A nice cheeseburger from McDonald's.
Mozart died in 1791, so the answer is "no."
Mozart didn't write he composed music. So to answer your question the answer is zero or none.
Mozart so refined what we now call classical music that he is practically without peer. Although many other composers before and after Mozart wrote beautiful, elegant music, few are so well known, with music so popular and beautiful. More than a master of symphonies, Mozart created beautiful operas, concertos, and divertimentos to name but a few of his works. Moreover, composers who lived after Mozart have widely copied and expanded on his originality and elegance, which was begun at the tender age of around four.
40 it's unknown so he composed over 1000 pieces of music
Mozart's music had depth , richness but also had the quick appeal for being flirtatious to the young woman. So looking at just that , I'd imagine Mozart would have had fencing as a sport of interest , as it appealed to the chivalrous male character who'd want to attract women. Whether this was really his passion , is something he'd know best , but, I sincerely doubt that besides composing the Best Music in time , anything else , would really interest him .
It can be. Mozart wrote lots, but so did some more modern composers.
He does it because he has been raised up by a musical family so it gives him courage so he can do it
Mozart never said what his inspiration was for learning to play the piano. However, based on the fact that he spent his whole life composing and playing music we can assume that he at least liked music. So his inspiration was probably just that he liked music.
I think your refering to the comment made; "Too many notes"-Emperor Joseph II's reaction to Mozart's Der Entführung aus dem Serail ("The Abduction from the Seraglio") in 1782 is…true! Or at least, widely believed to be so. The complete quote was, "Too many notes, my dear Mozart, and too beautiful for our ears." The Emperor was echoing a sentiment felt by many regarding Mozart's music: that it was so complex and sublime that it sometimes overwhelmed the senses of his eighteenth-century audience.
it was fairly unheard of when mozart started putting them into his music.. so around that time period
626 cataloged by Kochel. Since Kochel's count, we have discovered more. So about 1,000
I don't think so; I don't think there are any surviving members of the Mozart family anymore, but you can check ancestry.com or ancestry.ca for family trees.