Mozart's Piano Sonatas
Mozart's piano sonatas form a richly diverse and significant part of his instrumental output, and span much of his mature composing career, thereby representing a microcosm of the composer's changing style. Part I examines the contexts in which the sonatas were composed and performed, and reviews likely sources of influence. Part II concentrates on the genesis of the sonatas and the surviving autographs, which reveal important information about Mozart's compositional process. In Part III the music is studied from the standpoint of rhetoric - a discipline featured in numerous contemporary aesthetic and theoretical textbooks on music - and proceeds through an investigation of the nature of the musical ideas, followed by a discussion of formal design and finally a consideration of the style. The resulting picture affords a cross-section of Mozart's compositional strategies.
- The first English-language study of Mozart's piano sonatas
- Includes information on the most recently discovered autographs of the sonatas
- Discusses Mozart's style in relation to contemporary musical theory, in particular the application of rhetoric to music
Reviews & endorsements
"Performers and scholars who have spent years in the companionship of these sonatas will find Irving's study a useful entry point into their sources and recent critical literature." Michelle Fillion, Notes
Product details
April 1997Hardback
9780521496315
240 pages
236 × 162 × 22 mm
0.45kg
2 b/w illus. 35 music examples
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Part I. Contexts:
- 1. The solo sonata in context
- 2. Stylistic models for Mozart's sonatas
- Part II. Sources:
- 3 Six sonatas, K.279–84
- 4. Three sonatas, K.309–11
- 5. Four sonatas, K.330–2, K.333
- 6. Fantasia and Sonata in C minor, K.475 and 457
- 7. Later Viennese sonatas: K.533 and 494, K.545, K.570, K.576
- 8. Fragments: Part III. Style:
- 9. Eighteenth-century views of sonata form
- 10. Pre-compositional choices - the rhetorical inventio
- 11. Dispositio: rhetoric and design
- 12. The rhetorical elocutio
- Notes, Select bibliography
- Index.