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Symphony No. 7 (Mozart)

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Symphony in four movements completed in 1768
Mozart

Symphony No. 7 in D major, K. 45, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, was completed in Vienna in January 1768 after the family's return from a visit to Olomouc and Brno in Moravia. The symphony is in four movements. Its first performance was probably at a private concert. The symphony was reworked to become the overture to Mozart's opera, La finta semplice, K. 51, composed and performed later that year, and the overture itself was subsequently adapted further to create a new symphony, known in the Köchel 1964 (K6) catalogue as K. 46a. The autograph of the score is preserved in the Berlin State Library.

Movements and instrumentation

For the original (K. 45) version the instrumentation was: strings, 2 oboes, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, timpani, bassoon, continuo. For the symphonic overture (K. 46a) version the trumpets were replaced with flutes, an extra bassoon was added, and the timpani were excised.


\relative c' {
  \key d \major
  \tempo "Molto allegro"
  <d a' fis'>4\f q q r8 a\p |
  d8 a fis' d e a, g' e |
  fis8 d a' fis b( g) fis-. e-. |
  d8 a fis' d e a, g' e |
}
  1. Molto allegro,
    4
  2. Andante, cut time
  3. Menuetto and Trio,
    4 (this movement was omitted from the "overture" version)
  4. Molto allegro,
    4

Performance history

According to analyst Neal Zaslaw, the first occasion on which the K. 45 version could have been heard was a concert given by Prince von Galitzin, the Russian ambassador, at his Vienna residence in late March, 1768. The K. 46b version was heard at the premiere of La finta semplice, at Salzburg on 1 May 1769.

References

  1. ^ Zaslaw, pp. 114–18
  2. ^ Giglberger 2005, p. XI.
  3. ^ Osborne, p. 40

Sources

  • Giglberger, Veronika: (Preface), translated by J. Branford Robinson. In Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Die Sinfonien I, edited by . Bärenreiter-Verlag, Kassel 2005 ISMN M-006-20466-3.
  • Osborne, Charles: The Complete Operas of Mozart Gollancz, London 1992 ISBN 0-575-03823-3
  • Zaslaw, Neal: Mozart's Symphonies: Context, Performance Practice, Reception Oxford University Press, Oxford 1991 ISBN 0-19-816286-3

External links

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Biography
Music
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Related
Symphonies by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Unnumbered
Numbered
Adapted from serenades
Lost
  • Symphonies of doubtful authenticity.
  • No. 2 now attributed to Leopold Mozart.
  • No. 3 now attributed to Carl Friedrich Abel (although Mozart changed the instrumentation).
  • Symphonies generally agreed to be spurious today, but included in either the old or new complete editions.
  • No. 37 now attributed to Michael Haydn, except for the slow introduction which Mozart added.
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