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      Home  >  Daily News • Major Tournaments  >  The origin of Mozarts of Chess

      The origin of Mozarts of Chess

      Magnus Carlsen, Mozart


      Mozarts of Chess
      Lubomir Kavalek.
      International Chess Grandmaster
      Posted: 02/23/2012 5:42 pm

      In January 2004, I called Magnus Carlsen the Mozart of Chess for the first time. It was a spontaneous, last-minute decision to meet a deadline for my column in the Washington Post. The name was picked up immediately and spread around quickly. It was used, misused, overused. Even the television network CBS could not resist the temptation last Sunday to compare the world’s top-rated chess player to the famous Austrian composer. They titled a 60 Minutes segment on Magnus Carlsen “The Mozart of Chess.”

      The Spaniards took it a bit further in May 2007. Carlsen was supposed to fly to Valencia to play a simultaneous exhibition. At the same time, the film director Milos Forman was there, presenting a jazz opera, “A Walk Worthwhile.” In 1985, Forman won one of his two Oscars for his movie Amadeus. It didn’t take long to make the connection between the chess Mozart and the cinematic Amadeus. Forman and Carlsen met and played chess.

      Now I don’t know what to do,” said Amadeus after a few moves, hoping Carlsen might give him some advice. Mozart remained silent, but when Forman made a move, he said: “Not bad, not bad at all.”

      “At that moment,” Forman later recalled, “I felt like I just won an Oscar.” Encouraged, Amadeus pressed his luck and offered a draw. Carlsen politely declined and soon won the game.

      Despite all the publicity the unassuming Carlsen didn’t seem to be happy about being compared to Mozart. He was probably fed up with the name for some time and rightly so. I watched in horror as reporters stuck microphones in his face, asking: “How does it feel being called the Mozart of Chess?”

      The moniker occurred to me when I was looking for a subhead for Magnus’s great game against Sipke Ernst in Wijk aan Zee in 2004. It was a fresh, beautiful, imaginative masterpiece, created with lightness and ease, something Mozart might have composed in music at the age of six. Magnus was 13.

      Full article here.

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      1 Comment

      1. Anonymous Reply
        February 24, 2012 at 6:35 am

        Nakamura is the true Mozart of chess.

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