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Symphony No. 13 (Mozart)

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(Redirected from K. 112) 1771 symphony by W. A. Mozart
Mozart

Symphony No. 13 in F major, K. 112, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, was written in Milan during his second journey to Italy in the autumn of 1771. The symphony is in four movements, the second of which is scored for strings alone. The third movement minuet may have been written earlier, and then incorporated into the symphony—the autograph manuscript shows the minuet copied in Leopold's hand. Nicholas Kenyon describes Symphony No. 13 as the last in "conventional mode"—thereafter "we are in the beginnings of a different world."

Movements and instrumentation

The instrumentation is: strings, 2 oboes, 2 horns, bassoon, continuo.


\relative c'' {
  \tempo "Allegro"
  \key f \major
  \time 3/4
  <f a, f>4\f c a |
  f4 r8 f\p f f |
  es4 r8 es es es |
  d4 r8 d'16\f( e! f8) d-. |
  c8-. f-. a-. c-. bes( |
  <f a,>4
}
  1. Allegro,
    4
  2. Andante,
    4
  3. MenuettoTrio,
    4
  4. Molto allegro,
    8

Performance details

Its probable first performance was at a concert given by Leopold and Wolfgang Mozart at the residence of Albert Michael von Mayr, on 22 or 23 November 1771. This concert may also have seen the premiere of Mozart's 12th symphony.

References

  1. ^ Zaslaw, pp. 190–91
  2. Kenyon, p. 156

Sources

External links

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Biography
Music
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Related
Symphonies by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Unnumbered
Numbered
Adapted from serenades
Lost
  • Symphonies of doubtful authenticity.
  • No. 2 now attributed to Leopold Mozart.
  • No. 3 now attributed to Carl Friedrich Abel (although Mozart changed the instrumentation).
  • Symphonies generally agreed to be spurious today, but included in either the old or new complete editions.
  • No. 37 now attributed to Michael Haydn, except for the slow introduction which Mozart added.
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