Piano Concerto No. 7 (Mozart)
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In 1776, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart composed three independent piano concertos, one of which was the Concerto in F for Three Pianos and Orchestra, No. 7, K. 242. He originally finished K. 242 for three pianos in February of 1776. However, when he eventually recomposed it for himself and another pianist in 1780 in Salzburg, he rearranged it for two pianos, and that is how the piece is often performed today.
It has three movements:
Girdlestone, in his Mozart and his Piano Concertos, describes the concerto and compares one of the themes of its slow movement to similar themes that turn up in later concertos - especially the twenty-fifth (K. 503) - in more developed forms.
[edit] References
- Girdlestone, Cuthbert. Mozart and his Piano Concertos. 2nd edition. 1952: Norman, University of Oklahoma Press. Republished by Dover Publications, 1964, ISBN 0-486-21271-8.
[edit] External links
- Konzert in F für drei bzw. zwei Klaviere („Lodron-Konzert“). KV 242: Score and critical report (German) in the Neue Mozart-Ausgabe
- Piano Concerto No. 7 was available at the International Music Score Library Project.
- Article, source for dates above. Quotes Alfred Einstein's Mozart: His Character, His Work. Einstein discusses the work briefly - two lines in two pages - dismissing it as the least of Mozart's concertos with piano.
- Philadelphia Orchestra article