Amadeus Mozart

  • 1781 BCE

    March to Vienna

    March to Vienna
    January 1781, the opera Idomeneo, re di Creta (KV 366) by Mozart was premiered in Munich with "considerable success" 38 and in March, the composer was called to Vienna, where his patron Archbishop Colloredo attended the celebrations of access to the Austrian throne of Joseph II of Habsburg as emperor
  • 1774 BCE

    Concert for Fagot

    Concert for Fagot
    The Concerto for Greats in B flat major, K. 191 / 186e, written in 1774 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, is the most usual piece of repertoire for this instrument.1 Practically all professional bassoons interpret this work at some point in their career, and is one of the most demanded compositions in orchestral auditions - it often requires an interpreter to play the first two movements of the concert in all auditions.
  • 1719 BCE

    The father of Mozart

    The father of Mozart
    Johann Georg Leopold Mozart (14 de noviembre de 1719-28 de mayo de 1787) fue un compositor, director, profesor y violinista. Es conocido particularmente por su participación en la educación de su hijo Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  • Birth of Mozart

    Birth of Mozart
    Mozart was born on January 27, 1756 in Salzburg Austria.
  • Period: to

    The great journey

    This trip began on June 9, 1763 and for three and a half years, the Mozart toured the main cities of Europe, reaping great successes. In Vienna they were called to the palace by the Empress Maria Teresa and she was delighted with the child.
  • Concert tour

    Concert tour
    On June 9, 1763 they began a long concert tour that lasted three and a half years, in which the family moved to the courts of Munich, Mannheim, Paris, London, The Hague, again to Paris and returned home by Zurich, Donaueschingen and Munich
  • The firts opera of Mozart

    The firts opera of Mozart
    With 10 years Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart receives his first commission of composition charging a salary: "The obligation of the first commandment"
  • Symphony n.º 24

    Symphony n.º 24
    The work is composed for two oboes, two horns, and strings. The symphony consists of three movements: Allegro assai, 4/4
    Andantino grazioso, 2/4.
    Allegro, 3/8.
    The autograph score is currently located at the Staatsbibliothek Preusisscher Kulturbesitz in Berlin.1
  • Piano Concert n.º 21 (Mozart)

    Piano Concert n.º 21 (Mozart)
    The Concerto for Piano No. 21 in C Major, K. 467, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was completed on March 9, 1785 and premiered a day later, on March 10, at the Imperial and Royal Court Theater. Vienna, in a concert promoted by Mozart himself. This is one of the composer's most popular piano concertos.
  • The Marriage of Figaro

    The Marriage of Figaro
    The Marriage of Figaro (original title in Italian, Le nozze di Figaro) is an opera buffa in four acts with music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and libretto in Italian by Lorenzo da Ponte, based on the piece by Pierre Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, Le mariage of Figaro. It was composed between 1785 and 1786 and premiered in Vienna on May 1, 1786 under the direction of the same composer and then re-released on May 3.
  • Eine kleine Nachtmusik

    Eine kleine Nachtmusik
    Concert tour is one of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's most popular compositions. It is dated in Vienna on August 10, 1787, coinciding with the composition of the opera Don Giovanni. However, it is not known for whom or why Mozart composed it.
  • Symphony n.º 40

    Symphony n.º 40
    It is the penultimate symphony of the famous composer. It is called "great" symphony in G minor to distinguish it from the "little one", No. 25, also composed in G minor.
  • Lacrimosa (Réquiem)

    Lacrimosa (Réquiem)
    The Lacrimosa is the final part of the Sequentia Dies Irae. It is used by many composers such as Mozart or Verdi in their masses of deceased or requiems.
  • The Magic Flute

    The Magic Flute
    It is the last opera staged during the composer's life and premiered at the Freihaus-Theater auf der Wieden in Vienna on September 30, 1791 under the direction of Mozart himself, just two months before his death.
  • Death of Mozart

    Death of Mozart
    The composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart died in Vienna (Austria) on December 5, 1791, at 1 am, with an age of 35 years. He was born on January 27, 1756 in Salzburg (Austria).