Potpourri No. 4 (Spohr)

Potpourri No. 4 in B major, Op. 24, by Louis Spohr, was completed in 1808. The work was one of several compositions that Spohr, a noted violinist, wrote to provide a virtuoso encore when performing more serious chamber works such as Beethoven's Opus 18[1] string quartets. Written for a virtuoso first violin, with accompanying string trio (violin, viola, cello), like many similar works of this period, was based on themes from popular operas, in this case Mozart's Die Entführung aus dem Serail ('In Mohrenland gefangen war') and Don Giovanni ('Batti, batti').[1]

Movements

The composion is made up of a single multi-tempo movement marked Adagio con molto espressione – Andante – Grazioso – Allegro vivace – Allegretto and an average performance should take around 11 minutes.[2]

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gollark: Many animals can do many of the things human can.
gollark: Nobody is very sure where that line is.
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References

Notes
Sources
  • Clive Brown & Keith Warsop. Liner Notes to String Quartets (Complete), Vol. 14 – Nos. 31 and 36.
  • Full Score, Potpourri No. 4 in B major, Op. 24 at the IMSLP
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