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Emile Naoumoff plays Mozart's Piano Concerto K467 at age 13

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The opening movement begins quietly with a march figure, but quickly moves to a more lyrical melody interspersed with a fanfare in the winds. The music grows abruptly in volume, with the violins taking up the principal melody over the march theme, which is now played by the brass. This uplifting theme transitions to a brief, quieter interlude distinguished by a sighing motif in the brass. The march returns, eventually transitioning to the entrance of the soloist. The soloist plays a brief Eingang (a type of abbreviated cadenza) before resolving to a trill on the dominant G while the strings play the march in C major. The piano then introduces new material in C major and begins transitioning to the dominant key of G major. Immediately after an orchestral cadence finally announces the arrival of the dominant, the music abruptly shifts to G minor in a passage that is reminiscent of the main theme of the Symphony No. 40 in that key. A series of rising and falling chromatic scales then transition the music to the true second theme of the piece, an ebullient G major theme, which can also be heard in Mozart's Third Horn Concerto. The usual development and recapitulation follow. There is a cadenza at the end of the movement, although Mozart's original has been lost.

Date of composition 1785
Type Concerto
Tonality C Major
Catalogue KV 467
Instruments Piano
Orchestra
In listings Famous Works
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Autotranslations beta Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Concerto pour piano n°21 en do majeur, KV 467
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Concerto per pianoforte n. 21 in do maggiore, KV 467
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Konzert Nr. 21 für Klavier C-dur, KV 467

Emile Naoumoff plays Mozart's Piano Concerto K467 at age 13

24 January 1976 Das Symphonie Orchester Berlin at the Berlin Philharmonic Hall Thomas Mayer, conductor

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