
Mozart
Studies of the Autograph Scores
Alan Tyson(Author)
Harvard University Press
Published on 1. March 1990
Book
Paperback/Softback
391 pages
978-0-674-58831-8 (ISBN)
Description
The results and implications of Alan Tyson's work on Mozart have had a profound impact on virtually every aspect of research on this composer: biography, chronology of compositions, working methods, stylistic analysis. Central, perhaps, are Tyson's discoveries on chronology: time and again he has proved that datings, often of large, well-known works, that have been accepted for generations are not only erroneous but based on little more than speculation. This book assembles his major articles, previously scattered through magazines, journals, and festschrifts, plus two unpublished pieces, into a treasure trove for musicologists and music lovers.
Tyson's investigations, using primarily paper analysis, span Mozart's entire career and the full range of genres-string quartets, operas, choral music, keyboard music, concertos, and symphonies. He goes into the genesis of major works such as Cosi fan tutte, the "Prague" Symphony, the Piano Sonata K.333, the "Haydn" quartets, and La clemenza di Tito. His conclusions about chronology bear directly on biographical questions and current accounts of Mozart's stylistic development as well as his compositional methods. We learn here, for example, that the "first" horn concerto was in fact Mozart's last, and that he did not even complete the second movement, which was finished after his death by his pupil Suessmayr. The writing (and, in some cases, rewriting) of his later operas such as Figaro and Cosi fan tutte also lends itself to investigation by the same techniques; this is resulting in the rediscovery of some lost measures and little-known variant versions of arias.
Tyson's style is clear and elegant, and the originality of his work and the soundness of his inferences make this book a pleasure.
Tyson's investigations, using primarily paper analysis, span Mozart's entire career and the full range of genres-string quartets, operas, choral music, keyboard music, concertos, and symphonies. He goes into the genesis of major works such as Cosi fan tutte, the "Prague" Symphony, the Piano Sonata K.333, the "Haydn" quartets, and La clemenza di Tito. His conclusions about chronology bear directly on biographical questions and current accounts of Mozart's stylistic development as well as his compositional methods. We learn here, for example, that the "first" horn concerto was in fact Mozart's last, and that he did not even complete the second movement, which was finished after his death by his pupil Suessmayr. The writing (and, in some cases, rewriting) of his later operas such as Figaro and Cosi fan tutte also lends itself to investigation by the same techniques; this is resulting in the rediscovery of some lost measures and little-known variant versions of arias.
Tyson's style is clear and elegant, and the originality of his work and the soundness of his inferences make this book a pleasure.
Reviews / Votes
This elegantly written and beautifully presented book is, in sum, the most important contribution to Mozart scholarship for many years and must set us thinking afresh about the man and the music. -- Stanley Sadie * Encore * [These] meticulous studies of the surviving material have revolutionized several aspects of our understanding of Mozart's working methods. Tyson's Mozart is thrilling as a collection of primary research which hints at a new picture of how Mozart composed... He has brilliantly solved the long-standing puzzle of Mozart's 'first' horn concerto, showing that it was completed by Suessmayr after the composer's death using a plainsong theme of lamentation... On such painstaking work is advancing scholarship based. -- Nicholas Kenyon * The Observer * Alan Tyson is quite simply the calm, supremely competent expert. His treatise, which explicates how to read Mozart's manuscripts by mastering such tricky matters as watermarks, paper quality and handwriting, is...a model of lucidity, and indeed fascination... No doubt we are...closing in on the real Mozart. -- Peter Gay * London Review of Books * Some of the most striking material...shows not only that Mozart did far more sketching than mythology has suggested, but that it was normal for him to stop composition in the middle of a piece, only to pick it up months, or even years, later... The picture that emerges [is] of Mozart at work on a number of unfinished 'canvases,' with earlier, uncompleted fragments as possible resources for new ones... This attractively written book contains references to over 400 Mozart compositions and is an important contribution to musical scholarship. -- Roger Norrington * Times Literary Supplement *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge, Mass
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
3 examples, 10 tables, 90 figures
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
590 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-674-58831-8 (9780674588318)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Alan Tyson was a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
Content
Abbreviations 1. New Dating Methods: Watermarks and Paper-Studies 2. Redating Mozart: Some Stylistic and Biographical Implications 3. New Light on Mozart's "Prussian" Quartets 4. La clemenza di Tito and Its Chronology 5. A Reconstruction of Nannerl Mozart's Music Book (Notenbuch) 6. The Date of Mozart's Piano Sonata in B-flat, K.333(315c): The "Linz" Sonata? 7. Mozart's "Haydn" Quartets: The Contribution of Paper-Studies 8. The Origins of Mozart's "Hunt" Quartet, K.458 9. The Two Slow Movements of Mozart's "Paris" Symphony, K.297 10. Le nozze di Figaro: Lessons from the Autograph Score 11. The Mozart Fragments in the Mozarteum, Salzburg: A Preliminary Study of Their Chronology and Their Significance 12. The Dates of Mozart's Missa brevis K. 258 and Missa longa K.262(246a): An Investigation into His Klein-Querformat Papers 13. On the Composition of Mozart's Cosi fan tutte 14. Mozart's Use of 10-Staff and 12-Staff Paper 15. Notes on the Genesis of Mozart's "Ein musikalischer Spass," K.522 16. Mozart's D-Major Horn Concerto: Questions of Date and of Authenticity 17. The Rondo for Piano and Orchestra, K.386 18. Some Problems in the Text of Le nozze di Figaro: Did Mozart Have a Hand in Them? Notes Acknowledgments General Index Index of Archival Institutions and Their Holdings Index of Mozart's Compositions