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Mozart - Piano Sonata No. 14 in C minor, K. 457 complete

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The Piano Sonata No. 14 in C minor, K. 457, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was composed and completed in 1784, with the official date of completion recorded as October 14, 1784 in Mozart's private catalogue of works. It was published in December of 1785 together with the Fantasy in C minor, K. 475, as Opus 11 by the publishing firm Artaria, Mozart's main Viennese publisher. The title page bore a dedication to Thérèse von Trattner, who was one of Mozart's pupils in Vienna. Her husband was an important publisher as well as Mozart's landlord at the time. Eventually, the Trattners would become godparents to four of Mozart's children. The sonata was composed during the approximately 10-year period of Mozart's life as a freelance artist in Vienna after he removed himself from the patronage of the Archbishop of Salzburg in 1781. It is one of the earliest of only six sonatas composed during the Vienna years, and was probably written either as a teaching tool or for personal use. Sonatas during this time were generally written for the domestic sphere - as opposed to a symphony or concerto, they were designed to convey ideas in a small, intimate setting. A typical performance takes about 18 minutes. The work has three movements: I. Molto allegro II. Adagio III. Allegro assai The first movement is written in sonata form. It begins with a fiery Mannheim rocket figure, which appears twice in the first subject, or theme, which makes up m.1 - m. 19. The second subject, which is written in E-flat major, the relative major of C-minor, first appears in - exposition begins transitioning at m. 71 to the development, which spans to m. 99. This portion of the sonata is the most unstable harmonically, running through both F minor and G minor before returning to C-minor. The recapitulation occurs from to m. 168, this time the second subject is in c minor instead of the E-flat major of the exposition, and the coda ends the piece from m. 168 to m. 185. The slow movement is written in rondo form and in E-flat major. It is graceful and tranquil and provides a strong contrast with the first and third movements. The principal theme, or the A subject, occurs from m.1 - m.7. The overall form of the movement is ABACA, with a coda at the end from m. 47 to m. 57. The third movement returns to the dramatic quality of the first movement. It is written in sonata-rondo form. The first subject in the tonic is quite long, and first appears from m.1 to m. 44, then links to the second subject in E-flat major, which appears from m. 47 to . The principal subject returns in incomplete form from to , and also provides a link to the next section. In sonata form, it would be called the development. However, it is fairly short, only running from m. 146 to m. 166, and could be simply termed an episode. The episode leads to the recapitulation, which begins with a modified second subject in E-flat major. Subsequently, the principal subject returns in the tonic, and portions of the episode return from m. 275 to m. 287 before the coda at the end from to . The piece finishes with two dramatic chords. The Fantasy in C minor, K. 475, was completed some seven months after the C minor sonata. Mozart recorded the date of completion as May 20, 1785 in his private catalogue of works. Opinions have differed whether Mozart intended the two to be performed together. Although they were published together as the same opus, Mozart sometimes performed the pieces separately. The Fantasy has by nature a more improvisational quality than the subsequent sonata, and the pairing presents a classical correlation to the baroque combination of fantasy and fugue. Both the fantasy and sonata are linked by a focus on the bass register and octaves in the bass clef. The styles of both Muzio Clementi and C. P. E. Bach have been suggested to have influenced the composition of the fantasy, whether consciously or subconsciously. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- FREE .mp3 and .wav files of all Mozart's music at: FREE sheet music scores of any Mozart piece at: ALSO check out these cool sites: and ------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE: I do not know who the performers of this are, nor the place and date of recording!!! Any suggestions are welcome. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ENJOY!!!! :D

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