The Divertimento in E major, K. 563, is a string trio, written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1788, the year in which he completed his last three symphonies (nos. 39–41) and his "Coronation" Piano Concerto. It is his last divertimento and different from his other divertimenti not only in its instrumentation but also in its compositorial ambition and scope.
The work was completed in Vienna on September 27, 1788, and is dedicated to Michael von Puchberg, a friend and fellow Freemason, who lent money to Mozart.[1] The premiere was in Dresden on April 13, 1789, with Anton Teyber taking the violin part, Mozart playing viola and Antonín Kraft playing cello.[2] At the time Mozart was conducting a tour of German cities, on his way to Berlin (see Mozart's Berlin journey).
The work is in six movements:
Recorded performances of the Divertimento range from 41 to 50 minutes.
As Alfred Einstein writes in Mozart: His Character, His Work (and as excerpted in the notes to a Kennedy Center performance), Mozart's only completed string trio shares with most divertimenti this six-movement format, but from that no lightness of tone should be understood – rather, "it is a true chamber-music work, and grew to such large proportions only because it was intended to offer ... something special in the way of art, invention, and good spirits. ... Each instrument is primus inter pares, every note is significant, every note is a contribution to spiritual and sensuous fulfilment in sound." Einstein called it "one of his noblest works".[3]
Early performances of the work, however, were greeted with less enthusiasm. Tully Potter, in his notes to a recording, reports that when the Philharmonic String Trio of London performed the work in 1936, "that pompous old Wagnerian Ernest Newman reported that "the work is over-long, and some of it mere music-spinning of the conventional eighteenth-century type". He did, however, concede that "the Adagio is an impressive piece of work".[4] However, Potter also reports that when members of the Busch Quartet performed it in Basel in 1931, the painter Alfred Heinrich Pellegrini was so impressed that he made a painting of the performance.
Mozart's Divertimento in E major is "one of a kind," according to the notes to an Emerson Quartet performance.[5] However, it is not the first work written for string trio; for example Wenzel Pichl published six trios for violin, viola and cello written at least five years earlier.[6]