Horn Concerto No. 2 (Mozart)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Horn Concerto No. 2 in E-flat major, K. 417 was completed in 1783.

Horn Concerto in E-flat major
No. 2
by W. A. Mozart
The composer in 1782
KeyE-flat major
CatalogueK. 417
GenreConcerto
StyleClassical period
Composed1783 (1783)
MovementsThree (Allegro maestoso, Andante, Rondo (Più allegro))
Scoring

The concerto is scored for solo horn and an orchestra of two oboes, two horns, and strings. This is one of two horn concertos of Mozart to omit bassoons.[1] It is also one of Mozart's two horn concertos to have ripieno horns (horns included in the orchestra besides the soloist), though in contrast to Horn Concerto No. 4, K. 495, the solo horn in this one does not duplicate the first ripieno horn's part in the tutti passages.[2]

Mozart's good-natured ribbing of his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb for whom this and other works were written, is evident in the manuscript's inscription "W. A. Mozart took pity on Leitgeb, ass, ox and fool in Vienna on 27 May 1783."[3]

The final movement of the concerto was used in various movies and TV shows such as Little Einsteins and JFK.[4]

Structure

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The work is in three movements:

  1. Allegro maestoso
  2. Andante (B-flat major)
  3. Rondo (Più allegro) 6/8[5]

Discography

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Given its duration (no more than 20 minutes), the concerto is typically grouped with Mozart's other 3 for the instrument.[citation needed] The foremost example[6] is Dennis Brain's November 1953 recording of the four horn concertos on EMI with the Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Herbert von Karajan.

References

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  1. ^ Martha Kingdon Ward, "Mozart and the Bassoon", Music & Letters 30, 1 (1949): 9
  2. ^ Ralph Leavis, "Mozart's Last Horn Concerto" Music & Letters 34, 4 (1953): 316
  3. ^ Andrew Steptoe, Mozart. New York: Alfred A. Knopf (1997): 94
  4. ^ JFK - Original Soundtrack | Album | AllMusic, retrieved 2024-12-22
  5. ^ Jean-Pierre Marty, The Tempo Indications of Mozart. New Haven & London: Yale University Press (1988): 43. "The very absence of sixteenths is also an incentive towards overly fast tempos, and this is why the finales of the Horn Concertos K. 386b, 417 and 447 are almost always performed faster than 88/264. Yet, the finale of K. 417 ends with a coda marked Più allegro, and the finale of the fourth horn concerto (K. 495), though very similar in style to the other three, is marked Allegro vivace."
  6. ^ 1988 Penguin Guide, p. 679[full citation needed]
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