Piano Concerto No. 13 (Mozart) Explained

Subtitle:No. 13
Image Upright:0.9
Composer:W. A. Mozart
Key:C major
Catalogue:K. 415
Composed:–83
Movements:Three (Allegro vivace, Andante, Allegro)

The Piano Concerto No. 13 in C major, K. 415 (387b) by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was composed in Vienna in 1782–83. It is the third of the first three full concertos Mozart composed for his subscription concerts.

It consists of three movements:

  1. Allegro, in C major and
  2. Andante, in F major and
  3. Allegro, in C major and

The average duration of performance of Concerte für das Pianoforte (vol. 2, no.13), is 23 minutes.[1]

Instrumentation: solo – piano (or harpsichord); orchestra: 2 oboes, 2 bassoons + 2 horns, 2 trumpets + timpani + strings.

Mozart wrote this and the piano concertos nos. 12, K. 414, and 14, K. 449, for his subscription concerts, "either with a large orchestra with wind instruments or merely a Italian: quattro" [with string quartet].

Assessment and reception

This concerto has long had an ambiguous reputation. The first movement starts with a quiet theme, similar to that of the later C major Concerto No. 21, but introduced fugato. The orchestral introduction builds to an impressive tutti, but many writers, including Hutchings and Girdlestone, have considered that after the entry of the keyboard this early promise is somewhat dissipated. The keyboard part itself consists of passages that do not integrate well with the fugato treatment of the ritornellic material, and, as Hutchings comments, the result is that the "whole is less than the sum of the parts".

References

Notes and References

  1. Series XVI editors – Piano Concerto No.13 in C major, K.415/387b (Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus) Petrucci Music Library [Retrieved 2016-06-16]