To fulfill his 'patronage' and to bring in a paying audience.
No, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was not a dancer. He was a musical prodigy who played piano and composed classical music for piano, violin, and other instruments.
Other composers used his pieces as a standard of greatness.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. That's it ... there was no other alternate name except his Baptismal name perhaps: Johann Chrysostom Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Among other things he wrote solo concertos, symphonies, and operas.
Mozart started composing at the age of 5 in Salzburg. After that, he traveled around the world, composing in Milan and other places in Italy, and in a separate trip to Paris, he also composed some of his widely known pieces.
That's a subjective choice; there is no right answer. Many people would say Verdi, Puccini, Wagner or Mozart, but there are many other composers who would get votes.
The answer is simple; Mozart's Don Giovanni is different than his other two operas, the Magic Flute and the Marriage of Figaro, because they have different plots and movements and words and, they're just... different from one another. It's like saying, "What's the difference between Mozart's Symphony No. 1 and Symphony No. 22?" They're different!
One of the highlights of Mozart's life was performing as a musician at the age of seven. Other highlights include his marriage to Konstanze Weber and composing his successful opera 'The Magic Flute'.
Mozart really was Mozart. for some other info, watch the movie "Amadeus"
Mozart composed over 610 works.
Mozart enjoyed playing billiards.
It was fashionable in those days to wear a wig. search other people from that time and you will see
Mozart didn't have another teacher, only his dad tought him.
the billanars are opera and some other stuck up snob people
Obviously this will be a matter of opinion, but here goes:Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643) wrote about 18 operas, but only three complete works survive. Many people recognize L'Orfeo(1607) as the first major opera to bring together recitative, aria, choral and instrumental numbers in a dramatically effective work. The beautiful aria "Lasciatemi morire" that survives from his L'Arianna (1608) suggests that this opera was also a masterpiece.Monteverdi's other two surviving operas, Il Ritorno d'Ulisse (Return of Ulysses) and L'Incoronazione di Poppea (Coronation of Poppea) were written in 1640 and 1642 respectively, toward the end of his life. By this time the Baroque style was more firmly established and opera was well on its way toward being the institution we know today, but Monteverdi was still on top of his game. These are really powerful works.Another point of view might suggest Mozart, however, since his works are the earliest that have remained a part of the repertoire since their premieres. The change from Baroque to Classical opera styles was huge, both in the waning use of the male soprano voice and in the move away from stylized dramatic conventions. He could be called the first great modern opera composer.A third answer might be Christoph Willibald Von Gluck, whose Orfeo ed Euridice is the earliest opera to hold a place in the standard international repertoire. It premiered in Vienna in 1762.
Mozart was died in 1791. Liszt was born in 1811. They never met each other.
Erik is a bad and a good guy ,sometimes while the other is a good people