Mozart: Violin Sonatas, Vol. 5
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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791): Violin Sonatas 5 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg in 1756, the son of a court musician who, in the year of...
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791): Violin Sonatas 5
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg in
1756, the son of a court musician who, in the year of his
youngest child's birth, published an influential book on
violin-playing. Leopold Mozart rose to occupy the
position of Vice-Kapellmeister to the Archbishop of
Salzburg, but sacrificed his own creative career to that
of his son, in whom he detected early signs of precocious
genius. With the indulgence of his patron, he was able to
undertake extended concert tours of Europe in which his
son and elder daughter Nannerl were able to astonish
audiences. The boy played both the keyboard and the
violin and could improvise and soon write down his
own compositions.
Childhood that had brought Mozart signal success
was followed by a less satisfactory period of adolescence
largely in Salzburg under the patronage of a new and
less sympathetic Archbishop. Like his father, Mozart
found opportunities far too limited at home, while
chances of travel were now restricted. In 1777, when
leave of absence was not granted, he gave up
employment in Salzburg to seek a future elsewhere, but
neither Mannheim nor Paris, both musical centres of
some importance, had anything for him. His Mannheim
connections, however, brought a commission for an
opera in Munich in 1781, but after its successful staging
he was summoned by his patron to Vienna. There
Mozart's dissatisfaction with his position resulted in a
quarrel with the Archbishop and dismissal from his
service.
The last ten years of Mozart's life were spent in
Vienna in precarious independence of both patron and
immediate paternal advice, a situation aggravated by an
imprudent marriage. Initial success in the opera-house
and as a performer was followed, as the decade went on,
by increasing financial difficulties. By the time of his
death in December 1791, however, his fortunes seemed
about to change for the better, with the success of the
German opera The Magic Flute, and the possibility of
increased patronage.
Mozart's sonatas for violin and keyboard span a
period of some twenty-five years. His earliest attempts
at the form were made during his first extended tour of
Europe. Four of these early sonatas were published in
Paris in 1764, two as Opus 1 and two as Opus 2, and a
further set of six, Opus 3, was published in London the
following year. There followed another set of six
sonatas, Opus 4, written in The Hague in 1766 and
published there and in Amsterdam in the same year.
Mozart only returned to the form twelve years later.
During his stay in Mannheim in 1777 and 1778 he
completed four sonatas, to which he added a further two
in Paris in the early summer of the latter year,
publishing the set in Paris as Opus 1. Another group of
six sonatas was published in Vienna in 1781. This
included a sonata written in Mannheim and another
perhaps written in Salzburg. The other four of the set,
which was published as Opus 2, were written in the
summer of 1781 in Vienna. The four remaining
completed sonatas were written in Vienna between 1784
and 1788. While the Kochel numbers of these sonatas
provide easy identification, various systems of
numbering the sonatas as a series have been used. There
are over forty of these works and the numbering used in
the present series starts with the first of the mature
sonatas written in Mannheim in 1778 and includes only
completed sonatas after that date in its numbering.
The Sonata in F major, K.547, described as ' a little
piano sonata for a beginner with a violin' was entered
into Mozart's own list of compositions with the date
10th July 1788, shortly after the 'kleine Klavier Sonate
für Anfanger (Little Piano Sonata for Beginner), K.545.
The primary source for the violin sonata is an edition of
1805 by Mollo & Co. in Vienna, but it has been
suggested that the last two movements were originally
for piano, since both had appeared, after Mozart's death,
in that form, and have been the subject of varied
speculation. The first movement, marked Andantino
cantabile, opens with a simple melody, with the violin
generally a third below the piano melody, but assuming
more melodic independence in the middle section.
A passage in B flat major leads to a piano cadenza of
elementary display, after which the first material returns
to end the movement. The following Allegro shares the
first subject between the two instruments, while the
piano takes initial precedence in the secondary theme.
There is a short development section, after which the
first material returns in varied recapitulation. The piano
presents the theme for the final variations, the first three
of which are given principally to the keyboard, before
the violin is allowed some prominence in the fourth
variation. The fifth, in F minor, is for piano alone, which
follows in a sixth version of the material with rapid
notes, anchored by the slower notes of the violin, which
is allowed final melodic interest in conclusion.
