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Serenade No. 5 (Mozart)

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(Redirected from K. 213a) 1775 composition by W. A. Mozart

The Serenade No. 5 in D major, K. 204/213a was written on 5 August 1775 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart for ceremonies at the University of Salzburg. The work is very similar to the serenade K. 203, composed for Salzburg the previous summer.

Structure

The serenade is scored for two oboes (doubling flutes), bassoon, two horns in D, A, and G, two trumpets in D, and strings. There are seven movements:

  1. Allegro assai, 4/4
  2. Andante moderato in A major, 3/4
  3. Allegro in A major, 2/2
  4. Menuetto & Trio, 3/4
  5. in G major, 2/4
  6. Menuetto and Trio, 3/4
  7. Andantino Grazioso, 2/4 – Allegro, 3/8

The March in D, K. 215/213b, was used as an introduction or exit for this work.

The second, third and fourth movements all feature the solo violin prominently, forming a three-movement violin concerto within the serenade. This is similar to the K. 203 serenade from the previous year. Mozart probably played the solo violin part himself.

Like most of his orchestral serenades, a symphony was arranged from a subset of the serenade's movements. The "Serenade Symphony" for this work consists of movements one, five, six and seven (the non-concerto movements).

Notes

  1. ^ Zaslaw, Neal, The Compleat Mozart: a Guide to the Musical Works, pp. 233–234 (New York, 1990) ISBN 0-393-02886-0
  2. Brown, A. Peter, The Symphonic Repertoire, vol. 2. Indiana University Press (ISBN 025333487X), pp. 340–341 (2002).

External links

Serenades by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

List of compositions by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

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.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
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