Talk:Piano Concerto No. 25 (Mozart)
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[edit] "Emperor"
I had added the "Emperor" tidbit. It was Hutchings that said this was Mozart's "Emperor" Concerto. Subsequent edits had made this point confusing, though. Its certainly never used as a nickname for the concerto but -- as I recall -- Hutchings used the label to compare the symphonic grandeur of the first movement to the later Beethoven work. Theres a similar statement in the article for K271 stating that the work was "Mozart's Eroica". No one calls the ninth concerto "Eroica", but it work does mark a watershed in Mozart's ouevre towards to new, more advanced, compositional style (as the third symphony does in Beethoven's works). Anyhow, the Emperor factoid is not integral to this article, but I thought I would mark here in the discussion page the source of that statement. DavidRF 15:34, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
- Interesting! Thanks for the source. I made the edit after one of my students blithely told me that Mozart wrote the "Emperor" Concerto. There's also a CD listed on Amazon.com that has picked up the nickname. I agree with your solution. Bmwilcox 21:15, 5 August 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Girdlestone reference
The indirect Girdlestone reference should be replaced with something more direct- and while he doesn't write that or anything like what the author of the Kennedy Center notes attributes to him (Girdlestone) in the chapter on concerto no. 21 (25- he omits "concertos 1-4" consistently and understandably) in "Mozart and His Piano Concertos" (pp 415-444, Dover edition of 1964)... though he does write "the quintet in C, to which it is near" - and several statements about its relation to the symphony in C which can also largely be taken the same way) - perhaps Girdlestone made that statement elsewhere and more clearly also. Schissel | Sound the Note! 04:23, 14 November 2007 (UTC)