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Baerenreiter Verlag Concerto for Bassoon and Orchestra in B-flat Major KV 191 (186e) - Mozart/Giegling - Study Score - Book
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Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Editor: Franz Giegling
Format: Book, Urtext Edition
Version: Study Score
Throughout his career Mozart had a special feeling for the wind instruments. Not only did he add a distinctive flavour to the wind band in his orchestral music -- indeed, his writing for winds became a defining and inimitable feature of his music -- he also wrote compositions for wind players in his circle of friends.
The autograph score has disappeared, and all that has come down to us is a set of printed parts published by Andre in Offenbach for the first time.
This is Mozarts very first wind concerto altogether.
The relation between the soloist and the orchestra is not so much one of opposition as of complementarity, the bassoon embroidering the bass line in "leaps and runs" in much the same manner as, say, figured basses were once treated by the viola da gamba. The solo part, rather than being virtuoso and domineering, enters into a dialogue with the "lively participation of the orchestra".
Editor: Franz Giegling
Format: Book, Urtext Edition
Version: Study Score
Throughout his career Mozart had a special feeling for the wind instruments. Not only did he add a distinctive flavour to the wind band in his orchestral music -- indeed, his writing for winds became a defining and inimitable feature of his music -- he also wrote compositions for wind players in his circle of friends.
The autograph score has disappeared, and all that has come down to us is a set of printed parts published by Andre in Offenbach for the first time.
This is Mozarts very first wind concerto altogether.
The relation between the soloist and the orchestra is not so much one of opposition as of complementarity, the bassoon embroidering the bass line in "leaps and runs" in much the same manner as, say, figured basses were once treated by the viola da gamba. The solo part, rather than being virtuoso and domineering, enters into a dialogue with the "lively participation of the orchestra".
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