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Mozart:- Sinfonia concertante in E flat Major, K 364

Bawoo 2016. 3. 30. 21:32

 

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

 

 

(27 January 1756 – 5 December 1791),

 

Sinfonia concertante in E flat Major, K 364

 

The 10th Great Mountains International Music Festival

Aug. 3. 2013
Alpensia Music Tent, Pyeongchang

Kyung-Wha Chung, violin
Maxim Rysanov, viola
GMMFS Orchestra
Sasha Mäkilä, conductor

 

The Sinfonia Concertante for Violin, Viola and Orchestra in E-flat major, K. 364 (320d), was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

At the time of its composition in 1779, Mozart was on a tour of Europe that included Mannheim and Paris. The composition's complex orchestral dynamics reflects the increasing technical competence of the European orchestra of that era and was strongly influenced by Mozart's visit to the Mannheim court orchestra during his European tour of 1777 to 1779.

 

 

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Violin: Itzhak Perlman
Viola: Pincha Zukerman
Zubin Mehta, Israel Philharmonic.

 

Mozart had been experimenting with the sinfonia concertante genre and this work can be considered his most successful realization in this cross-over genre between symphony and concerto. The piece is scored in three movements for solo violin, solo viola, two oboes, two horns, and strings, the latter including two sections of violas.


The solo viola part is written in D major instead of E flat major, and the instrument tuned a semitone sharper (scordatura technique), to give a more brilliant tone. This technique is uncommon when performed on the modern viola and is used mostly in performance on original instruments.
It has also been arranged for cello in place of the viola part.


I. Allegro maestoso, common time
II. Andante, 3/4, in C minor
III. Presto, 2/4


This Sinfonia Concertante has influenced many arrangers to use these themes. In 1808 an uncredited arrangement of the piece for string sextet Grande Sestetto Concertante was published by Sigmund Anton Steiner. All six parts are divided equally among the six players; it is not presented as soloists with accompaniment.

The opening two melodic phrases of "The Windmills of Your Mind," a song from the 1968 film The Thomas Crown Affair, were adopted from the opening of the second movement of the Sinfonia Concertante.


 

The Sinfonia Concertante was mentioned in William Styron's 1979 novel Sophie's Choice; after a stranger molests Sophie on the subway, she hears the Sinfonia Concertante on the radio, which brings back memories of her childhood in Krakow and snaps her out of her depression.
Variations on the slow second movement were used for the soundtrack to the 1988 Peter Greenaway film Drowning by Numbers by composer Michael Nyman. The original piece is also heard after

each of the drownings in the screenplay.


The American composer and bassist Edgar Meyer was so interested in this work that in 1995 he

wrote a double concerto for double bass, cello and orchestra that, while very different in style, closely mirrors the structure of Mozart's Sinfonia concertante.


The andante movement of this piece was featured in Nuri Bilge Ceylan's 2002 film Uzak.