Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Original file (1,179 × 1,614 pixels, file size: 1.81 MB, MIME type: application/pdf, 37 pages) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Originally the Notenbuch was a bound volume comprising forty-eight pages of blank music paper, with eight staves on each page. Inscribed with the words Pour le clavecin (French: For the harpsichord), it was presented to Nannerl on the occasion of her eighth name day on 26 July 1759 (or possibly her eighth birthday, which fell on the 30th or 31st day of the same month).
allegro Cheerful or brisk; but commonly interpreted as lively, fast all'ottava "at the octave", see ottava alt (Eng.), alt dom, or altered dominant A jazz term which instructs chord-playing musicians such as a jazz pianist or jazz guitarist to perform a dominant (V7) chord with at least one (often both) altered (sharpened or flattened) 5th or 9th
The sections in the Allegro in D major do not repeat; the third section is similar to the first in style but the melody is distinct. [2] The first section lasts until bar 32. It begins in D major, with a repetition of bars 1 through 4, then modulates to the dominant key, A major, in bars 5 and 6.
Allegro The first movement, in D major and 4 4 time, is written in sonata allegro form, with the notable deviation of the recapitulation being the mirror image of the exposition. That is, the recapitulation starts with the second theme, and Mozart waits until the very end to unveil the return of the first theme.
The form is that of a three-movement Italian overture: Allegro, 4 4; Andante, 2 4 (in G minor) Molto allegro, 3 8; All three movements are coloured especially prominently by horns. A rousing first movement in the key of B ♭ major opens the symphony, followed by a more solemn, mournful movement in the relative key of G minor.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's String Quartet No. 15 in D minor, K. 421/417b is the second of his quartets dedicated to Haydn and the only one of the set in a minor key.Though undated in the autograph, [1] it is believed to have been completed in 1783, while his wife Constanze Mozart was in labour with her first child Raimund.
The symphony is scored for two flutes, two horns in C and two horns in F for the first, third and fourth movements, in F and B-flat for the second, and strings.There are no oboes in this symphony; Mozart used flutes instead for the first time.