‘Before There Was Mozart’ is a tale for all ages
Many, many years from now, youre going to be a major-league ball player, or a concert pianist, maybe a ballerina or a singer with a band.
Thats because you spend a lot of time practicing. Though its sometimes hard and not always fun, practice makes perfect and you want to be as perfect as possible when youre a ball player, pianist, ballerina or singer.
Throughout his life, a young boy named Joseph practiced his violin, but only when he wasnt exploring. In the new book Before There Was Mozart: The Story of Joseph Boulogne, Chevalier de Saint-George, youll read a story thats somewhat hidden by history.
It was breezy on Christmas Day 1739, and the slaves who worked the sugar fields were preparing to celebrate the holiday. But up in the main house, the owner of the West Indies plantation was awaiting the birth of a child.
The baby was named Joseph because it was Christmas, and the midwife predicted that someday hed meet the king and queen of France. Josephs mother, Nanon, a slave born in Senegal, was just happy that the boy was healthy.
On the plantation, Joseph loved to play with other slave children, even though he was not one of them. As the only child of a slave and her master, he wasnt made to work; instead, he was allowed to wander the island and explore, and when Josephs mother went to town, he usually went along. It was in town that he fell in love with music.
But life wasnt all play. Monsieur Plato, the plantations overseer, was also Josephs tutor, and Monsieur ended each lesson with violin practice. By the time he was 9 years old and had e migrated to France with his parents, Joseph whose father eventually gave him the name of Joseph Boulogne, Chevalier de Saint-George was known as a talented violinist.
As Joseph grew, he loved the violin more and more. He started composing and performing: unknowingly, before Wolfgang Mozart, and later fulfilling the prophec y made the day he was born as the first man of color at the royal palace for the king and queen of France.
If you go looking for this book and you should youll probably find it in the picture book section of your library or bookstore.
It might be ill-placed there, however.
Author Lesa Cline-Ransome and illustrator James E. Ransome have dusted off an amazing story that even adults can appreciate, but I fear that the narrative is too sophisticated for toddlers, who gravitate toward picture books. Surely, Before There Was Mozart can be enjoyed by them the illustrations are colorful and little kid-friendly but children old enough to understand history, classical music and this tales significance will probably like it more.
Overall, this is a beautiful and important book, but just beware for whom you bring it home. Small children may squirm with impatience at this story, but for kids 8 or older, Before There Was Mozart is just perfect.
Terri Schlichenmeyers childrens book reviews appear weekly in View.





