Symphony No. 6 (Mozart)

Symphony No. 6 in F major, K. 43, was composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1767. According to Alfred Einstein in his 1937 revision of the Köchel catalogue, the symphony was probably begun in Vienna and completed in Olomouc, a Moravian town to which the Mozart family fled to escape a Viennese smallpox epidemic;[1] see Mozart and smallpox.

The symphony is in four movements, and is Mozart's first in the key of F. Its initial performance was at Brno on 30 December 1767[1] The autograph of the score is today preserved in the Biblioteka Jagiellońska in Kraków.[2]

Movements and instrumentation

The instrumentation for the first performance was: 2 flutes; 2 oboes; 2 horns; bassoon; strings and keyboard continuo.[1] The flutes are used in the second movement in place of the oboes.[3] For the first time in a symphony, Mozart uses two obligatory viola parts.[4]


\relative c' {
  \key f \major
  \tempo "Allegro"
  f4\f a8. f16 c'4 c |
  c4( a8.) f16 c4 r8 c |
  f8-.[ r g-.] r a-.[ r bes-.] r |
  c4.( a8 bes4) g8( e) |
  f8-. r
}

This is Mozart's first four-movement symphony, in which he introduces the Minuet and Trio for the first time, a feature common in many of his symphonies thereafter. The movements are:

  1. Allegro, 4/4
  2. Andante, 2/4
  3. Menuetto and Trio, 3/4
  4. Allegro, 6/8

The Andante movement uses a theme from Mozart's early Latin opera Apollo et Hyacinthus, K. 38, in which "muted violins sing over pizzicato seconds and divided violas, a ravishing effect".[5]

First performance

The symphony was included in a concert arranged by Count von Schrattenbach, brother of the Archbishop of Salzburg, given by the Mozart family (Leopold Mozart, the 11-year-old Wolfgang Amadeus, and the 15-year-old Maria) on 30 December 1767 at the Taverna in Brno. A local clergyman recorded: "I attended a musical concert in a house in the city known as the "Taverna", at which a Salzburg boy of eleven years and his sister of fifteen years, accompanied on various instruments by inhabitants of Brno, excited everyone's admiration"[6]

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 3 Zaslaw, pp. 109112
  2. Giglberger 2005, p. X.
  3. Neue Mozart-Ausgabe (Score)
  4. Brown 2002, pp. 350–51.
  5. Kenyon, p. 143
  6. Quoted by Zaslaw, pp. 11112 from O. E. Deutsch.

Sources

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.