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The overkill is threatening to bury the music. The 250th anniversary of
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s birth this year has reminded everyone within reach
of a radio that besides being a composer he is a global brand, a lubricant
for the wheels of diplomacy, a health fad and a cult, complete with shrines
and worshipping faithful.
The squiggly Mozart signature now turns up on golf balls, chocolates, musical
bras and a new yoghurt. This anniversary is a force generating a tsunami of
trivia and even starting a backlash. There is a show planned for Vienna
called I Hate Mozart and one in Bremerhaven more brutally titled Who
the F--- is Mozart?
But not in Salzburg. The town of Mozart’s birth seized the global Mozart
concession in the 1920s, when the summer festival took off, and has no
intention of letting it go when this year is payday. Mozart may have spent
his life trying to get away from Salzburg — he settled in Vienna — but that
does not mean that today’s Salzburgers are going to knock him. Their
favourite son is an industry and a meal ticket. “Mozart is mercilessly
marketed,” the city’s mayor said recently, “but I don’t know what Salzburg
would do without him.”
Suppose that you manage to ignore the hoopla and hype and actually get to
Salzburg hoping to hear the man’s music. What will you find? First,
seriousness about the music itself. In the space of four days in late
January we went to one opera and four concerts, ranging from a piano trio to
the full majesty of the Vienna Philharmonic in the festival hall. Not one
fell below first rate and all were packed.
Smile as you might at the Salzburg matrons in their big fur, big hair, big
glasses and their neat menfolk who never take their jackets off, these are
demanding listeners. Conductors and musicians know that special performances
are required and rewarded.
The audience’s taste is not especially conservative. The January production of La
Finta Giardiniera was directed by Doris Dörrie, better known as a film
director and notorious for having once done Rigoletto in the style of The
Planet of the Apes. This new production of one of Mozart’s lesser-known
operas was set in a garden centre (walk-on flowers, assignations in garden
sheds) and beautifully inventive.
In snow or sun, Salzburg is an enticing nest of spires and domes against a
backdrop of distant mountains. No one would drive past without stopping. No
one can drive past without noticing the one, flabbergasting exception to the
harmony of landscape and stone. On one steep hill sits a large concrete
blockhouse, defiantly independent in its ugliness. In case anyone misses it
— hardly possible — a huge neon sign is stuck to the front. The building is,
naturally, a modern art gallery.
I had expected a delicate and intimate town. But almost from the moment you
reach the city’s edge, you will be reminded that Salzburg is a city with a
significant and independent history.
Guides drop gentle hints that Salzburg shouldn’t really be part of Austria at
all. Resentment of Vienna is everywhere and fully reciprocated: the Viennese
have always been irked by Salzburg’s identification with Mozart.
When you are not listening to music, Salzburg is for strolling and stopping.
You will be pushed to find a bad cup of coffee in the country that made
elevenses — or, more elegantly, the Kaffeepause — an art.
Mozart would have laughed at the present-day veneration of his output. Of the
three big collections of Mozartiana, I would recommend the Mozart-Wohnhaus
and the Viva! Mozart exhibition over Mozart’s birthplace, the
Geburtshaus. As part of a guided group, we were allowed into the holy of
holies in the basement of the Wohnhaus: behind steel doors with winking
lights are the most valuable Mozart manuscripts.
On one, the great man has written a few words. Perhaps a clue to his musical
thinking? No, a punning wordplay on the name of a girl he has slept with.
Upstairs, respectful but puzzled Japanese ladies in sensible rain hats stand
before a letter from Mozart, on tour with his father, to his mother.
“Leopold is healthy. He thanks you for the socks.” If the composer is
sitting on his cloud looking down on the town of his birth today, he must be
smiling.
Page 2 :Need to know, Mozart events
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Need to know
George Brock travelled with Travel for the Arts (020-8799 8350,
www.travelforthearts.co.uk), which runs music tours and has special
trips during the Salzburg Festival in July. A three-night trip, In Mozart’s
Time, costs from £895pp, including flights, tickets for Don
Giovanni and sightseeing tours.
Where to eat: Alter Fuchs on Linzer Gasse and K+K on
Waagplatz — with eight dining rooms over four floors — serve excellent,
traditional Austrian food.
More info: www.salzburg/info.
MOZART EVENTS
Salzburg
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