Horn Concerto No. 1 (Mozart)

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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Horn Concerto No. 1 in D major, K. 412 was completed in 1791. The work is in two movements:

This is one of two horn concerti of Mozart to include bassoons, but in this one he "treats them indifferently in the first movement."[1]

Although numbered first, this was actually the last of the four to be completed. Compared to the other three concertos, it is shorter in duration (two movements rather than three), and is much simpler in regard to both range and technique, perhaps in a nod to Leitgeb's, the horn player and Mozart's great friend, advanced age and (presumably) reduced capabilities at the time of composition. The second movement was shown by Alan Tyson to have been finished by Mozart's student Franz Xaver Süssmayr after Mozart's death.

The autograph score contains, arranged in strategic places throughout the Rondo, a bizarre written narrative perhaps directed to Leutgeb:

For you, Mr. Donkey--Come on--quick--get on with it--like a good fellow--be brave--Are you finished yet?--for you--beast--oh what a dissonance--Oh!--Woe is me!!--Well done, poor chap--oh, pain in the balls!--Oh God, how fast!--you make me laugh--help--take a breather--go on, go on--that's a little better--still not finished?--you awful swine!--how charming you are!--dear one!--little donkey!--ha, ha, ha--take a breath!--But do play at least one note, you prick!--Aha! Bravo, bravo, hurrah!--You're going to torture me for the fourth time, and thank God it's the last--Oh finish now, I beg of you!--Confound it--also bravura?--Bravo!--oh, a sheep bleating--you're finished?--Thank heavens!--Enough, enough![2]

Solomon terms it "a prose description of a farcial sexual encounter".

[edit] Discography

Given its duration (no more than 20 minutes) it is quite common to find this Horn Concerto on the same CD as Mozart's other three, or in boxed sets of Mozart's concerti for wind instruments or even all his concerti. The Naxos Records CD "Complete Works for Horn & Orchestra" includes, besides the concerti, three rondos for horn and orchestra completed by musicologists. David Jolley's recording of No. 1 with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra on Deutsche Grammophon is paired with Charles Neiding's performance of the Clarinet Concerto, K. 622.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Martha Kingdon Ward, "Mozart and the Bassoon" Music & Letters 30, 1 (1949): 9
  2. ^ Solomon 1995, 357