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Concertone for two Violins and Orchestra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Concertone for two Violins and Orchestra in C
by W. A. Mozart
KeyC major
CatalogueK. 190 (186e)
GenreSinfonia concertante
StyleClassical period
Composed1774 (1774)
MovementsThree (Allegro spiritoso, Andantino grazioso, Tempo minuetto. Vivace)
Scoring
  • two Violins
  • orchestra

The Concertone for two Violins and Orchestra in C, K. 190 (186e) was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in May 1774.[1]

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  • Mozart - Concertone for 2 Violins and Orchestra in C major, K. 190 (186E)
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  • W.A. Mozart Concertone in C major for 2 violin K.V. 190

Transcription

History

Despite illegible handwriting, an xray of the manuscript revealed a date of May 31, 1774. According to Hans Engel the piece was composed in Italy,[2] although Salzburg is written on the title page and is accepted as the place of composition. Completed soon after Mozart's return from an extended trip to Italy.[3]

The circumstances for the Salzburg performance are unknown, however, the inclusion of trumpets suggest it may have been a celebratory or festive occasion. Mozart himself may have played one of the solo violin parts. Presumably the Concertone was performed by the Salzburg court orchestra. Music with string solos was fashionable at the time, led by Mozart's employer Archbishop Colloredo, who himself played the violin. It was written before the 1775 violin concertos in Salzburg, and was first published in 1870 Leipzig; August Cranz Hofmeister's p.179. It was also published by Breitkopf & Härtel in 1880.[1][4][5] The original autograph manuscript is housed at the Morgan Library & Museum in New York.[6]

Description

Concertone

Mozart simply wrote "Concertone" (large concert) on the autograph score.[7] An Italian term which meant more than one soloist with an accompanying orchestra, similar to a symphonie concertante. Leopold Mozart also called the work a concertone in his copy. The title page of the score only refers to two solo violins and orchestra. But the music contains notable solo writing for the oboe, cello and with a few passages for divided violas and for a solo double bass.[5]

One of Mozart's earliest concertos, the Concertone has similarities in form to the earlier concerto grosso form, as well as contemporary concertante works. Such as Joseph Haydn's symphonies 6 to 8, Le Matin, Le Midi and Le Soir, and similar styled works by J.C. Bach. This form of writing was popular in Paris at the time. The flautist Johann Baptist Wendling was enthusiastic about the Concertone and arranged to have it performed in Paris or possibly Mannheim. Wendling exclaimed "it is just the thing for Paris".[8] The Mozart scholar Alexander Hyatt King remarked "a hybrid work in which the old genre got a new soul … the juxtaposition of baroque concerto grosso instruments mixes well with the new galant style”.[9]

Movements

The three movements are marked: I. Allegro spiritoso in common time

common time, II Andantino grazioso in F major in triple time 3
4
, III. Tempo minuetto - Vivace in triple time 3
4
.

The first movement shows similarities to the French style of writing at the time, however the dynamic markings are more of the Mannheim style. Mozart wrote out the cadenza for the first movement. The extended long second movement displays lyrical trills and a masterful polyphonic interaction of the solo performers. The minuet finale is cheerful and at a faster tempo, also affording the soloists opportunities to display their virtuosic skills.[8][4][5] A typical performance lasts between 25 and 30 minutes.[1]

Orchestration

Two solo violins, two oboes, two French horns, two trumpets and strings.[1][7]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Concertone in C major": Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  2. ^ Christoph-Hellmut Mahling. "Series Five - Concertos" (PDF). Online Publications. DME Mozarteum. International Mozart Foundation. p. IX. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  3. ^ The New Grove Mozart (1980) Stanley Sadie, p. 42 ISBN 0333341996
  4. ^ a b David Garrett. "Concertone for Two Violins in C, K.190" (PDF). programme notes. Adelaide Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved April 17, 2021.
  5. ^ a b c Joseph Stevenson. "Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Concertone for 2 violins, oboe, cello & orchestra in C major, K. 190 (K. 186E)". sheet music. AllMusic. Retrieved April 17, 2021.
  6. ^ Concertone, violins (2), orchestra, K. 190, C major. Morgan Library & Museum. OCLC 270567720. Retrieved April 17, 2021. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  7. ^ a b "Mozart Concertone, K.190". sheet music. MusOpen. Retrieved April 17, 2021.
  8. ^ a b Irina Susidko. "W.A.Mozart OBOENSPITZE, volume 3". W.A.Mozart OBOENSPITZE, volume 3 / ALEXEI UTKIN / HERMITAGE ORCHESTRA. Retrieved April 17, 2021.
  9. ^ BBC Music Guides to Mozart Wind & String Concertos (1978) A. Hyatt King ISBN 0295954787

External links

This page was last edited on 7 February 2024, at 17:50
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