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| Kyrie |
| Litaniae de venerabili altaris sacramento |
| © 1991 Philips Classics Productions |
| 422 520-2 |
The fact was, Mozart was bored nearly to tears by the marginal existence he was forced to lead in provincial Salzburg. "I live in a country where music leads a struggling existence," he complained to Padre Martini. Worst of all, in Salzburg there was no theater to speak of, no opportunity to indulge his true passion for composing opera. Even his talent for creating church music was hampered by the Archbishop's rules, which stipulated that no Mass could last longer than three quarters of an hour.
Small wonder, then, that Mozart seized every opportunity to display his skill. One opportunity was the composition of this litany: "Now since Mozart did not have to pay any attention to the Archbishop this time, he was free of music restrictions. He stretched his wings, he wrote once more extensive arias for the soloists, he allowed himself polyphonic exploits," writes Alfred Einstein.
Indeed, the nine movements of the litany are a study in contrast, a celebration of Mozart's ability to blend the old, "strict" style with free-form operatic composition. "For whom did Mozart write such things?" Einstein asks, rhetorically. "We have no choice but to imagine that in the audience for such a litany, devoutness was mixed with connoisseurship; it was a concert, given on a liturgical pretext."
Leopold's later correspondence suggests that these discriminating (if less than devout) worshipers were not confined to Salzburg: Over the next few years the litany also was performed in other cities, including his home town of Augsburg.
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