Franz von Walsegg

Count Franz von Walsegg (January 17, 1763 – November 11, 1827) was an aristocrat, living in Stuppach Castle near Gloggnitz, who is best remembered for having commissioned a requiem mass from Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1791 following the death of his twenty-year-old wife Anna (the grieving count, only 28 himself at the time, would never remarry). A Freemason and amateur musician, Walsegg had a penchant for commissioning works from composers of the day and then passing them off as his own in private performances. In his account of the commission of the requiem mass from Mozart, Anton Herzog states:

Herr Franz, Count von Walsegg... was a passionate lover of music and the theatre; hence, every week, on Tuesdays and Thursdays... quartets were played... So that we would not lack for new quartets, in view of so frequent productions of them, Herr Count not only procured all those publicly announced but was in touch with many composers, yet without ever revealing [their] identit[ies]... they delivered to him works of which he retained the sole ownership, and for which he paid well. To name one man, Herr Hoffmeister...

[1]
Franz von Walsegg
Born(1763-01-17)17 January 1763
Stuppach near Gloggnitz, Lower Austria
Died11 November 1827(1827-11-11) (aged 64)
Stuppach, Lower Austria, Austrian Empire
SpouseAnna Walsegg

Although Mozart died before completing the requiem, Constanze Mozart arranged for several other composers, most notably Franz Xaver Süssmayr, to complete the work in order to gain the remainder of the sum Walsegg had promised.

Notes

  1. Landon, H. C. Robbins. 1791: Mozart's Last Year, 1999, p. 76.
gollark: I refuse your refusal.
gollark: Lyricly, stop wasting time with nonMacron things.
gollark: Lack of good response interpreted as communism.
gollark: <@319753218592866315> You should be spending your time more usefully on Macron design.
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References

  • Bernard Jacobson (1995), "Catholic with Masonic Overtones" (insert in Sacred Music, CD#18 of the Best of the Complete Mozart Edition), Philips: Germany.


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