Mass in C major, K. 220 "Sparrow"

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Missa brevis in C major
"Sparrow"
Mass by W. A. Mozart
Salzburger Dom.jpg
Salzburg Cathedral may have been the first performance venue of the mass.
Catalogue K. 220/196b
Movements6
Vocal SATB choir and soloists
Instrumental
  • brass
  • strings
  • continuo

The Sparrow Mass (German: Spatzenmesse) is a mass in C major K. 220/196b, Mass No. 9, [1] Missa brevis No. 5, [2] composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1775 or 1776 in Salzburg. The mass is sometimes termed a missa brevis et solemnis , because it is short in a simple structure as a missa brevis, but festively scored like a missa solemnis with brass and timpani in addition to four soloists, strings and organ. It was possibly first performed on 7 April 1776 in a mass for Easter at the Salzburg Cathedral. The nickname is derived from violin figures in the Hosanna which resemble bird chirping.

Contents

Background

The mass may have been performed on 7 April 1776 during a celebration of Easter at the Salzburg Cathedral. According to a letter by Mozart, a copy was possibly loaned to the Heiligenkreuz Monastery the following year. [3] The mass got the nickname Spatzenmesse (Sparrow Mass) on account of "the violin figures in the Hosanna" of the Sanctus, [4] repeated after the Benedictus, which "recall the chirping of birds." [5]

The Sparrow Mass is one of a series of five masses Mozart composed in 1775–1776 (or possibly 1775–1777), all of them with clarini trumpets, and so in the "trumpet key" of C major. [6] [7] Karl Geiringer notes that K. 220 was one of the models Franz Xaver Süssmayr used when completing Mozart's Requiem. [8]

Structure and scoring

The composition is short in duration as a missa brevis. Mozart does not even include the fugal conclusions to the Gloria and the Credo normally expected. [5] It is richly orchestrated as a missa solemnis, for four soloists (soprano, alto, tenor, bass), a four-part choir (SATB), two trumpets, three trombones, timpani, strings and organ, the latter supplying figured bass for most of the duration. The mass is therefore sometimes termed a missa brevis et solemnis. [6]

The setting of the Latin Order of Mass is structured in six movements. In the following table of the movements, the voices, markings, keys and time signatures are taken from the choral score.

No.PartIncipitVocalMarkingKeyTime
1KyrieKyrieSATBAllegro C major Commontime.svg
2GloriaGloriaSATB + soloistsAllegroC major3
4
3CredoCredoSATB + soloistsAllegroC major Commontime.svg
Et incarnatus estSATBAndante
Et resurrexitSATBAllegro
4SanctusSanctusSATBAndanteC major3
4
Pleni sunt coeliSATBAllegro Commontime.svg
OsannaSATBAllegro
5BenedictusBenedictussoloistsAndante G major Commontime.svg
OsannaSATBAllegroC major
6Agnus DeiAgnus DeiSATB + soloistsAdagioC major3
4
Dona nobis pacemSATBAllegro Commontime.svg

Following the example of Joseph Haydn (such as in the Nicolaimesse ) [9] and Michael Haydn, Mozart in this mass recalls the music of the Kyrie in the Dona nobis, something which Franz Xaver Süssmayr did in his completion of Mozart's Requiem. [5] The Requiem contains an almost literal quotation from this mass in the Requiem aeternam. [10]

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References

Notes

  1. Senn 1978.
  2. Humphreys 1990.
  3. Eisen & Keefe 2006, p. 274.
  4. Anon. 1990, p. 11.
  5. 1 2 3 Beyer 1991.
  6. 1 2 Eisen & Keefe 2006, p. 271–272, 274.
  7. Leisinger 2013.
  8. Landon & Mitchell 1956.
  9. Heartz 1905.
  10. Summer.

Bibliography

Scores

Books

Further reading