Cover for Sollers: Mysterious Mozart. Click for larger image

Mysterious Mozart

An audacious portrait of Mozart's genius, available in English for the first time

Both a beguiling portrait of the artist and an idiosyncratic self-portrait of the author, Mysterious Mozart is Philippe Sollers's alternately oblique and searingly direct interpretation of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's oeuvre and lasting mystique, audaciously reformulated for the postmodern age.

With a mix of slang, abstractions, quotations, first- and third-person narratives, and blunt opinion, French writer and critic Philippe Sollers taps into Mozart's playful correspondence and the lesser-known pieces of his enormous repertoire to analyze the popularity and public perceptions of his music. Detailing Mozart's drive to continue producing masterpieces even when saddled with debt and riddled with illness and anxiety, Sollers powerfully and meticulously analyzes Mozart's seven last great operas using a psychoanalytical approach to the characters' relationships.

As Sollers explores themes of constancy, prodigy, freedom, and religion, he offers up bits of his own history, revealing his affinity for the creative geniuses of the eighteenth century and a yearning to bring that era's utopian freedom to life in contemporary times. What emerges is an inimitable portrait of a man and a musician whose greatest gift is a quirky companionability, a warm and mysterious appeal that distinguishes Mozart from other great composers and is brilliantly echoed by Sollers's artful tangle of narrative.

"A most intriguing alternative, in content and method, to almost all other recent books on Mozart. Highly recommended."--Choice

"A journey of fanciful discovery. . . . Opinionated and laden with insights."--Opera News

"Philippe Sollers is a mercurial personality and a leading controversial figure on the French literary scene, and his take on Mozart is fresh, lively, witty, and informed. What makes Mysterious Mozart especially interesting is its blend of music criticism, biography, and personal insight."--David Hayman, translator and editor of Philippe Sollers's Writing and the Experience of Limits

Publication of this book was supported by a grant from the Henry and Edna Binkele Classical Music Fund.

Philippe Sollers is a French biographer, editor, critic, and novelist whose work includes books on Dante, Willem De Kooning, Pablo Picasso, and Giacomo Casanova. He is a cofounder of the avant-garde journal Tel Quel and the founder of L'Infini. Armine Kotin Mortimer is a professor of French at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the author of Writing Realism: Representations in French Fiction and a study of Sollers's Paradis.

Related Titles

previous book next book
Political Writings

Simone de Beauvoir

Then Sings My Soul

The Culture of Southern Gospel Music

Douglas Harrison

The Organs of J. S. Bach

A Handbook

Christoph Wolff and Markus Zepf

Squeeze This!

A Cultural History of the Accordion in America

Marion Jacobson

Live Fast, Love Hard

The Faron Young Story

Diane Diekman

Henry Mancini

Reinventing Film Music

John Caps

Twentieth Century Drifter

The Life of Marty Robbins

Diane Diekman

Bach Perspectives, Volume 8

J. S. Bach and the Oratorio Tradition

Edited by Daniel R. Melamed

Bean Blossom

The Brown County Jamboree and Bill Monroe’s Bluegrass Festivals

Thomas A. Adler