ANSWERS: 8
  • To quote another great composer,Pyotr Tchaikovsky: "Mozart is the highest, the culminating point that beauty has attained in the sphere of music". That should tell you something right there.
  • he was the shit at piano.
  • Well, he and Beethoven were the kings of the classical era of music.
  • He had 3 really funny names?
  • He is either loved or hated, often without substantiated logic defending such a feeling. Personally he does not move me the way chopin does, or a composer of the russian school, but he was without a doubt a talented man with an extraordinary gift for channeling his feelings, and often as demonstrated with his operas the magic flute, and Don Giovanni, (among others), was very keen on icorporating his beliefs and life experiences into his work. Peter Schaffer's 1984 film "Amadeus" depicted a obscene man who appears to squander his time, and was clinically and perpetually stuck at the emotional maturity of a young child. Do to this much "re-imagined illustration" of the late master, many non musicians the world over believed him to be a talented "fruit" and therefore his percieved importance was that he was a tormented genius. While in actual fact, the real Wolfgang worked very hard on his compositions, I believe his importance to the western classical school of music are the much awaited dynamics focal points that where so unattainable in the baroque and roccoco eras. His scores brimming with musical thought, and overflowing with his genius in the form of oramentation and his heavily singing based phrasings were just wgat europe needed after the baroque style.
  • he made some of the best music ever written in the history of the world while he was deaf.
  • He invented "modern" dance.
  • Was it his piano?

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