening to Mozart. For myself, I'll listen to Mozart, along with all the other music I enjoy.


8 posted on 12/19/2005 1:33:41 PM PST by MineralMan (godless atheist)
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To: billorites
The most astonishing verbal vomit I have ever encountered.

Herr Lebrecht seems to suffer from piano envy.

9 posted on 12/19/2005 1:37:28 PM PST by FreedomFarmer (Facts without theory is trivia. Theory without facts is socialism.)
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To: billorites
What utter garbage. Mozart's music was considered dissonant and hard to follow in its time. what makes his operas great isn't the librettos as good as they were but his characterizations through music. Harmonically he was more adventurous then Beethoven for the most part.
10 posted on 12/19/2005 1:39:16 PM PST by Borges
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To: billorites

Hilarious!


11 posted on 12/19/2005 1:39:29 PM PST by djreece ("... Until He leads justice to victory." Matt. 12:20c)
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To: billorites

The aria played in Shawshank Redemption that stopped the prisoners in their tracks was Mozart, I do believe. I love Mozart. But, then again I love Bach, Beethoven, Brahms too.


12 posted on 12/19/2005 1:39:31 PM PST by Conservative4Ever (Dear Santa, ......I can explain....)
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To: billorites

Either a scam, or the author's a musical idiot.


13 posted on 12/19/2005 1:39:33 PM PST by onedoug
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To: billorites

I agree with the premise that Mozart was no Beethoven but he certainly was no slouch either. Mick and Keith weren't as revolutionary or as talented as Lennon and McCartney but they still wrote and performed darn good music.


14 posted on 12/19/2005 1:39:45 PM PST by DallasMike (Call me Dallasaurus)
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To: billorites
dissonance free???

Try the Quartet in C, K.465. The slow introduction to the first movement sounds like Shostakovich.

15 posted on 12/19/2005 1:41:59 PM PST by Publius
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To: DallasMike
He was no Beethoven...he was better. :-) Better melodist more harmonically adventurous. Had better taste. There are passages in Beethoven that one wishes had been written differently.
16 posted on 12/19/2005 1:42:23 PM PST by Borges
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To: billorites

I would check to see if Mr. Lebrecht is a descendant of Antonio Salieri on his mother's side, and of Karl Marx on his father's side. This guy reminds me of the "classic rock" snobs of my wasted youth who thought that anything you could actually dance to was trash.


17 posted on 12/19/2005 1:47:23 PM PST by pawdoggie
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To: billorites

This guy is a total jerk. He works for the London Evening Standard and the BBC, his bio reveals.

For writing this column, he should be duct-taped to a chair and forced to listen to a hundred playings of Stravinsky's "Le Sacre du Printemps," followed by a hundred playings of Berg's Fifth Symphony.


18 posted on 12/19/2005 1:47:39 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Cicero
Not to disparage Le Sacre or Berg I hope! Berg was the most Romantic of the atonalists. And Le Sacre comes right out of Borodin and Rimsky Korsakov
19 posted on 12/19/2005 1:50:12 PM PST by Borges
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To: MineralMan
"Here, we have a writer who is bored with Mozart. Tough nuts for him"

Yeah, I go through phases where I think Mozart's a little cloying.

Listening to the Requiem usually cures me pretty quick.

20 posted on 12/19/2005 1:50:46 PM PST by billorites (freepo ergo sum)
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