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Mozart's best music: where to start

Opera, piano music, symphonies or concertos – Mozart’s music has something for everyone. Here's
our pick of 15 great pieces, so you listen for yourself and discover the essential Mozart downloads.

1. Horn Concerto No. 4 in E flat major

A cheery skipping horn tune coupled with playful strings – Mozart’s Horn Concerto No. 4 is enough to
put anyone in good mood. He wrote it for his friend Joseph Leutgeb to play on a natural horn, a
predecessor to the modern French horn.

2. The Marriage of Figaro

Lively, cheeky, funny – Mozart had a sense of humour, and you can hear it from the word go in this
cheerful opera. It’s a great love-story, with a few cases of mistaken identity, trickery, and practical
jokes thrown in for good measure. Musical highlights include the ‘Sull’aria’ duet, and the soprano
aria ‘Porgi, amor’.

3. Piano Concerto No. 21 ('Elvira Madigan') in C major

Mozart’s 1785 beautiful piano concerto is often used in films – you’ll hear it in Superman Returns,
The Spy Who Loved Me, and Elvira Madigan, giving the music its unofficial nickname.

4. Oboe Concerto in C major

Mozart captures the character of the oboe perfectly in his symphonies, so it’s surprising that this is
his only oboe concerto. The flighty melodies in the fast movements are well suited to the instrument,
but it’s also been reworked as a concerto in D major for the flute.

5. Così Fan Tutte

Expect fiancée swapping, disguises, and trickery aplenty in this jaunty opera from Mozart. It’s one of
the three operas composed to a libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte, and the vocal writing captures the
Italian flavour of the words perfectly.

6. Clarinet Quintet in A major

Mozart only wrote one clarinet quintet – a piece for string quartet plus clarinet – but he’s proven he
knows how to get the best from the instrument. The lyrical tunes and the similarities to the clarinet

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concerto have ensured both pieces remain extremely popular: both are in A major, and they were
written for the same clarinetist, Anton Stadler.

7. The Magic Flute

A handsome prince, a serpent, and three ladies who produce an enchanted flute with the power to
change men’s hearts? Mozart's opera is a bit of a musical pantomime, with some brilliant songs
thrown in for good measure: the famously difficult ‘Queen of the Night’ aria, ‘Der Hölle Rache kocht
in meinem Herzen’, is just one of them.

8. Symphony No. 41 ('Jupiter') in C major

A fitting conclusion to Mozart’s 41 symphonies, ‘Jupiter’ showcases the best of all the composer’s
styles. It’s majestic and impressive with a playful lightness of touch and humour – a perfect mix of
musical genius and friendly accessible tunes.

9. Exsultate, jubilate

If you like Mozart’s operas, this solo religious motet is bound to impress. Originally written for a male
castrato singer, it’s now usually performed by a female singer. The final movement, setting just the
word ‘Alleluia’ to fast running quavers, is a masterpiece.

10. Concerto for Flute, Harp, and Orchestra in C major

When Mozart wrote this concerto in 1778, the harp was still being developed. This is the only piece
of music he wrote for the instrument, but the writing for each soloist is carefully crafted – it’s
something of a showpiece for harpists who can get their fingers round the difficult passages.

11. Clarinet Concerto

This brilliant piece is one of the last works Mozart wrote before he died in 1791. It seems he was
saving the best ‘til last with this concerto for clarinet – it’s the only concerto he wrote for the
instrument. Cheery yet graceful, the clarinet’s warm tone brings the beautifully simple tunes to life,
and it’s always a high entry in the Classic FM Hall of Fame.

12. Requiem

An anonymous commission prompted Mozart to start writing his Requiem. After taking on the
project, he started experiencing ‘very strange thoughts’, and began to fear he was writing a requiem
for his own death. The result? A moving piece, with passages of fearful angst and resolute
acceptance, left unfinished by the time Mozart died in 1791.

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13. Mass No. 15 in C major ('Coronation')

This is a much lighter version of Mozart’s Mass settings, one where he wasn’t fearful of his own
death. Regal and grand, the ‘Coronation’ mass shows classical choral writing at its best, and the
flowing soprano solo in the ‘Agnus Dei’ may have inspired the ‘Dove Sono’ aria from The Marriage of
Figaro, written seven years later.

14. Haydn Quartets

Mozart composed 23 string quartets, but the set of six dedicated to Haydn are some of the best
examples of the genre. From the mysterious ‘Dissonance’ Quartet, No. 19, to the lively ‘Hunt’, No. 17,
the six quartets cover a wide emotional range. What’s more, Haydn loved them, saying Mozart was
the greatest composer he knew.

15. Symphony No. 40 in G minor

There’s a reason this stormy symphony is often called ‘The Great G minor’. It’s a powerful piece from
the off, and it’s packed with catchy tunes. Rushing passages are appeased with relaxing heart-
warming harmonies, until the piece comes to a close in a frenzied finish.

https://www.classicfm.com/composers/mozart/guides/mozarts-best-music-where-start/piano-concerto-21/

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