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12 Variations in E♭ major on the Romance "Je suis Lindor" from "Le Barbier de Seville" by Pierre Beaumarchais, music by Antoine-Laurent Baudron, K. 354 (Paris, 1778) 6 Variations in F major on the aria "Salve tu, Domine" from the opera "I filosofi immaginarii" by Giovanni Paisiello , K. 398 (Vienna, 1783)
Weihnachtsbaum (English: Christmas Tree; French: Arbre de Noël) is a suite of 12 pieces written by Franz Liszt in 1873–76, with revisions in 1881. The suite exists in versions for solo piano and piano four-hands.
His only full-scale ballets are K. Anh. 10 and K. 367, the rest are all either small stand-alone works or incomplete works. The Gavotte in B-flat, K. 300, isn't technically ballet music, but a dance, and so would nowadays be catalogued with Mozart's other dance music. But the Neue Mozart-Ausgabe regards it as ballet music.
Mozart Piano Concertos Nos 20 and 21. Cambridge Music Handbooks. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-48475-8. Hutchings, Arthur (1997). A Companion to Mozart's Piano Concertos. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-816708-3. Mozart, W. A. Piano Concertos Nos. 1–6 in full score. Dover Publications, New York. ISBN 0-486-44191-1
List of compositions by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; List of solo piano compositions by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; List of concert arias, songs and canons by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; Köchel catalogue; Mozart symphonies of spurious or doubtful authenticity; The Complete Mozart Edition; Fantasia No. 4 (Mozart)
The Piano Concerto No. 24 in C minor, K. 491, is a concerto composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart for keyboard (usually a piano or fortepiano) and orchestra. Mozart composed the concerto in the winter of 1785–1786, finishing it on 24 March 1786, three weeks after completing his Piano Concerto No. 23 in A major .
Twelve Variations on "Ah vous dirai-je, Maman", K. 265/300e, is a piano composition by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, composed when he was around 25 years old (1781 or 1782).). This piece consists of twelve variations on the French folk song "Ah! vous dirai-je, mam
It has four sections: Exsultate jubilate – Allegro ()Fulget amica dies – Secco recitative Tu virginum corona – Andante ()Alleluja – Allegro (F major) Musicologist Stanley Sadie called the final section, "Alleluia", "a jewel of a piece with its high spirits and its wit ... like no other piece of Mozart's; its music speaks unmistakably of his relaxed high spirits at the time he wrote it ...