Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) Sonata for violin & piano No. 27 in G major, K. 379 (K. 373a) 1. Adagio 2. Allegro 3. Thema. Andantino cantabile Henryk Szeryng, violin and Ingrid Haebler, piano Description by Brian Robins [-] Composed in April 1781, the present sonata is one of the last works composed by Mozart while he was in the service of the Archbishop Hieronymus Colloredo of Salzburg. Early in March, Mozart, who had only recently returned from Munich after supervising the first performances of his opera Idomeneo, was summoned by the Archbishop to Vienna along with other members of the archiepiscopal retinue. On April 8, the Archbishop held a concert at the home of his brother, Prince Rudolph Joseph Colloredo. Later that night, Mozart sat down to write to his father Leopold: “Today (for I am writing at eleven o'clock at night) we had a concert where three of my compositions were performed -- new ones, of course; a rondo for a concerto for Brunetti [Antonio Brunetti, the Archbishop's concertmaster
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