Let anyone recently 
                arrived from the moon be aware that 
                we are on the cusp of yet another Mozart-packed 
                year (2006). To get things started, 
                Naxos offers this attractive volume, 
                with more than just the contents of 
                its pages to occupy the purchaser.
              
              In the preface, Jeremy 
                Siepmann states that he has "attempted 
                to give the book some of the immediacy 
                of a novel by allowing its protagonists 
                wherever possible to relate the story 
                in their own words". In respect 
                of the Mozart family he was undoubtedly 
                fortunate as they always seemed to have 
                been scribbling down their thoughts 
                in letters, journals and the like. I 
                agree with him that this gives "a 
                far richer and more fascinating portrait 
                of both the characters and their time 
                than any amount of subjective ‘interpretation’." 
                Nothing beats going back to the source, 
                and this book does so with tremendous 
                frequency.
              
              This book is anything 
                but dry, turgid and academic as a result, 
                which is much to its overall advantage. 
                Siepmann’s style is clear and his points 
                are lucidly made. The structure and 
                layout of the volume also say much about 
                its overall ambitions: it weaves chapters 
                of biographical content with interludes 
                that concentrate on the music. Each 
                narrative can be followed independently 
                or sections read in isolation – and 
                either way the text reads well as it 
                glides accurately and effortlessly over 
                the main facts, theories and intricacies 
                of Mozart and his music. 
              
              Siepmann uses the word 
                ‘masterpiece’ with amazing frequency 
                – I lost count after about the twentieth 
                time – and were Mozart not the subject 
                I would take greater exception to it. 
                It is in any case a word all too often 
                twisted uncomfortably from its original 
                meaning. For a book pitched at a generalist 
                level such a situation might be expected, 
                however in future greater care should 
                be taken to both credit the reader with 
                critical faculties and also help to 
                inform and develop them. 
              
              There seems a slight 
                discord though between the editorial 
                direction of the book and the author’s 
                opinion: the preface proclaims a split 
                between biography and musical commentary 
                of about two thirds and one third, but 
                Siepmann claims on page 153 in the chapter 
                ‘Mozart the Immortal’ that "All 
                that matters is the music". The 
                comment comes after briefly touching 
                on whether or not Mozart had Tourette’s 
                Syndrome, but taken more widely, the 
                musical commentary would have been more 
                rewarding if it had greater equality 
                of space overall.
              
              It is however, a well 
                intentioned primer on both man and music, 
                and as such is likely to be of most 
                use to one approaching either for the 
                first time rather than someone like 
                myself who has spent the last 15 years 
                or so regularly digesting Mozartiana. 
                The glossary of musical terms, brief 
                notes on personalities that appear along 
                the way of the Mozart story, annotations 
                to the CD tracks and a short bibliography 
                are likely to encourage the interested 
                reader to take things beyond the confines 
                of this volume. 
              
              The website I found 
                serviceable and informative, showing 
                that Naxos have purposefully taken a 
                leaf out of many more scholarly publishers’ 
                current practice. The two CDs cover 
                in over two and a half hours some 25 
                examples of Mozart’s music, from his 
                Minuet in G, K.1 (played by Siepmann) 
                to the Requiem, K.626. The tracks benefit 
                from presenting complete works or movements 
                and many of the artists will be known 
                to those familiar with 
                the Naxos catalogue: Jenő Jandó 
                on piano, Capella Istropolitana or the 
                conductor Michael Halász, to name but 
                three. Whilst none of the performances 
                scales the sublime heights of Mozartian 
                interpretation, they nonetheless provide 
                the novice listener with a averagely 
                decent starting point. Those that expand 
                their horizons to complete recordings 
                would in the long run do well to explore 
                other sources for their purchases, providing 
                their budget allows.
              
              Mozart and Beethoven 
                (the subject of another volume also 
                written by Siepmann) are obvious choices 
                to launch such a series with, and hopefully 
                as it grows through taking in major 
                figures, space will be found to accommodate 
                some more esoteric names too, thus complementing 
                Naxos’s approach to recording music. 
                Mozart celebratory year or not, his 
                is a story that can never be told too 
                many times – and having a love of his 
                music is one of the supreme joys in 
                life by which few can remain unmoved.
               
              Evan Dickerson
               
              With each Life & Music biography 
                comes access to a dedicated website 
                for that composer, containing hours 
                of extra music to listen to. The works 
                featured on the CDs may be enjoyed in 
                full on the website (so in the case 
                of Mahler, there are seven symphonies 
                and four major vocal works!) plus many 
                pieces by contemporaries of the composer. 
                There is also a substantial timeline 
                showing the composers life beside 
                concurrent events in arts, literature 
                and history.
              These websites, together with the 
                book and CDs, make for an unrivalled 
                multimedia approach the biographical 
                format and a uniquely rounded portrait 
                of each composer.