Top Picks
-
Mozart - Sinfonia Concertante for Four Winds in E flat, K. 297b / K. Anh. C 14.01 [complete]
YouTube 1y ago
-
Amateur video shows explosion in Aleppo suburb and car bomb being prepared
Top Picks 17m ago
-
Aug. Trial Set for Ohio Man in Triple Kidnapping
Top Picks 17m ago
-
Royal Baby Could Give U.K. Economy $400M Bump
Top Picks 1h ago
-
Obama speaks against nuclear weapons
Top Picks 2h ago
-
Video: Mass protests hit Brazil over transport fares, FIFA cup overspending
Top Picks 2h ago
-
Three charged in Ohio slavery case
Top Picks 3h ago
-
US to hold direct peace talks with Taliban
Top Picks 3h ago
-
Protests continue to rock Brazil
Top Picks 3h ago
-
Paris Jackson testifies
Top Picks 5h ago
-
Turkey standoff as silent protests sweep the country
Top Picks 6h ago
-
Raw: Massive Protests Fill Brazilian Streets
Top Picks 6h ago
-
The 1860s Bar
Top Picks 12h ago
-
Inside Jaws, A Filmumentary by @jamieswb (2013)
Top Picks 15h ago
-
Kilian Martin: India within
Top Picks 16h ago
-
The World Must Stand Together
Top Picks 20h ago
Mozart - Sinfonia Concertante for Four Winds in E flat, K. 297b / K. Anh. C 14.01 [complete]
1y agoTags
Description
The Sinfonia Concertante for Four Winds in E flat major, is a work thought to be by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, for oboe, clarinet, horn, bassoon, and orchestra, K. 297b (Anh. C 14.01). He originally wrote a work for flute, oboe, horn, bassoon, and orchestra, K Anh. 9 (279B), in Paris in April 1778. There is considerable dispute about the relation of the work as it is performed today to this original work. The Sinfonia Concertante is scored for solo oboe, solo clarinet, solo horn, solo bassoon, and an orchestra of two horns, two oboes, and strings. A typical performance lasts about 28 minutes. 1. Allegro, in common time. This movement is in sonata form with three expositions rather than two -- one played by the orchestra, the other two by the soloists. It contains a written cadenza before the coda. 2. Adagio in common time, with "gentle exchanges of thematic material". 3. Andante con variazioni, a theme with ten variations and a coda. Each variation is separated by "identical, basically decorative orchestral ritornelli". This movement is in 2/4 time until the end of the last variation, where 6 adagio bars in 6/8 time lead to a coda in common time. Mozart is known through letters and concert announcements to have written a sinfonia concertante for flute, oboe, horn, and bassoon, the original score of which is lost. There is considerable debate about the authenticity of what is performed today, and whether the extant piece is even related to the original work. Highly regarded scholars have conflicting opinions, and some say the composition is currently in a corrupt form. Stanley Sadie, for instance is dismissive. Alfred Einstein considered it genuine. Some have the opinion that it is inconceivable that Mozart wrote a homotonal concerto (i.e. with all three movements in the same key; here E-flat major). The Mozart Project considers this piece as "spurious or doubtful", and it does not appear on their listing of concertos. Mozart displayed affection and prominence for the wind instruments in his operas and concertos. Noteworthy wind passages are in the fifteenth and seventeenth piano concertos, with memorable dialogues with the soloist; flute, oboe and bassoon. In opera there are many arias with similar woodwind and French Horn passages, such as Fiordiligi's "Per pietà, ben mio, perdona" from Così fan tutte. Some authorities believe that these outstanding qualities are also displayed in this piece.The Sinfonia Concertante is popular today, and regularly performed. It is well regarded by professional musicians. Certain passages are of the highest quality, such as the coda of the first movement, which displays a rumbustious and thrilling finale. Robert Levin, who wrote an entire book about the piece, considers the orchestral part and the first movement cadenza to be spurious, and the soloists' role to have been modified by others from the original without having had the orchestral parts as reference. Levin has made a reconstruction of the original piece based on his research. It has been suggested that this piece has a recollective, even autumnal character. The writing for wind instruments here is of such quality that it is only surpassed by the later "Gran Partita" in B-flat major of 1781. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- FREE .mp3 and .wav files of all Mozart's music at: http://www.mozart-archiv.de/ FREE sheet music scores of any Mozart piece at: http://dme.mozarteum.at/DME/nma/start.php?l=2 ALSO check out these cool sites: http://musopen.org/ and http://imslp.org/wiki/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE: I do not know who the performers of this are, nor the place and date of recording!!! Any suggestions are welcome. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENJOY!!!! :D
