Bach wrote a lot of choral, church and religious music and was German influenced. Vivaldi's music is more ornate and quite descriptive music and Italian influenced.
Bach blurs the distinction between tutti and soloist in themes and texture whereas Vivaldi gives different themes to orchestra and to soloists. he also emphasizes the woodwind instruments.
Both were baroque composers and wrote well-known music such as; Bach-brandenburg concertos and Vivaldi-the four seasons.
Hope it could be of help.
Antonio Lucio Vivaldi was born on 4 March 1678 he died in 28 July 1741...
Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart was born on 27 January 1756 and died on 5 December 1791
I guess a similar analogy might be:
James Paul McCartney was born 18 June 1942
Noel Thomas David Gallagher was born 29 May 1967
They're all musically gifted, but some were born earlier... and the guys that came later might have been 'influenced' by the hits they grew up with...
Just a thought...
Well, they're both composers, -obviously- but they both took a great liking to stringed instruments. Although Mozart used more than just stringed instruments in most of his pieces and Vivaldi tended not to; they were still great composers. Vivaldi was Italian and Mozart was Austrian.
Well vivaldi is from the broque era and mozart is from the classical era.
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Vivaldi
Mozart, Bach, Vivaldi they are all wonderful!
Beethoven Bach Mozart Tchaikovsky Vivaldi Johan Strauss
Of course they can! Some famous male violin players include Antonio Vivaldi, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart....there's loads!
Some examples would be; Beethoven, Mozart, Bach, Vivaldi, Pachelbel. Almost all celebrated composers are now dead.
Maria Anna Mozart is Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's mother.
Died in Vienna on July 28th 1741 "of internal fire" (probably the asthmatic bronchitis from which he suffered all his life) and, like Mozart fifty years later, received a modest burial.
Examples of Classical music from the 'Classical' period is anything written by composers such as Haydn, Mozart, Paganini and early-mid Beethoven between the years of about 1750 and 1820. Suggested pieces are Beethoven's First, Second, Third and Fourth Symphonies, Mozart's Operas and Haydn's piano sonatas. However, if you are referring to 'Classical' music as any music written before the music of the present day then you can listen to pretty much anything between the dates of 1450 and 1900 by composers as diverse as Monteverdi, Thomas Tallis, Henry Purcell, Antonio Vivaldi, Johann Sebastian Bach, Franz Schubert, Sergei Rachmaninov and Edward Elgar.
Vivaldi did not write for the clarinet since it hadn't been invented yet. Vivaldi DID write for Clarinet! His Concerto for Two Oboes and Two Clarinets in C major, RV 560 would like to take the previous poster up on a wager.
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Van Gogh, Gauguin, Picasso, Miró, and manypieces by J.S. Bach, Vivaldi, Beethoven, Mozart, Ravel, etc.
Mozart died in 1791, so the answer is "no."