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{{short description|Work by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart}}
The '''Symphony No. 39 in E-flat major''' of ], ] 543, was completed 26 June, 1788.<ref>Deutsch 1965, 320</ref>
{{Infobox musical composition
|name=Symphony No. 39
|composer=]
|image = Mozart-1783-lange.jpg
|image_upright =
|caption = Mozart c. 1783
|key=]
|catalogue=]. 543
|composed={{start date|1788}}
|movements=four}}
The '''Symphony No. 39''' in ] of ], ]&nbsp;543, was completed on 26 June 1788.<ref name="Deutsch 1965, 320">{{harvnb|Deutsch|1965|p=320}}</ref>


==Composition and premiere== ==Composition==


The 39th Symphony is the first of a set of three (his last symphonies) that Mozart composed in rapid succession during the summer of 1788. No. ] was completed 25 July and No. ] 10 August. <ref>Deutsch 1965, 320</ref> Around the same time, Mozart was writing his ]s in E and C major, his '']'', and a violin sonatina. Mozart biographer ] has suggested that Mozart took ]'s ], in the same key, as a model.<ref>"But, as regards the E-flat Symphony , it was probably the beginning of a symphony by Michael of 14 August 1783&mdash;Mozart was then in Salzburg and may have become acquainted with the work&mdash;that supplied the stimulus for the first Allegro: Ex. 7 Similarly with the ''Adagio affettuoso'' of the Haydn work and Mozart's Andante." (Einstein 1945, 127)</ref> The Symphony No. 39 is the first of a set of three (his last ]) that Mozart composed in rapid succession during the summer of 1788. No. ] was completed on 25 July and No. ] on 10 August.<ref name="Deutsch 1965, 320" /> ] argues that Mozart composed the three symphonies as a unified work, pointing, among other things, to the fact that the Symphony No. 39 has a grand introduction (in the manner of an ]) but no ].<ref>{{cite news|last1=Clements|first1=Andrew|title=Mozart: The Last Symphonies review a thrilling journey through a tantalising new theory|url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/jul/23/mozart-last-symphonies-nikolaus-harnoncourt-review|work=]|date=23 July 2014}}</ref>


Around the time that he composed the three symphonies, Mozart was writing his ]s in ] and ] (K. 542 and K. 548), his '']'' (K. 545), and a ] ] (K. 547). Mozart biographer ] has suggested that Mozart took ]'s ], in the same key, as a model.<ref>"But, as regards the ] Symphony , it was probably the beginning of a symphony by Michael of 14 August 1783&mdash;Mozart was then in Salzburg and may have become acquainted with the work&mdash;that supplied the stimulus for the first ]: Ex. 7 ]] Similarly with the ] ] of the Haydn work and Mozart's ]." {{harv|Einstein|1945|p=127}}</ref>
It seems to be impossible to determine the date of the premiere of the 39th Symphony on the basis of currently available evidence; in fact, it cannot be established whether the symphony was ever performed in the composer's lifetime. According to Deutsch (1965), around the time Mozart wrote the work, he was preparing to hold a series of "Concerts in the Casino", in a new casino in the Spiegelgasse owned by Philipp Otto. Mozart even sent a pair of tickets for this series to his friend ]. But it seems impossible to determine whether the concert series was held, or was cancelled for lack of interest.<ref>Deutsch 1965, 320</ref> In addition, in the period up to the end of his life, Mozart participated in various other concerts whose program included an unidentified symphony; these also could have been the occasion of the premiere of the 39th (for details, see ]).

== Premiere ==
It seems to be impossible to determine the date of the premiere of the 39th Symphony on the basis of currently available evidence; in fact, it cannot be established whether the symphony was ever performed in the composer's lifetime. According to {{harvp|Deutsch|1965}}, around the time Mozart wrote the work, he was preparing to hold a series of "Concerts in the Casino", in a new casino in the Spiegelgasse owned by Philipp Otto. Mozart even sent a pair of tickets for this series to his friend ]. But it seems impossible to determine whether the concert series was held or was cancelled for lack of interest.<ref name="Deutsch 1965, 320" /> In addition, in the period up to the end of his life, Mozart participated in various other concerts the programs of which included an unidentified symphony; these also could have been the occasion of the premiere of the 39th (for details, see ]).

