Did The Music Professor FINISH Mozart's Crazy D minor Fantasia?
0:00 Introduction. August Müller's original ending of K.397 is a travesty0:43 Thank you! I will avoid saying 'Content' from now on.
1:45 Historical Background.1780: Idomeneo and leaving Salzburg for ever.
4:35 Tensions with Leopold: Mozart the Revolutionary. Going to Vienna.
6:00 Mozart was not poor. The piano concertos. Die Entführing.
7:10 Falling in love with Constanza. Scandal and marriage. Why the fantasia is unfinished.
8:38 Discovering Bach & Handel. Discovering polyphony. Influence of C.P.E. Bach.
10:08 Opening arpeggios look back to Bach and forward to Beethoven. E.T.A Hoffmann.
11:25 The Aria (with sighing apoggiaturas). A tragedy with cadenzas. Improvisation.
12:45 Opera Buffa: the reconciling of comedy and tragedy. Don Giovanni.
14:06 Mozart's manuscript breaks off. Comparison with C minor Fantasia. Completion.
15:19 Mozart's D minor Fantasia with Animated Commentary.
In this video, Mozart discusses Mozart’s famous unfinished Fantasia in D minor K.397 which Mozart composed (and abandoned) in the frenziedly busy year of 1782, shortly after he had arrived in Vienna as a freelance musician. The piece is fascinating as an indicator of Mozart’s dramatic style of improvisation, and it also reveals how his operatic genius influenced his creative work. Matthew King views the music as a Janus-faced bridge between older styles (exemplified by J.S. and C.P.E. Bach) and early Romanticism, which the music seems to prefigure. The video concludes with an animated commentary of the fantasia, played on a fortepiano by Matthew King, who has composed a new conclusion for the piece to replace the original one by August Müller that he feels is...just wrong!
There are two extracts from the movie Amadeus (directed by Miloš Forman) in this short film, along with an extract from the Met 2016 performance of Idomeneo (conducted by James Levine), and an extract from the overture to Mozart’s opera Die Entführung aus dem Serail (with the Mainly Mozart orchestra conducted by Robert Belfer).
Other videos about Mozart on this channel:
https://youtu.be/Zi-fdi4-hKY?si=9K1NFGPgaxZbK1c9
https://youtu.be/MzKxWhlZrhk?si=TukNIJ-Q0PWn192j
https://youtu.be/g-D_KLkoxi0?si=_vEjKwCLqgIMpYYc
https://youtu.be/qC4VCOa51u0?si=bLDoUMJO76rbEiL6
https://youtu.be/kWqECUy3tSk?si=3x2Ymtz4P_jwHrdF
https://youtu.be/80gxGnm1vMU?si=M0_Vu3vsmtKNTcPw
⦿ SUPPORT US ON PATREON ⦿
https://www.patreon.com/c/musicprofessor
⦿ BUY US A Kofi ⦿
https://ko-fi.com/themusicprofessor
⦿ Support us on PayPal ⦿
https://paypal.me/themusicprofessor?c...
⦿ SUBSCRIBE TO THIS CHANNEL ⦿
https://bit.ly/3Pnnwon
#mozart #fantasia #themusicprofessor
Edited by Ian Coulter ( https://www.iancoultermusic.com )
Piano and discussion by Matthew King (www.matthewkingcomposer.com) Receive SMS online on sms24.me
TubeReader video aggregator is a website that collects and organizes online videos from the YouTube source. Video aggregation is done for different purposes, and TubeReader take different approaches to achieve their purpose.
Our try to collect videos of high quality or interest for visitors to view; the collection may be made by editors or may be based on community votes.
Another method is to base the collection on those videos most viewed, either at the aggregator site or at various popular video hosting sites.
TubeReader site exists to allow users to collect their own sets of videos, for personal use as well as for browsing and viewing by others; TubeReader can develop online communities around video sharing.
Our site allow users to create a personalized video playlist, for personal use as well as for browsing and viewing by others.
@YouTubeReaderBot allows you to subscribe to Youtube channels.
By using @YouTubeReaderBot Bot you agree with YouTube Terms of Service.
Use the @YouTubeReaderBot telegram bot to be the first to be notified when new videos are released on your favorite channels.
Look for new videos or channels and share them with your friends.
You can start using our bot from this video, subscribe now to Did The Music Professor FINISH Mozart's Crazy D minor Fantasia?
What is YouTube?
YouTube is a free video sharing website that makes it easy to watch online videos. You can even create and upload your own videos to share with others. Originally created in 2005, YouTube is now one of the most popular sites on the Web, with visitors watching around 6 billion hours of video every month.