Historical performance practice in cadenzas for Mozart's concerto for bassoon, K. 191 (186e)

Mozart's Concerto for Bassoon, K. 191 has long been an important part of the Classical era bassoon repertory. Few composers of the Classical period wrote for the bassoon as a solo instrument, and even fewer still paired it with an orchestral backing. K. 191 not only is unique within the bassoon...

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Main Author: Wildey, Sarah Anne
Other Authors: Coelho, Benjamin
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/3404
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3349&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-33492019-10-13T04:58:26Z Historical performance practice in cadenzas for Mozart's concerto for bassoon, K. 191 (186e) Wildey, Sarah Anne Mozart's Concerto for Bassoon, K. 191 has long been an important part of the Classical era bassoon repertory. Few composers of the Classical period wrote for the bassoon as a solo instrument, and even fewer still paired it with an orchestral backing. K. 191 not only is unique within the bassoon repertory, but also stands out in the compositional career of Mozart as being his first completed wind concerto, composed at the age of eighteen. Mozart did not write cadenzas for K. 191; therefore a large part of the performance itself is untouched by Mozart's hand. Depending on personal (or teacher) preference, the performer may write an original cadenza for the performance or use an existing cadenza written by a well-known bassoonist or composer. In either case, the cadenza is removed stylistically from Mozart and almost always removed from the Classical period. While there are many guides on how to write a cadenza in the Classical style, there are none specific to the bassoon and its capabilities, strengths, or weaknesses during this period. Also lacking is an informational resource that critiques cadenzas on how they adhere to or stray from Classical performance practice, and more specifically to the performance abilities of the bassoon. A document that analyzes the abilities of the Classical era bassoon would be a useful guide in an era where accurate performance practice is increasingly sought after, even expected, in live performance. 2012-07-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/3404 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3349&context=etd Copyright 2012 Sarah Anne Wildey Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaCoelho, Benjamin bassoon Classical Mozart Performance practice Music
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic bassoon
Classical
Mozart
Performance practice
Music
spellingShingle bassoon
Classical
Mozart
Performance practice
Music
Wildey, Sarah Anne
Historical performance practice in cadenzas for Mozart's concerto for bassoon, K. 191 (186e)
description Mozart's Concerto for Bassoon, K. 191 has long been an important part of the Classical era bassoon repertory. Few composers of the Classical period wrote for the bassoon as a solo instrument, and even fewer still paired it with an orchestral backing. K. 191 not only is unique within the bassoon repertory, but also stands out in the compositional career of Mozart as being his first completed wind concerto, composed at the age of eighteen. Mozart did not write cadenzas for K. 191; therefore a large part of the performance itself is untouched by Mozart's hand. Depending on personal (or teacher) preference, the performer may write an original cadenza for the performance or use an existing cadenza written by a well-known bassoonist or composer. In either case, the cadenza is removed stylistically from Mozart and almost always removed from the Classical period. While there are many guides on how to write a cadenza in the Classical style, there are none specific to the bassoon and its capabilities, strengths, or weaknesses during this period. Also lacking is an informational resource that critiques cadenzas on how they adhere to or stray from Classical performance practice, and more specifically to the performance abilities of the bassoon. A document that analyzes the abilities of the Classical era bassoon would be a useful guide in an era where accurate performance practice is increasingly sought after, even expected, in live performance.
author2 Coelho, Benjamin
author_facet Coelho, Benjamin
Wildey, Sarah Anne
author Wildey, Sarah Anne
author_sort Wildey, Sarah Anne
title Historical performance practice in cadenzas for Mozart's concerto for bassoon, K. 191 (186e)
title_short Historical performance practice in cadenzas for Mozart's concerto for bassoon, K. 191 (186e)
title_full Historical performance practice in cadenzas for Mozart's concerto for bassoon, K. 191 (186e)
title_fullStr Historical performance practice in cadenzas for Mozart's concerto for bassoon, K. 191 (186e)
title_full_unstemmed Historical performance practice in cadenzas for Mozart's concerto for bassoon, K. 191 (186e)
title_sort historical performance practice in cadenzas for mozart's concerto for bassoon, k. 191 (186e)
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2012
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/3404
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3349&context=etd
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