===First eyewitness account===

However, we now have what is likely the first known eyewitness account of the performance of the 39th Symphony. An all-Mozart memorial concert took place in Hamburg in March 1792, where the verified performance of this symphony was noted by an eyewitness named Iwan Anderwitsch, who describes the start of the symphony as follows:
{{quote|The opening is so majestic that it so surprised even the coldest, most insensitive listener and non-expert, that even if he wanted to chat, it prevented him from being inattentive, and thus, so to speak, put him in a position to become all ears. It then becomes fiery, full, ineffably grand and rich in ideas, with striking variety in almost all obbligato parts, that it is nearly impossible to follow so rapidly with ear and feeling, and one is nearly paralyzed. This actual paralysis became visible in various connoisseurs and friends of music, and some admitted that they would never have been able to think or imagine they would hear something like this performed so splendidly in Hamburg.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Black|first1=David|title=A personal response to the Mozart memorial concert in Hamburg and the Symphony in E-flat (K. 543)|url=https://sites.google.com/site/mozartdocuments/documents/1792-02-19-anderwitsch|website=Mozart: New Documents, edited by Dexter Edge and David Black|access-date=May 10, 2017}}</ref>}}


In modern times, the work is part of the core symphonic repertoire and is frequently performed and recorded. In modern times, the work is part of the core symphonic repertoire and is frequently performed and recorded.


==Instrumentation and movements== ==Instrumentation and movements==
The symphony is scored for ], two ]s, two ]s, two ]s, two ]s, ] and ].


{{ external media|float=center|width=270px|audio1=You may hear Mozart's Symphony No. 39 in E flat major, K. 543 performed by ] and the ] in 1960 }}
The symphony is scored for ], pairs of ]s, ]s, ]s and ]s, ] and ], and consists of four ]s:
There are four ]s:


{{Ordered list|type=upper-roman|
# '']''
|], {{music|cut-time}} (])<ref>Older scores show the introduction in {{music|time|4|4}}. See the '']'' for verification of the cut time marking.</ref> — ], {{music|time|3|4}} (in ])
# '']''
|] ] ] in ], {{music|time|2|4}} (in modified sonata form without ])
# '']: Trio''
|] (Allegretto) — Trio, {{music|time|3|4}} (in compound ])
# '']''
|Allegro, {{music|time|2|4}} (in sonata form)
}}


===I. Adagio – Allegro===
The first movement opens with a majestic introduction with fanfares heard in the brass section. This is followed by an Allegro in ], though while several features - the loud outburst following the soft opening, for instance - connect it with the ] school that influences the earliest of his symphonies. The independence of the winds and greater interplay of the parts in general, and the fact that the second theme group in those earlier symphonies was (to paraphrase ]) practically always completely trivial, which is not the case here, combine with the second group which contains several themes, including a particularly felicitous "walking theme". These are just a very few of the points that distinguish this movement from those works, from which it has more differences than similarities.
:<score vorbis="1">
\relative c' {
\key es \major
\tempo "Adagio"
\time 2/2
\tempo 4 = 50
<es g,>2\f q4.. q16 |
q2 r8 bes''32\p( as g f es d c bes as) |
<aes, d>2\f q4.. q16 |
q2
}
</score>
:<score vorbis="1">
\version "2.14.2"
\relative c' {
\clef "treble"
\tempo "Allegro"
\key ees \major
\time 3/4
\tempo 4 = 120
r4 ees4\p (g)
bes2. ~
bes4 (g' f
ees2 d4)
r4 d4 (f)
bes,2. ~
bes4 (d, f)
aes2 (g4)
}
</score>


The first movement opens with a majestic introduction with ]s heard in the ]. This is followed by an Allegro in ], though while several features – the loud outburst following the soft opening, for instance – connect it with the ] school that influences the earliest of his symphonies. The independence of the ] and greater interplay of the parts in general, and the fact that the second ] group contains several themes (including a particularly felicitous "walking theme") compared to those earlier symphonies whose second groups were practically always completely trivial, are just a very few of the points that distinguish this movement from those earlier works, from which it has more differences than similarities.{{Citation needed|date=September 2018}}
The slow movement, in abridged sonata form, i.e. no development section (), starts quietly in the ] and expands into the rest of the orchestra. Quiet main material and energetic, somewhat agitated transitions characterize this movement. Comparison with the ] of ] suggests the latter may have had this work at the back of his mind.
The work has a very interesting minuet and trio. The trio is an Austrian folk dance called a "landler" and features a clarinet solo. The forceful Menuetto is set off by the trio's unusual tint of the second clarinet playing ]s in its low (]) register.


