No...Beethoven was deaf
ANSWER:
Not only was Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart not deaf, he was able to keep his hearing long after his death, and in the tomb of which he was laid to rest, many a monk could hear the strange a whooshing noise of wind that sounded more like a shush. Shhhhhh!, the monks would hear, particularly after a night of drinking their Trappist Ale and the merriment would get rather loud, even for monks who had taken a vow of silence. Shhhhhh! would be the loud and rattling noise that blew like an angry gust of wind through the catacombs of Mozart's tomb. Shhhhhhhh!
Finally, one day, one of those monks who'd lived in silence for twenty years since taking a vow of silence, decided to investigate. He began his decent down the dank and musty steps of the maze like catacombs, occasionally slipping and making all sorts of noise while falling down the dark steps below and he would hear: "Shhhhhhhh! The monk picked himself up, and trembling with fear continued down the dark steps until finally, at the end of a corner, he could see the flickering of candlelight dancing shadows across the wall. He quietly and carefully approached the room from where the candlelight emitted and peeked into the room to see what was really going on.
In the room where the candle flickered was the corpse of Mozart furiously and madly working away erasing notations on paper. The monk, who had not spoken a word in twenty years dropped his own candle and spontaneously declared: "Dear God in Heaven, it's you! Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart!! Wh-wh-what are you doing?" Mozart turned to face the monk with a scowl, placed his decaying finger up to his long since decayed lip and said: "Shhhh! I'm decomposing."
Mozart was not deaf; it was Beethoven who was totally deaf. He composed his music as he heard it in his mind's ear, much as we see or imagine in our mind's eyes.
Anyone who's totally deaf has lost all hearing in both ears.
No, Mozart (January 27, 1756 - December 5, 1791), never went deaf. There was evidence during his lifetime that he had perfect pitch. He did have a congenital deformity of the cartilage of his left ear, but it did not affect his hearing.
Motzart was not blind or deaf. Beethoven was deaf.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart did not have any documented hearing loss. The most notable composer to have gone deaf was Ludwig van Beethoven.
Source: Ask.com
No, not that i know of anyway??...
No he was not deaf or blind.
no that was bach
No, that was Beethoven.
No, only beethoven got deaf
His full name is Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. His parents must have liked it?
Wolfgang Amadeus MozartActually it was Johann Chrysostom Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart But he preferred Wolfgang Amadè Mozart. He only used "Amadeus" jokingly.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in 1756 and died in 1791.
Wolfgang Amadaus Mozart
Leopold Mozart was Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's father and Beth Amlile Mozart was Wolfgang's MOTHER
His full name is Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. His parents must have liked it?
Wolfgang Amadeus MozartActually it was Johann Chrysostom Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart But he preferred Wolfgang Amadè Mozart. He only used "Amadeus" jokingly.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Mozart ... Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart is 5' 4".
Mozart's first name was Wolfgang. His full name was Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in 1756 and died in 1791.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. That's it ... there was no other alternate name except his Baptismal name perhaps: Johann Chrysostom Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
Mozart...
Mozart was a composer.
Wolfgang Amadaus Mozart