The Mozarts, Who They Were
TRANSLATED BY DENA MARZULLO
Diego Minoia
The Mozarts, Who They Were
A Family on the Quest of a European Triumph
Travels, music, encounters and interesting facts
The historical-sociological conditions, the family,
the childhood and the adolescence of Wolfgang Amadeus
Volume 2
(1763 - 1775)
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced without the written consent of the author
Copyright © Diego Minoia 2020
www.diegominoia.it
ISBN 979-12-200-6604-4
Cover design: Marta Colosio
Diego Minoia
The Mozarts, Who They Were
A Family on the Quest of a European Triumph
Travels, music, encounters and interesting facts
Table of Contents
Volume I
Part 1: Salzburg and the Mozart family
Salzburg - The Prince-Bishops – Interesting facts on Salzburg – Music at the Court of the Prince-Bishopric – The musicians of the Salzburg Court – The Mozart family (mother, sister, father, Wolfgang) – Wolfgang's station in the history of music – The life of the Mozart family in Salzburg – Mozart's earnings – The catalogue of the Mozartian compositions
Part 2: School of thought, culture and society in the 1700s
The geopolitical situation during the 18th century – The Age of Enlightenment – Society during the Mozart epoch – Theater, influence and society – Theater and the impresario – The dedications and the earnings of composers and librettists – The castrated – Protected, borrowed and stolen musicians – Music of the 1700s – The role of the musician during the second half of the 1700s – The Melodramma – Music and the church – The principle forms of church music - The evolution and perfection of musical instruments during the 1700s – Pre-Romantic Mozart?
Part 3: Daily life during Mozart's time
The household in Europe in the 1700s – Pannier or farthingale – Laundry – Ice – Food and the evolution of taste – Artists and their role in society - Various habits and interesting facts: household pets, high fashion à la Française – Paris, the guiding light of fashion – Gossip and aristocratic parlors – The “dark gloom” - Parisian parlors and sex - Conservatories and hospitals for the poor
Part 4: The Mozarts family before the European travels
From 1775 to 1762: Leopold Mozart and the education of prodigious children – The Mozartian epistolary – The letters dating 1755/1756 – Leopold Mozart: part author, part businessman – Augsburg letters to the publisher Lotter – The production of paper until the 1700s – Leopold's astuteness – The Fair – Publishing in the 1700s and the author's rights – Leopold's “ploy” - Taxes in the 18th century – Nannerl and Wolfgang's musical education in Salzburg – Wolfgang's first compositions
Part 5: The first journeys of the Mozart family
Traveling in the 18th century: roads, guides, lodging, dangers – Some history on the postal service until Mozart's epoch – The first journeys: Munich and Vienna – The first journey to Vienna - Vienna, the capital of the Empire – Interesting facts – Epistolary from Vienna – Dress during the 18th century – The Academies – Music at the Court of Vienna – Business and the diversification of consumerism – Interior décor – What did Wolfgang and Nannerl do during their exhibitions? – The phenomenon of the 18th century's child prodigies
Part 6: The Mozarts and the Grand European Tour/1– Germany and the Netherlands
What was the Grand Tour of the 18th century? - The Mozart's Grand Tour “in reverse” - Appointments in every city - Sojourns along the journey: Salzburg, Munich, Augsburg, Ulm, Ludwigsburg, Bruchsal, Schwetzingen, Heidelberg, Mannheim, Worms, Mainz, Frankfurt, Mainz, Koblenz, Bonn, Cologne, Aachen, Liège, Tienen, Leuven, Brussels, Mons, Bonavis, Gourney, Paris
Volume 2
Part 7: The Mozart family and the Grand European Tour/2
Paris: encounters, hopes, gifts, success, interesting facts. Wolfgang's Parisian compositions
Part 8: The Mozart family and the Grand European Tour/3 – London
London: a “new” world, formative musical encounters, marketing strategies and government crisis. Wolfgang's “Londonese” compositions
Part 9: The Mozart family and the Grand European Tour/4 – The long return trip
Calais, Dunkirk, Lille, Ghent, Antwerp, Rotterdam, The Hague, Amsterdam, The Hague, Haarlem, Amsterdam, Utrecht, Antwerp, Brussels, Valenciennes, Cambrai, Paris, Dijon, Lyon, Geneva, Lausanne, Bern, Zürich, Winterthur, Schaffhausen, Donaueschingen, Dillingen, Augsburg, Munich, Salzburg
Part 10: Salzburg / Vienna / Salzburg
The return to daily life in Salzburg – A period of settling in and growth for Wolfgang in acquiring further musical knowledge – A second journey to Vienna – A period of additional Salzburg study in preparation for the upcoming journey to Italy
Intermezzo
The Grand Tour in Italy in the 18th century, the opinions and diaries of other travelers on the Grand Tour, Europe and Italy during the second half of the 18th century
Part 11: The first journey to Italy
Salzburg, Innsbruck, Bolzano, Rovereto, Verona, Mantua, Milan, Lodi, Parma, Bologna, Florence, Rome, Sessa Aurunca, Capua, Naples, Rome, Civita Castellana, Terni, Spoleto, Foligno, Loreto, Senigallia, Pesaro, Rimini, Imola, Bologna, Parma, Piacenza, Milan, Turin, Milan, Brescia, Verona, Vicenza, Padua, Venice, Padua, Vicenza, Verona, Rovereto, Brixen, Innsbruck, Salzburg
Part 12: The second journey to Italy
In Milan for the composition of the theatrical serenade Ascanio in Alba – Back to Salzburg
Part 13: The third journey to Italy
In Milan for the composition of the opera Lucio Silla – Wolfgang returns to Salzburg to serve the Court
Part 14: Vienna and Munich
Unsuccessful attempts in Vienna – La finta giardiniera “The Disguised Gardener” in Munich – Wolfgang's melancholic return to Salzburg – Mozart is dismissed – Leopold and Wolfgang's separation – Wolfgang's departure with his mother in search of fortune elsewhere
A note to the reader: throughout the book, some parts of the text have been highlighted in gray. These have been included to give further information and in-depth explanation to broaden the understanding of the topic being discussed. There is no harm in passing over these segments to avoid interrupting the narrative related to the Mozart family; you may wish to re-read them later at your leisure. I hope you enjoy these brief “parenthesis” as a contribution to each situation that has been described in its historical and social context.
Introduction
Why this book? Because it has never been written! For years, I had been looking for a book about the Mozart family with these