===II. Andante con moto===
The finale is another sonata form whose main theme, like that of the later string quintet in D, is mostly a ], here ascending and descending. The ] section is dramatic; there is no ], but both the exposition, and the development through the end of the recapitulation, are requested to be and often are, repeated.
:<score vorbis="1">
\relative c' {
\clef "treble"
\tempo "Andante con moto"
\key aes \major
\time 2/4
\tempo 4 = 60
ees4\p (f16. g32 aes16. f32)
ees8 r8 aes16. (g32) bes16. (aes32)
c16. (bes32) des16. (c32) ees8-. ees-.
ees4 (ees,8) r8
ees4 (f16. g32 aes16. f32)
ees8 r8 aes16. (g32) bes16. (aes32)
c16. (bes32) d16. (c32) ees8-. bes'-.
bes4 (ees,8) r8 \bar ":|."
}
</score>
The slow movement, in abridged sonata form, i.e. no development section,<ref>http://hem.bredband.net/urigonzalez/treitler_imagination_chapter7.htm {{Dead link|date=November 2010}}</ref> starts quietly in the ] and expands into the rest of the ]. Quiet main material and energetic, somewhat agitated transitions characterize this movement.{{Citation needed|date=September 2018}} The key is ], the ] of ].


=== III. Menuetto (Allegretto) ===
==Notes==
:<score vorbis="1">
\relative c' {
\clef "treble"
\tempo "Menuetto"
\key ees \major
\time 3/4
\tempo 4 = 120
<<{<g ees'>4\f s2 } \\ { \stemUp ees''2.}>>
bes,8-. ees-. c-. ees-. bes-. ees-.
\stemDown c-. ees-. aes-. c-. ees-. aes-.
c4 r4 r4
<<{<d,, bes'>4\f s2 } \\ { \stemUp bes''2.}>>
\stemUp aes,,8-. bes-. g-. bes-. aes-. bes-.
g-. bes-. ees-. g-. bes-. ees-.
\stemDown g4 r4 g\p
g\fp (d es)
g\fp (d es)
\grace bes'16 (aes4)-.\p aes-. aes-.
aes2 (g4)
f f g8 (ees)
d4 d ees8 (c)
bes4-! bes (d)
bes r4 r4 \bar ":|."
}
</score>
The work has a very interesting minuet and trio. The trio is an Austrian folk dance called a "]" and features a clarinet solo. The forceful Menuetto is set off by the trio's unusual tint of the second clarinet playing ]s in its low (]) register. The ] for this particular folk dance derived from local drinking songs which were popular in Vienna during the late 18th century.{{Citation needed|date=September 2018}}


===IV. Allegro===
<references/>
:<score vorbis="1">
\relative c'' {
\clef "treble"
\tempo "Allegro"
\key ees \major
\time 2/4
\tempo 4 = 120
\partial 4 \partial 8 g'16-.\p aes-.
bes (aes) g-. f-. ees8-. f-.
bes,4. c16 d
ees (d) c-. bes-. aes g aes bes
g4. aes16 bes
c8 d16 ees f (g) aes-. f-.
ees (d) c-. bes-. ees8 f16 g
aes8 aes g g
f16 (d) ees-. c-. bes8
}
</score>
The ] is another sonata form whose main theme, like that of the ], is mostly a ], here ascending and descending. The ] section is dramatic; there is no ], but both the ], and the development through the end of the ], are requested to be, and often are, repeated.{{Citation needed|date=September 2018}}


==References== ==References==
===Notes===
<references />


===Sources===
*Deutsch, Otto Erich (1965) ''Mozart: A Documentary Biography''. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
*{{cite book|last=Deutsch|first=Otto Erich|author-link=Otto Erich Deutsch|year=1965|title=Mozart: A Documentary Biography|location=Stanford|publisher=Stanford University Press}}
*Einstein, Alfred (1945) ''Mozart: His Character, His Work'', translated into English by Arthur Mendel & Nathan Broder. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
*{{cite book|last=Einstein|first=Alfred|author-link=Alfred Einstein|year=1945|title=Mozart: His Character, His Work|translator=Arthur Mendel & Nathan Broder|location=Oxford|publisher=Oxford University Press}}


==External links== ==External links==
* {{NMA|111|18|112|3|Sinfonie in E-flat KV 543}} *{{NMA|111|1|112|3|Sinfonie in E-flat KV 543}}
*{{IMSLP|work=Symphony No.39 in E-flat major, K.543 (Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus)|cname=Symphony No. 39}}
*
*], , apartment where Mozart wrote his last three symphonies
* {{IMSLP2|id=Symphony_No.39_%28Mozart%2C_Wolfgang_Amadeus%29|cname=Symphony No. 39}}


{{Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart}}
{{MozartSymphonies}}
{{Mozart symphonies}}
{{Portal bar|Classical music}}
{{Authority control}}


] ]
]

]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 05:31, 23 January 2025

Work by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Symphony No. 39
by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Mozart c. 1783
KeyE♭ major
CatalogueK. 543
Composed1788 (1788)
Movementsfour

The Symphony No. 39 in E♭ major of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, K. 543, was completed on 26 June 1788.

