Why I wrote MOZART’S LAST ARIA as
a historical crime novel
 I wanted to make the novel fit the music of
Mozart. Not only in the way
I described Nannerl and others performing his music. But in the very
structure of the book. I decided to think of the novel in terms of one
of Wolfgang’s piano sonatas. These are among my favorite pieces by the
maestro. I chose one of his most disturbing sonatas, the A minor (known
by its number designation K 310). Many people think of Mozart
as a purveyor of happy little tunes compared to the sweeping
emotionalism of Beethoven. But this sonata alone demonstrates the
depths of emotion in Wolfgang’s music. He wrote it when alone in Paris
after his mother’s death there. How does it fit the format of a crime
novel? It begins with an Allegro maestoso that is deeply disturbing and
almost discordant. Listen and you’ll see what I mean. I have Nannerl
play this movement in MOZART’S LAST ARIA after she hears of Wolfgang’s
death. I thought of this as the introductory theme of Act I of my
novel, in which the calm world around Nannerl collapses with news of
her brother’s death, when she resolves to find out what happened to
him. The thoughtful second movement (Andante cantabile con espressione)
is Act II of the book, where Nannerl slowly explores the Vienna
Wolfgang left behind, including the delicate relationship with his
wife, the fears of his friends and the dangers she senses. Act III is
the final Presto movement, in which the disturbing themes of the first
movement are resolved in a series of climactic scenes. It also
represents the discovery of musical clues slipped into the first
movement, just as Nannerl uncovers the truth over the last couple of
chapters of the book. This idea gave me an emotional framework for the
plot. Given that the A minor sonata was written in response to a death
– that of Wolfgang’s mother – and that I wanted to explore Nannerl’s
feelings about her dead brother, it seemed natural that I ought to make
this a crime novel.
Photo: The cover of the
catalogue in which Mozart recorded the titles of each
of his compositions
Mozart Family
Leopold
Mozart took his wife, Maria Anna, and his two surviving children,
Wolfgang and Maria Anna (known as Nannerl, Little Nanna) on tour
throughout Europe. (They had a number of other children who died as
babies.) In an age when most people went no more than a few miles from
home, the travels drew the family very close. Here the family is at the
piano before a portrait of Anna Maria, who died when she traveled with
Wolfgang to Paris in 1778. Leopold was born in 1719 in Augsburg and
made his living as a court musician to the Prince Archbishop of
Salzburg. He wrote a widely read instructional manual for the violin.
He married Maria Anna in 1747, when she was 26. Though Leopold has
often been portrayed as a small-minded control freak, he was a cultured
man with a broad knowledge of literature and the sciences. After 1785,
he seems to have become rather estranged from his son. Though he was
66, he took Nannerl’s baby son Leopold to live with him – far away from
the mother -- with the intention, apparently, of making a musical
prodigy of him. But the old man died in 1787.
Sisters and Brothers
 Born
in
Salzburg in 1751 at the end of July, Nannerl was a child prodigy at the
keyboard, but her brother Wolfgang soon outshone her and took all the
attention at concerts – and the attention of their father, who decided
that the boy would be the one to carry the family’s fortunes. When that
change became clear, Nannerl often collapsed into emotional fits and
despair which left her in bed sometimes for weeks. She kept a diary in
which she listed many of the social engagements that occupied her in
Salzburg, as well as the pieces she continued to play at the piano.
Though she was rather old for marriage and frequently feared she’d
become an old maid, Leopold arranged for her to wed a dull provincial
bureaucrat and consigned her to life in a remote mountain village in
1784. She bore three children, two girls who died at less than one and
at 16, and a boy who outlived her by only 11 years. After Wolfgang’s
death, she contributed to early biographers with stories of their
childhood travels. When her husband died she returned to Salzburg,
where she taught piano and died in 1829.
Wolfgang's Wife

Mozart’s
wife Constanze was born into the talented Weber family in 1762 in
Mannheim (One of her sisters sang the role of Queen of the Night in the
premiere of “The Magic Flute”). Wolfgang was initially in love with her
sister Aloysia. When spurned, he improvised a song before the family:
“Whoever doesn’t love me can kiss my ass.” (In later letters, however,
he told Constanze she had “a kissable ass.”) After the Webers came to
live in Vienna, Mozart became the family’s lodger. He married Constanze
in 1782, against the wishes of father Leopold. An accomplished soprano,
Constanze sang in Wolfgang’s C Minor Mass, performing at St. Peter’s in
Salzburg when the married couple visited Leopold and Nannerl in
Salzburg. The visit was pretty frosty. After Wolfgang died, she married
a Danish diplomat and settled in Salzburg. She finished the biography
of Mozart started by her husband and published it in 1828. She died in
1842.
Sons
Wolfgang
and Constanze had two sons who survived infancy. (They lost four others
as babies.) Karl Thomas Mozart was born in 1784. He settled in Milan
where he abandoned music to become a civil servant. He died in 1858.
Franz Xaver Wolfgang Mozart (in this portrait) was born a few months
before his famous father’s death. He performed as a child in concerts
memorializing his father and studied under various composers, including
Salieri. Some of his piano compositions were quite popular in the early
nineteenth century. He lived in Poland much of his life, carrying out
concert tours and falling in love with an older Polish woman. He
performed his father’s Requiem in Salzburg for Constanze’s second
husband, not long before Nannerl’s death. Franz Xaver died in 1844.
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