
 |
 |
| Every search and purchase you make
from here supports WBUR |
|
|
 |
A worthy present for Mozart on his 250th birthday: an original, sometimes eclectic, and mostly well-written book about the composer and his operas.
by Mark Kroll
 |
 |
 |
"Mozart and His Operas," by David Cairns. Courtesy: Amazon.com. |
BOSTON, Mass. - June 19, 2006 -
Mozart mania is back. In fact, it never left and don't say I didn't warn you. We are only half way through 2006 and there is no letup in sight, but some of the birthday presents deserve to be opened and enjoyed right away.
One is the new book "Mozart
and his Operas" by David Cairns. The author, former music critic for London's "Daily
Telegraph," starts out on page one with a confession: "Another book on Mozart
and his operas may not be needed. I can only say that I needed to write it." I
am glad he did. Although plenty of words have been written about this repertoire,
Cairns's take on the subject is original, sometimes eclectic, and mostly well
written. It is also heartfelt. Cairns obviously loves this music, and he wants
his readers to feel the same way. The fact that he addressed the book "not to
scholars but to musicians and amateurs" makes this latest entry in the Mozart
sweepstakes all the more useful, and readable.
Cairns covers the familiar ground for Mozart and his operas efficiently, but
there are also moments when readers might find themselves sitting up and saying: "why
didn't I think of that!?" One example is the connection the author makes between
Mozart and Shakespeare. Citing a noted Shakespearean scholar, Cairns muses that "Shakespeare's
gift for reading or hearing something and unspringing its unrealized potential
is also Mozart's (if for books we substitute scores)," the artistic creations
of both men seeming "to have come from a god and not a mortal."
Anyone who has seen the movie "Shakespeare
in Love" must remember the look on the faces of all the actors, the expression of being in the presence of something godlike, as they stood frozen in place listening to the balcony scene of "Romeo and Juliet" for the first time. The same thing can happen upon hearing a piece by Mozart for the first time.
Cairns' Mozart is also a universal god. To make this point, he takes the reader
to, of all places, the Amazon jungle in the 1950s, where the French explorer Alain
Gheerbrant encountered an isolated tribe of Maquiritare Indians.
The natives were at first too afraid of the strange visitors to leave their
huts, and Gheerbrant tells us that it was only after he played his "beloved
Mozart" on his portable record player did the villagers "lose all fear, emerge
from their huts and sit peacefully round the gramophone."
Cairns himself shows no fear in taking on perhaps a more dangerous adversary:
the many myths that have been attached to Mozart over the past 250 years. One
is the portrait in the movie "Amadeus" of a neurotic or even psychotic composer
in a pink wig. Cairns banishes this image, proving convincingly that the real
Mozart was "not a manic depressive ... not a drunkard or a compulsive gambler
and/or womanizer ... not an impractical, incompetent child ... did not end by
losing his will to live and half-consciously destroying himself through a mixture
of dissipation and feverish overwork." Any questions, class?
As for Mozart's well-known difficulties with his father Leopold, Cairns takes
the direct approach by simply asking: "Was Mozart the first or the last son
to be evasive and economical with the truth when dealing with an accusing father?" In
fact, the author thinks we should be "grateful to Leopold Mozart for teaching
his son so well," and that we should also try to imagine the sense of fear and
wonder he and his wife Anna Maria must have felt when they first realized that
their little boy was a "miracle which God caused to be born in Salzburg." Good
point. Just what would you have done if your baby put down his bottle and composed
a symphony?
Cairns's writing style is deceptively breezy and light. At one point,
he describes a passage in a Mozart concerto in which the "oboe and bassoon echoing
the soloist's four notes" are "as irreverently subversive as Harpo Marx." However,
Cairns's book is no lightweight. It contains plenty of hard information about
Mozart and his operas, and a substantial amount of detailed musical analysis.
In fact, I think there is too much analysis for a book addressed to amateurs,
while at the same time the absence of musical examples makes the analyses of
limited value to musicians.
Quibbles aside, this is a book written by a musician
who has lived with Mozart's music for many years, and loves it so much that
he needed to share his accumulated knowledge and passion with his readers. You
can feel this up to the very last paragraph, where Cairns mounts one final assault
on a Mozart myth -- the belief that Mozart was given a pauper's burial and
his body thrown into a communal grave. Cairns the musicologist uses facts to
neatly and efficiently dispatch this falsehood, but Cairns the Mozart lover
also adds a romantic tribute to his hero: "Maybe, though, the myth is too deeply
entrenched ever to be dug up and destroyed: it suits the notion of the ... miraculous
being who vanished as mysteriously as he had come. ... In any case the mortal
remains and their whereabouts are not of great importance. What is important,
perennially, is not the skull but what was inside it, which lives on in the
minds and hearts of unnumbered thousands for whom it is a reason for being alive."
This
book is another reason to enjoy living during this Mozart year.

 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |


|
 |


 |
Singer at 100 An exclusive online special explores the controversial work and life of Yiddish writer Isaac Bashevis Singer. |
 |
 |
 |
Gauguin's Tahiti Paintings Take a multimedia tour of Paul Gauguin's Tahiti paintings, including the famous painting, "Where Are We From." |
 |
 |
 |
Hawthorne at 200 View a multimedia celebration of Nathaniel Hawthorne's 200th birthday. |
 |
 |
|
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
 |