The Twelve Variations on the French Song "La
Bergère Celimène", K.359, were written in Vienna in
June 1781. It seems probable that Mozart wrote the
work for his piano pupil Countess Maria Karolina
Thiennes de Rumbeke, nee Cobenzl. In May he had
secured his dismissal from the service of the Archbishop
of Salzburg and was immediately seeking to make use
of his new independence. In a letter of 20th June 1781 to
his father he mentions in conclusion the fact that he is
busy composing variations for his pupil, possibly the
present work, although he wrote two other sets of
variations in the same month. The Countess, the
daughter of Count Johann Karl Philipp Cobenzl,
minister plenipotentiary for the Austrian Netherlands,
and wife of Count Thiennes et Rumbeke, a chamberlain
at the court in Vienna, had engaged Mozart as a teacher
very soon after the latter's arrival in Vienna in March. A
near contemporary of her teacher, she became renowned
as very proficient on the instrument, celebrated for
accuracy, taste and speed, Prazision, Geschmack und
Geschwindigkeit, in the words of the Jahrbuch der
Kunst von Wien und Prag of 1796. The song La Bergère
Celimène seems to have been taken from a collection of
songs for two voices by the French castrato and teacher
Antoine Albanèse, published in 1770. The opening
words of the chanson indicate its conventional theme:
La Bergère Celimène dans les bois s'en va chantant
(The Shepherdess Celimène goes singing in the woods).
The piano is entrusted with the Allegretto theme, with a
violin accompaniment. The following variations include
a third for piano alone, a fourth in triplets and a fifth in
semiquavers. The seventh variation is in a dramatic G
minor and the eighth introduces a brief element of
counterpoint. The tenth variation allows the piano handcrossing
and the eleventh, Adagio, is accompanied by
the violin's plucked and syncopated chords. The final
variation allows the violin the principal melodic interest.
The Sonata in A major, K.526, is dated 24th August
1787. On 28th May Mozart's father had died in
Salzburg, his last letter to Mozart's sister Nannerl
expressing his misgivings about his son's management
of his affairs in Vienna. In January had come a
commission from Prague for a new opera, Don
Giovanni, to be staged there in October. While nothing
certain is known of the circumstances of composition of
the violin sonata, it has been suggested that it was
influenced by the death in London of Carl Friedrich
Abel, a colleague of Johann Christian Bach, whom he
had known as a child in London, and the Mozart scholar
Georges de Saint-Foix drew attention to Mozart's use of
a theme from a sonata by Abel in the final rondo.
Mozart's sonata was published in September 1787 by
Hoffmeister and he seems to have played it privately
with the violinist Heinrich Anton Hoffmann during a
visit to Mainz in 1790. The sonata shares the musical
content more equably between the two players than is
the case with the other two works here included. The
principal theme of the opening Molto allegro is heard
from both instruments, before a short piano link to the
second subject, first entrusted to the violin, before rôles
are reversed. The thematic material is explored in the
central development, before returning in varied
recapitulation. The D major slow movement is marked
first by the steady rhythm of the piano accompanying
figure, later given to the violin when the piano takes up
the cantabile theme. Further material is introduced
before the second section of the movement, making
further use of the opening elements before the return of
the original key, with the piano quaver pattern now
syncopated. The final rondo is dominated by its
principal theme, framing contrasting episodes rich in
invention, and often, for the moment at least, assuming
the character of a perpetuum mobile in its quaver
patterns, ending a work of significant maturity.
Keith Anderson
Violin Sonata No. 36 in F major, K. 547 (more info)
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I. Andantino cantabile - 6:02
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II. Allegro - 9:12
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III. Andante con variazioni - 7:53
Variations in G major on La bergere Celimene, K. 359 (more info)
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Variations in G major, K. 359 (K. 374a), "La bergere Celimene" - 15:12
Sonata for Keyboard and Violin No. 35 in A major, K. 526 (more info)
Composed by:
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Conducted by:
Dmitry Sitkovetsky
Benjamin Schmid, violin
Hephzibah Menuhin, piano
Benjamin Loeb, piano
Ani Kavafian, violin
Yehudi Menuhin, violin
Ariane Haering, piano
Takako Nishizaki, violin
Konstantin Lifschitz, piano
David Breitman, fortepiano
Jean-Francois Rivest, violin
Annette Unger, violin
Brunhild Webersinke, piano
Jorge Federico Osorio, piano
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I. Molto Allegro - 10:08
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II. Andante - 11:31
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III. Presto - 7:43