Departments > Print Music > Choral > Vocal & Choral Scores > Choral Major Works > C.F. Peters Corporation > Mass in c minor K427 (K417a) - Mozart/Landon/Nebois - SATB Vocal Score

C.F. Peters Corporation Mass in c minor K427 (K417a) - Mozart/Landon/Nebois - SATB Vocal Score

SKU: # 157254   |   Model: # EKGM1900   |    Product Reviews0 Reviews  Write a Review

Mass in c minor K427 (K417a) - Mozart/Landon/Nebois - SATB Vocal Score
Notify Me

Buy Online

 Add to Cart

Buy In-Store

Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791)
Editors: H.C. Robbins Landon, Josef Nebois
Format: Vocal Score
Voicing: SATB

Mozart began composing this Mass in 1782. He was betrothed to Constanze Weber at the time; she had fallen gravely ill, and he had made a vow to write a Grand Mass for her recovery. Further, the plan was for Constanze to sing the aria Et incarnatus est (which was to be the centrepiece of the work) at the premiere performance. The Mass was a huge underaking. Before Mozart could complete it, Constanze recovered, their marriage went forward, and Mozart left the Mass unfinished (since he had vowed to write the work entirely on his own inspiration, there was no commissioner, hence no income to be garnered from it, hence no overwhelming compulsion to complete it. It is to be noted, of course, that Mozart did complete Constanze's great solo, the aria Et incarnatus est, but never continued to write a single additional number for the Credo. He also never composed the final movement of the Mass, Agnus Dei - Dona nobis pacem
Duration: 60 minutes

Movements:
  • Kyrie eleison - Christe eleison - Kyrie eleison
  • Gloria in excelsis Deo
  • Credo in unum Deum
  • Credo in unum Deum(chorus)
  • Et incarnatus est (soprano solo)
  • Sanctus
  • Sanctus Dominus Deus Sabaoth (chorus)
  • Benedictus, quivenit in nomine Domini (SSTB quartet)
  • Osanna in excelsis (petite reprise) (chorus)

Q & A


There are currently no questions for this product.

Reviews


There are currently no reviews for this product. Be the first to write one!

Great Additions