What did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart blue plaque do at 20 Frith Street W1?

20 Frith Street W1Blue Plaque

The Story

# 20 Frith Street, Soho Standing before this unassuming Georgian townhouse in the heart of Soho, you're looking at a pivotal moment in musical history—the place where an eight-year-old prodigy from Salzburg experienced London's vibrant musical world during the winter of 1764-1765. During his stay, Mozart didn't merely live here; he was constantly performing in the drawing rooms of London's elite and composing furiously, with the sounds of the bustling Soho streets and the city's orchestras firing his youthful imagination. It was here that Mozart encountered the symphonic traditions of London composers, absorbed influences that would reshape his understanding of musical form, and produced some of his earliest works while his sister Maria Anna performed alongside him at countless concerts. This address marks far more than a childhood residence—it represents the moment when a continental child-prodigy transformed into a composer who would synthesize English musical sensibilities with his own genius, an encounter with a foreign musical culture that subtly but significantly influenced the man who would later revolutionize classical music.

Location

20 Frith Street W1

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