Composition

The Symphony No. 39 is the first of a set of three (his last symphonies) that Mozart composed in rapid succession during the summer of 1788. No. 40 was completed on 25 July and No. 41 on 10 August. Nikolaus Harnoncourt argues that Mozart composed the three symphonies as a unified work, pointing, among other things, to the fact that the Symphony No. 39 has a grand introduction (in the manner of an overture) but no coda.

Around the time that he composed the three symphonies, Mozart was writing his piano trios in E major and C major (K. 542 and K. 548), his sonata facile (K. 545), and a violin sonatina (K. 547). Mozart biographer Alfred Einstein has suggested that Mozart took Michael Haydn's Symphony No. 26, in the same key, as a model.

Premiere

It seems to be impossible to determine the date of the premiere of the 39th Symphony on the basis of currently available evidence; in fact, it cannot be established whether the symphony was ever performed in the composer's lifetime. According to Deutsch (1965), around the time Mozart wrote the work, he was preparing to hold a series of "Concerts in the Casino", in a new casino in the Spiegelgasse owned by Philipp Otto. Mozart even sent a pair of tickets for this series to his friend Michael von Puchberg. But it seems impossible to determine whether the concert series was held or was cancelled for lack of interest. In addition, in the period up to the end of his life, Mozart participated in various other concerts the programs of which included an unidentified symphony; these also could have been the occasion of the premiere of the 39th (for details, see Symphony No. 40 (Mozart)).

First eyewitness account

However, we now have what is likely the first known eyewitness account of the performance of the 39th Symphony. An all-Mozart memorial concert took place in Hamburg in March 1792, where the verified performance of this symphony was noted by an eyewitness named Iwan Anderwitsch, who describes the start of the symphony as follows:

The opening is so majestic that it so surprised even the coldest, most insensitive listener and non-expert, that even if he wanted to chat, it prevented him from being inattentive, and thus, so to speak, put him in a position to become all ears. It then becomes fiery, full, ineffably grand and rich in ideas, with striking variety in almost all obbligato parts, that it is nearly impossible to follow so rapidly with ear and feeling, and one is nearly paralyzed. This actual paralysis became visible in various connoisseurs and friends of music, and some admitted that they would never have been able to think or imagine they would hear something like this performed so splendidly in Hamburg.

In modern times, the work is part of the core symphonic repertoire and is frequently performed and recorded.

Instrumentation and movements

The symphony is scored for flute, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani and strings.

External audio
audio icon You may hear Mozart's Symphony No. 39 in E flat major, K. 543 performed by Otto Klemperer and the Philharmonia Orchestra in 1960 Here on Archive.org

There are four movements:

  1. Adagio, cut time (Alla breve) — Allegro,
    4 (in sonata form)
  2. Andante con moto in A♭ major,
    4 (in modified sonata form without development)
  3. Menuetto (Allegretto) — Trio,
    4 (in compound ternary form)
  4. Allegro,
    4 (in sonata form)

I. Adagio – Allegro


\relative c' {
  \key es \major
  \tempo "Adagio"
  \time 2/2
  \tempo 4 = 50
  <es g,>2\f q4.. q16 |
  q2 r8 bes''32\p( as g f es d c bes as) |
  <aes, d>2\f q4.. q16 |
  q2
}

\version "2.14.2"
 \relative c' {
         \clef "treble" 
         \tempo "Allegro"
         \key ees \major
         \time 3/4 
         \tempo 4 = 120
      r4 ees4\p (g)
      bes2. ~
      bes4 (g' f
      ees2 d4)
      r4 d4 (f)
      bes,2. ~
      bes4 (d, f)
      aes2 (g4)
}

The first movement opens with a majestic introduction with fanfares heard in the brass section. This is followed by an Allegro in sonata form, though while several features – the loud outburst following the soft opening, for instance – connect it with the galant school that influences the earliest of his symphonies. The independence of the winds and greater interplay of the parts in general, and the fact that the second theme group contains several themes (including a particularly felicitous "walking theme") compared to those earlier symphonies whose second groups were practically always completely trivial, are just a very few of the points that distinguish this movement from those earlier works, from which it has more differences than similarities.

