
Critic Reviews
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In exhilarating, transformative prose, the poet Patrick Mackie reveals a musician in dialogue with culture at its most sweepingly progressive.
Mozart is one of the most familiar and beloved icons of our culture, but how much do we really understand about his music, and what can it reveal to us about the great composer? Following Mozart from his youth in Salzburg to his early death, from his close and rivalrous relationship with his father to his romantic attachments, from his hugely successful operas to intimate compositions on the keyboard, Patrick Mackie leads the reader through the major and lesser-known moments of the composer's life and brings alive the teeming, swiveling modernity of eighteenth-century Europe. In this era of rococo painting, surrealist aesthetics, and political turbulence, Mozart reckoned with a searing talent that threatened to overwhelm him, all the while pushing himself to extraordinary feats of musicianship. In Mozart in Motion, we are returned to the volatility of the eighteenth century and hear Mozart's music in all its audacious vividness, gaining fresh perspectives on why his works still move us so intensely today as we continue to search for a modernity he imagined into being."A welcome reminder that the universe reflected in Mozart's operas, symphonies, concertos, and chamber works was very much shaped by political and social currents--some of which reflect the anxieties and hopes of our own time as well . . . Mozart's music continues to inspire love because it holds space for sensual delight and evinces a knowing, generous view of humanity. It 'can relay pleasure while analyzing it, ' as Mackie puts it. For ardent Mozarteans and classical-curious streamers, [Mozart in Motion] will do the same."
--Corinna da Fonseca-Wollheim, The Atlantic