Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791)
Mass in C Major, K. 317 (Coronation Mass)
Exsultate, jubilate, K. 165 Ave verum corpus, K. 618
Mozart's life was all too short. Born in Salzburg in 1756, the
son of a leading court musician, he amazed Europe as an infant prodigy, undertaking
protracted tours under the guidance of his father. Adolescence and early manhood proved
less satisfying. The Mozarts had security in Salzburg, but the city, under its new
Archbishop, seemed to have little to offer, and Mozart was certain that he deserved
something better. In 1781, after fulfilling a successful commission in Munich with his
opera Idomeneo, he travelled to Vienna to
join his patron, the Archbishop. When he was denied the opportunities that seemed within
his grasp and particularly the chance of making some impression on the Emperor, he
quarrelled with his employer and, not for the first but now for the last time, was
dismissed.
Mozart spent the last ten years of his life principally in
Vienna, without consistent patronage adequate to his needs and without the constant
presence and advice of his father, who remained in Salzburg. An imprudent marriage made
increasing demands on his purse, and initial success in the theatre and in public
subscription concerts was followed by disappointment and the need to borrow money to meet
expenses normal to one of his station. In 1791, however, his fortunes seemed to have
changed for the better. From the new Emperor he had received nothing, but the German opera
Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute) won
popular success in the autumn, and there was the prospect of a position as adjunct to the
ailing Kapellmeister at the Cathedral of St. Stephen in Vienna, with the likelihood of
succession in due course. Death intervened. Mozart died in the early hours of 5th
December, after a short illness.
The so-called Coronation
Mass, the Mass in C major, K. 317,
was completed on 23rd March, 1779, in Salzburg, where Mozart had returned after an
abortive attempt to find employment in Mannheim and in Paris. He had been compelled to
resign from the Archbishop's service in order to undertake a journey on which, for the
first time, his father had been unable to accompany him. The fifteen months away had been
expensive in monetary terms and his mother, who went with him, had died in Paris in the
summer of 1778. Eventually his father managed to arrange for him a position again at
Salzburg, this time as court organist, a post for which he made a formal petition in
January 1779.
The composition of the Coronation
Mass may be seen as a concomitant of Mozart's new duties in Salzburg. The work
was apparently intended for performance at one of the two festival days of Easter in the
same year, either 4th or 5th April, together with the Epistle
Sonata K. 329, with its more elaborate organ part, which Mozart himself would
have played. The popular name of the work, the Coronation Mass, has been supposed to
originate in the association of the Mass with a commemoration of the crowning of the
miraculous statue of the Blessed Virgin of Maria Plain, near Salzburg. Others have chosen
to infer a connection with the coronation of the Emperor Leopold II in Prague in 1791, the
occasion of the first performance of the new coronation opera La clemenza di Tito.
The Coronation Mass is scored for pairs of oboes, horns,
trumpets and drums, three trombones, strings without violas, and organ, the bass line
reinforced, according to custom, by bassoons. The Kyrie opens in celebratory style, before
the entry of the soprano soloist and the solo tenor. As is customary, the Gloria retains a
more homophonic texture in the choral writing and in the writing for solo voices until the
words Domine Deus, Rex caelestis, sung by the soprano, with the tenor soloist adding the
next clause, overlapping with the words before. There is space for a brief passage of
imitative counterpoint in the final Amen. There is an impressively lively introduction to
the Credo, largely homophonic in choral texture until the words Descendit de caelis are
illustrated in descending melodic lines, one voice imitating another. The statement by the
four soloists of belief in the Incarnation is duly muted, with its florid first violin
accompaniment to the simple chordal texture of the vocal parts, a burst of jubilant sound
being reserved for the affirmation of belief in the resurrection, The soloists propose
faith in the Holy Spirit, joined by the chorus in the additional declaration of belief in
the Catholic Church. There are subtle dynamic effects in the treatment of the words
expressing belief in the resurrection of the dead, while the Amen again allows a brief
excursion into contrapuntal writing. The more emphatic music of the Sanctus is followed by
a gentler introduction to the Benedictus from the strings and organ and the four solo
voices, joined by the choir and the trombones for the final Hosanna in excels is. The
final Agnus Dei is at first entrusted to the
soprano soloist, without the brass instruments of the orchestra, leading to a plea for
peace from the four soloists, joined finally by the choir and full orchestra.
The motet Exsultate,
jubilate, K. 165, belongs to a happier period of Mozart's life, when all seemed
to lie before him. With his father he had first visited Italy late in 1769. A second visit
followed in 1771, with the commission for a serenata, Ascanio
in Alba, in Milan. The third and final visit took place in the winter of 1772,
with the reluctant assent of the new Archbishop of Salzburg. The primary object of the
journey was to provide a new opera, Lucio Silla,
for Milan, then ruled by Archduke Ferdinand, son of the Empress Maria Theresia. The
leading singer in Lucio Silla was the
castrato Venanzio Rauzzini, who was shortly to make his home in England, and it was for
him that Mozart wrote his Exsultate, jubilate,
a work that makes considerable demands on a singer. The motet is scored for pairs of oboes
and horns, strings and organ. The opening section is followed by a brief recitative,
modulating from the original key of F major to the A major of the succeeding Andante. The
original key is restored for the final jubilant Alleluja.
