Hayden and Mozart: Music in Vienna
Before the era of World Wars in the 20th century,
Vienna was renowned as a city of cultural magnificence. Maintaining
a centralized monarchy for a longer period of time than that of London
or Paris, Vienna had the authority to make decisions quickly, and these
various decisions, regarding construction or spending of money usually
catered to the aristocracy. The result was Vienna’s evolution
into a cultural center focused on the arts and music especially. During
the 18th century Vienna was a destination for any aspiring composer.
The grandeur of its opera houses and the Emperor’s general fondness
for music were reasons to attract singers, musicians and composers to
Vienna. |
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Karl VI of the Habsburg Dynasty, also
known as the “musical emperor” was extremely helpful to
the cause of music and its success in Vienna. As the Hapsburg Empire
expanded east, Karl VI became increasingly worried about his inability
to produce a male heir. This fact combined with his desire to solidify
Austria’s economic stability made it necessary that he establish
the Pragmatic
Sanction which would make it legal for his lands to pass to his
daughter Maria Theresa. With these pressures ever present Karl VI naturally
found escape in the distraction of the arts and music in particular.
He devoted much of his time to attending operas and spent much of his
funds on expanding the musical centers in Vienna, which preceded the
Baroque style of later popular opera houses. He died in 1740 before
most of Vienna’s great composers were even born, but he was highly
responsible for Vienna’s reputation as a musical haven. |
Undoubtedly, a great musical center will attract
great musicians. This was certainly the case in Vienna. Many of the
most well known composers of the 18th and 19th centuries spent most
of their time in Austria’s musical capital. Vienna’s most
famous traditional composers include Haydn and Mozart. Their success
in Vienna only increased Vienna’s renown among musicians all over
Europe. |
The first of Vienna’s most successful composers
was Joseph Haydn, born in 1732, a native of Austria. As a young boy,
Haydn attended Saint Stephen’s Cathedral Choir School, one of
the many institutions made available under Karl VI’s reign. He
received a basic education in the musical arts until the age of 17 when
he began work as a freelance musician. Under Karl VI’s example,
it had become popular for members of the aristocracy as well as for
members of the royal family to hire their own composers. If a musician
worked hard enough to develop a good reputation it was likely they would
be hired to entertain members of the aristocracy. As Haydn had hoped,
in 1792 he was appointed Kapellmeister to Prince Pál Antal Esterházy.
Under this title Haydn was able to sell his music to publishers and
receive commissions. His resulting income allowed him to pursue more
personal projects. He is attributed with “transforming instrumental
expression in the 18th century through his directness and bold experimentation”
with the notes. It seems unlikely Haydn could have achieved such a successful
career anywhere other than Vienna. The work he produced there had a
significant influence future composers as well as Mozart who later became
one of his good friends and surpassed the fame of Haydn. |
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The music ability of the young genius Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart found no better place to flourish than in Vienna. Born
in Salzburg in 1756, Mozart had proven himself a musical genius by the
age of six where he was already performing frequently on the violin
organ and clavier for the royal courts. He was successful as a young
child and wrote many symphonies under his father’s care, but his
career did not reach full force until he moved to Vienna in 1782, ten
years before Haydn was to become Kapellmeister. His work as a freelance
musician there reached the ears of Haydn, who immediately extended his
positive opinion of his music. Moments like these were typical of Vienna
and one of the reasons why the capital continued to attract people to
its streets. In addition to the many opportunities to find work as a
musician, one had the chance to network with established composers and
become inspired by the work of others. This is exactly what happened
to Mozart. His work was outstanding but once he became exposed to the
likes of Haydn he achieved true greatness. His philosophy on music which
explains “music must never offend the ear; it must please the
hearer” is reminiscent of Haydn’s fame for music that never
made “the listener weary.” Mozart stayed in Vienna until
his ambiguous death in 1791. Unfortunately the price of Vienna’s
lavish lifestyle left Mozart in poor financial standing despite his
famous reputation. |
Vienna’s rich cultural history ultimately
set the city up for disaster during World War I and II. The extermination
of the Jews and purging of the arts in the 20th century posed a difficult
transition for Vienna. In the past when it had been characterized as
a center for the imagination and creativity of the human mind, in the
20th century it was seen as nothing more than a Nazis sympathizer stronghold.
Years of cultural success had been forgotten and destroyed by the horrors
of World War II especially. Today however, Vienna is slowly beginning
to reclaim its more glorious history of the 18th century. Opera houses
remain the main attraction in Vienna and music stands out as one of
their greatest achievements. No other city can as easily claim this
musical superiority. |

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