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am_battery wrote:I could not give the answer.almost every kind music mozart had composed: symphony,opera,cantata,concerto,solo sonata,etc..
pml wrote:Ahem, Steltz... Les petit riens (for Paris!)
Melodia wrote:He of course didn't composer anything for things that hadn't been invented yet (wind quintet, etc)
Melodia wrote:Obviously he didn't write a lot of concertos for specific instruments -- trombone, cello, viola, double bass, solo harp, alphorn (his father did though!), but concertos as a whole he did.
He of course didn't compose anything for combinations that hadn't been invented yet (wind quintet, etc) or just whatever random combinations you can think of, or genres that hadn't been (symphonic poem).
He also is missing some earlier forms, like concerto grosso.
But I can't think of any forms that in his time would have been appropriate that he didn't use.
pml wrote:My emphasis, but this isn’t a serious omission when you consider he did write one for flute and harp, and very few composers treated the harp as a concertante instrument at all. (There were rather sexist reasons behind this, primarily that aside from a few virtuoso executants, the harp was viewed as an instrument for women.)
perlnerd666 wrote:Never mind then.
Concertante cello comes to mind.
sbeckmesser wrote:perlnerd666 wrote:Never mind then.
Concertante cello comes to mind.
Is there any Mozart piece with an orchestra where there is an obbligato cello line? There are Haydn symphony movements that have this, but I can't think of any by Mozart. As for a obbligato viola line, fuggeddaboutit.
--Sixtus
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