The setting of the Ave
verum, K. 618, belongs to the last summer of Mozart's life and was written in
Baden, where his wife was taking the waters. It was composed for the celebration of the
Feast of Corpus Christi and designed for his friend Anton. Stoll, a schoolmaster with
responsibility for a church choir. The music, in its simple clarity, represents a more
popular and less formal type of church music, rather in the spirit of those Josephine
reforms to which Mozart had earlier taken such exception in Salzburg.
Priti Coles
The English-born lyric coloratura soprano Priti Coles started
her career in Holland where she performed at the Netherlands Opera in Amsterdam and the
Opera Forum Eschede. In 1986 she made her Viennese debut as Mary in the world premiere of
Chailly's La Cantatrice Clava and since then has built a distinguished reputation as a
Mozart specialist, especially for her performance of Silvia in the much acclaimed Vienna
production of Mozart's Ascanio in Alba.
Anna di Mauro
Anna di Mauro received her concert-diploma as a pianist at the
Stuttgart Musikhochschule. After taking vocal lessons privately in Italy, she received her
diploma as a teacher of singing at the Conservatorio Rossini in Pesaro and in 1985 made
her operatic debut in Essen as Charlotte in Massenet's Werther. A series of operatic
engagements followed throughout Germany with recitals there and in France, Italy and
Russia. Since that time she has had a very active career in a varied operatic repertoire,
including the roles of Santuzza and Amneris at the Arena in Verona and of Carmen in Mantua. Anna di Mauro is also well known
as a recitalist and as a concert soloist.
John Dickie
John Dickie was born in London and grew up in Vienna, where his
father was for thirty years a singer with the Vienna State Opera. After leaving school, he
spent three years at the Vienna Musikhochschule as a student of Luise Scheid, followed by
two years at the Conservatory as a pupil of Hilde Zadek, undertaking study of Italian
roles in Florence under Flaminio Contini during the summer months. After three years
experience at the Vienna Volksoper, John Dickie's first engagement was at Wuppertal, where
he was able to study and perform various lyric tenor roles under the direction of Hellmuth
Matthiasek and Hans-Martin Schneidt. He followed this with three seasons at Mannheim.
During this period he made his first appearance at the Vienna State Opera in The Barber of Seville and at the German Opera in
Berlin in The Merry Wives of Windsor. From
Mannheim he moved to Hamburg for two further seasons at the Staatsoper, at this time
making his Covent Garden début as Almaviva in The Barber of Seville. John Dickie
was invited by Eberhard Waechter, the new director of the Vienna Opera Houses, to return
to Vienna. He has since then fulfilled engagements in Hamburg, Cologne and other important
opera-houses. He has appeared, in addition, at the German Opera of the Rhine, the Theatre
National de l'Opera de Paris and the Grand Theatre de Geneve. In 1981 he sang for the
first time at the Bregenz Festival, appearing as Tamino in the famous Savcary production
of Die Zauberflöte. John Dickie has
appeared often on television, in particular in a distinguished production of Gluck's Orphée in Paris, a project of OAF and East
German Television. He sang the part of the Evangelist
and the tenor arias of the St. Matthew Passion
for the first time in Leipzig in the autumn of 1989 under the direction of Max Pommer.
Andrea Martin
The baritone Andrea Martin studied in Vienna and in Rome under
the most distinguished teachers and began his operatic career in Austria with the Vienna
Chamber Opera in Klagenfurt, Salzburg and Graz, and in Germany in Hagen and Munich. He
appeared as Dr. Malatesta in Don Pasquale in Treviso in 1979 and after winning various
prizes in international competitions sang at the major Italian opera-houses, appearing
abroad in Barcelona, Lisbon, Paris and the United States of America. His career has
brought appearances in North and South America and in the Far East and his many less usual
recordings include roles in operas by Donizetti and Salieri.
Camerata Cassovia
The Camerata Cassovia is the chamber ensemble of the CSFR State
Philharmonic Orchestra which is based in the Eastern Slovakian town of Ko?ice. The
orchestra was founded in 1968 and has toured widely within Europe and the Far East.
Johannes Wildner
Johannes Wildner was born in the Austrian resort of
Murzzuschlag in 1956 and studied violin and conducting, taking his diploma at the Vienna
Musikhochschule and proceeding to a doctorate in musicology. A member of the Vienna
Philharmonic Orchestra, he has toured widely as leader of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra's
Johann Strauss Ensemble and of the Vienna Mozart Academy. As a conductor he has directed
the Orchestra Sinfonica dellĄŻEmilia Romagna Arturo Toscanini, the Budapest State Opera
Orchestra, the Silesian Philharmonic, the Malmo Symphony Orchestra, the Dresden
Philharmonic and others. He has recorded works by Schumann, Wagner and Mozart for Naxos
and is one of the main conductors in the Marco Polo Johann Strauss II complete edition. He
also conducted at the Arena of Verona, the Dresden Philharmonic Orchestra, Radio
Symphony-Orchestra of Munich and is musical director of the Ko?ice State Philharmonic
Orchestra.