Piano Quartet No. 2 (Mozart)

Mozart's Piano Quartet No. 2 in E-flat major, K. 493, was written after Franz Anton Hoffmeister released Mozart from the obligation of writing three piano quartets.

Piano Quartet in E-flat major
No. 2
Chamber music by W. A. Mozart
The composer in 1782, unfinished portrait by Joseph Lange
CatalogueK. 493
Composed1786 (1786)
Movementsthree
Scoring
  • violin
  • viola
  • cello
  • piano.

Composition and reception

Mozart received a commission for three quartets in 1785 from the publisher Franz Anton Hoffmeister. Hoffmeister thought the G minor Quartet (K. 478) was too difficult and that the public would not buy it, so he released Mozart from the obligation of completing the set. Nine months later, Mozart composed this quartet anyway, completing it on 3 June 1786.[1]

Movements

The work is in three movements:

  1. Allegro, common time
  2. Larghetto, 3/8, A-flat major
  3. Allegretto, cut time

Editions and versions

The C. F. Peters Edition set of parts has rehearsal letters throughout the whole work; the Eulenburg Edition study score has measure numbers but no rehearsal letters, the same goes for Bärenreiter.

Discography

Before CDs, almost all repeats were ignored to bring the whole piece at about 24 minutes in duration, thus allowing it to fit on one side of a phonograph record; the other side could then have the K. 478 at about 22 minutes (with repeats also ignored). Following all repeats brings the piece to about 29 to 30 minutes.

Alfred Brendel has recorded this work with members of the Alban Berg Quartett (without second violinist Gerhard Schulz); the Angel Records disc includes Brendel and the quartet playing the Piano Concerto in A major, K. 414.

However, it is far more common to pair this Quartet with the K. 478 Quartet; to give two examples: the Hyperion CD with Paul Lewis and the Leopold String Trio, and the Naxos recording by the Menuhin Festival Piano Quartet. The CBS Masterworks recording with Yo-Yo Ma, Jaime Laredo, Isaac Stern and Emanuel Ax, in addition to the two Quartets, also includes the Kegelstatt Trio, K. 498.

Notes

  1. Melvin Berger, Guide to Chamber Music, 2001, Dover. p. 300
gollark: You would really expect people to come up with more interesting flags than "hahaha indistinguishable horizontal colored lines".
gollark: I do not like these emojis.
gollark: You are like the Unicode codepoint U+019B ƛ Latin Small Letter Lambda with Stroke, introduced in Unicode 1.1.
gollark: You are like an algebraic magma with the binary operation multiplication.
gollark: You are like the hexadecimal value ce7d4761fa385c421e9b155e0ceea047498f2a33acefdafa6bb93f845de606061868f3a7ad48002042c7c79fc6aa5dc2bcc0528976eacb95b58e4932027b76b2.

References

  • Deutsch, Otto Erich (1965). Mozart: A Documentary Biography. Stanford: Stanford University Press. OCLC 8991008.
  • Solomon, Maynard (1995). Mozart: a life. New York: Harper Collins Publishers. ISBN 0-06-019046-9. solomon maynard mozart.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.