Serenade No. 10 (Mozart)

Last updated

Serenade No. 10
by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Mozart Portrait Croce.jpg
Detail of Wolfgang from the 1780–81 Portrait of the Mozart Family
Other nameGran Partita
Key B-flat major
Catalogue K. 361/370a
Composed1781 or 1782
Durationabout 50 minutes
MovementsSeven
ScoringTwelve winds and string bass

The Serenade No. 10 for winds in B-flat major, K. 361/370a, is a serenade by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart scored for thirteen instruments: twelve winds and string bass. The piece was composed in 1781 and is often known by the subtitle Gran Partita, though the title is a misspelling and not in Mozart's hand. [1] It consists of seven movements.

Contents

Composition date

Some prominent authorities (Köchel, Tyson, and Dexter Edge) show that the paper and watermarks of this work prove a composition date of 1781. That the work was specially composed for a public concert given by Anton Stadler on March 23, 1784, is less likely, because this performance has no proven connection with the date of composition and only marks an ante quem date. The autograph of this work contains 24 leaves of paper-type 57. Four other compositions that used this paper can be securely dated to 1781. It was shown by Alan Tyson that this fact is sufficiently compelling to presume that K. 361 was composed in 1781. There is no evidence whatsoever that the 24 leaves of this paper-type that appear in the autograph of K. 361 were ever intended for anything other than K. 361, and it is clear from the pattern of paper-usage that K. 361 was the principal project for which Mozart acquired that paper-type.[ citation needed ]

The documentary history also shows that there is an unequivocal reference to wind-band music in Vienna in 1781. The performance of only four movements in 1784 generated the belief that the work was composed in two stages. Bastiaan Blomhert has made a compelling argument that the octet version of movements 1, 2, 3 and 7 of the Gran Partita are the original version, one that Mozart enlarged in 1784 for the Akademie of Anton Stadler in the Vienna Burgtheater. [2]

Instrumentation

The work is scored for 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 basset horns, 2 bassoons, 4 horns and double bass. In performance, the double bass is sometimes replaced by a contrabassoon. Mozart's Harmoniemusik, including K. 361, shows his interest in texture through his use of unique combinations of instruments for the era, scoring, rhythm and articulation. [3]

Movements

References

  1. Leeson 1997, p. 222.
  2. Blomhert, Bastiaan, "The version à 8 of the Gran Partita KV 361 (370a)" in: Mozart-Jahrbuch 1991 (Salzburg, 1992)
  3. Eisen, Cliff, and Stanley Sadie. "Mozart, (Johann Chrysostom) Wolfgang Amadeus." Grove Music Online . 2001.
  4. Goodwin, Noël, CD liner notes for Mozart: Three Wind Serenades, Sinfonia Concertante, ASV CD COS 242
  5. Amadeus, Warner Bros., 1984
  6. "How I Met Your Mother" S04E02 "The Best Burger In New York", CBS, 2008

Bibliography