II. Andante con moto


 \relative c' {
         \clef "treble" 
         \tempo "Andante con moto"
         \key aes \major
         \time 2/4 
         \tempo 4 = 60
      ees4\p (f16. g32 aes16. f32)
      ees8 r8 aes16. (g32) bes16. (aes32)
      c16. (bes32) des16. (c32) ees8-. ees-.
      ees4 (ees,8) r8
      ees4 (f16. g32 aes16. f32)
      ees8 r8 aes16. (g32) bes16. (aes32)
      c16. (bes32) d16. (c32) ees8-. bes'-.
      bes4 (ees,8) r8 \bar ":|."
}

The slow movement, in abridged sonata form, i.e. no development section, starts quietly in the strings and expands into the rest of the orchestra. Quiet main material and energetic, somewhat agitated transitions characterize this movement. The key is A♭ major, the subdominant of E♭ major.

III. Menuetto (Allegretto)


 \relative c' {
         \clef "treble" 
         \tempo "Menuetto"
         \key ees \major
         \time 3/4 
         \tempo 4 = 120
     <<{<g ees'>4\f s2 } \\ { \stemUp ees''2.}>>
     bes,8-. ees-. c-. ees-. bes-. ees-.
    \stemDown  c-. ees-. aes-. c-. ees-. aes-.
     c4 r4 r4
     <<{<d,, bes'>4\f s2 } \\ { \stemUp bes''2.}>>
      \stemUp aes,,8-. bes-. g-. bes-. aes-. bes-.
    g-. bes-. ees-. g-. bes-. ees-.
    \stemDown g4 r4 g\p
     g\fp (d es)
     g\fp (d es)
    \grace bes'16 (aes4)-.\p aes-. aes-.
     aes2 (g4)
     f f g8 (ees)
     d4 d ees8 (c)
     bes4-! bes (d)
     bes r4 r4   \bar ":|."
 }

The work has a very interesting minuet and trio. The trio is an Austrian folk dance called a "Ländler" and features a clarinet solo. The forceful Menuetto is set off by the trio's unusual tint of the second clarinet playing arpeggios in its low (chalumeau) register. The melody for this particular folk dance derived from local drinking songs which were popular in Vienna during the late 18th century.

IV. Allegro


 \relative c'' {
         \clef "treble" 
         \tempo "Allegro"
         \key ees \major
         \time 2/4 
         \tempo 4 = 120
     \partial 4 \partial 8   g'16-.\p aes-.
     bes (aes) g-. f-. ees8-. f-.
     bes,4. c16 d
     ees (d) c-. bes-. aes g aes bes
     g4. aes16 bes
     c8 d16 ees f (g) aes-. f-.
     ees (d) c-. bes-. ees8 f16 g
     aes8 aes g g
     f16 (d) ees-. c-. bes8
 }

The finale is another sonata form whose main theme, like that of the later string quintet in D, is mostly a scale, here ascending and descending. The development section is dramatic; there is no coda, but both the exposition, and the development through the end of the recapitulation, are requested to be, and often are, repeated.

References

Notes

  1. ^ Deutsch 1965, p. 320
  2. Clements, Andrew (23 July 2014). "Mozart: The Last Symphonies review – a thrilling journey through a tantalising new theory". The Guardian.
  3. "But, as regards the E-flat Symphony , it was probably the beginning of a symphony by Michael of 14 August 1783—Mozart was then in Salzburg and may have become acquainted with the work—that supplied the stimulus for the first Allegro: Ex. 7 Similarly with the Adagio affettuoso of the Haydn work and Mozart's Andante." (Einstein 1945, p. 127)
  4. Black, David. "A personal response to the Mozart memorial concert in Hamburg and the Symphony in E-flat (K. 543)". Mozart: New Documents, edited by Dexter Edge and David Black. Retrieved May 10, 2017.
  5. Older scores show the introduction in
    4. See the Neue Mozart-Ausgabe for verification of the cut time marking.
  6. http://hem.bredband.net/urigonzalez/treitler_imagination_chapter7.htm

Sources

  • Deutsch, Otto Erich (1965). Mozart: A Documentary Biography. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • Einstein, Alfred (1945). Mozart: His Character, His Work. Translated by Arthur Mendel & Nathan Broder. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

External links

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Biography
Music
Editions
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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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