Violin Sonata No. 25 (Mozart)
| Violin Sonata | |
|---|---|
| No. 25 | |
| by W. A. Mozart | |
First page from the 1781 autograph score | |
| Key | F major |
| Catalogue | K. 376 |
| Period | Classical |
| Composed | 1781 |
| Movements | 3 |
| Premiere | |
| Location | Vienna |
Violin Sonata No. 25, K. 377 in F major by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart is a 1781 sonata in three movements.
History
The work was the third of six violin sonatas published in Vienna by Artaria and Co. in November 1781.[1] This piece was dedicated to the pianist Josepha Barbara Auernhammer.
The work, along with its companion sonatas, received a warm review in 1783 from an anonymous author in the pages of Magazin der Musik:
These sonatas are the only ones of their kind ... They are rich in new ideas, showing traces of the great musical genius of their author. ... Moreover, the violin accompaniment is so ingeniously combined with the piano part that both instruments are continuously employed; and thus these sonatas demand a violinist as accomplished as the pianist.”[2]
The reviewer's remarks reflect the status of the violin sonata in Mozart's time; it was construed primarily as a piano sonata, with the violin part serving as accompaniment; Mozart's work reflects the beginning of the move toward coequal status in this genre.[3]
The popularity of the work is also attested by the fact that five other publishers, in three other cities, issued their own editions:
- Boyer, Paris, ca. 1785
- Hummel, Amsterdam, ca. 1786
- London, Longman and Broderip, ca. 1790
- London, Birchall, ca. 1790
- London, John Bland, ca. 1790[4]
Movements
I. Allegro
It has been said that this movement "overflows with energy". This movement contains multiple triplets and unexpected parts.[1] Of the bass line, Lacroix writes, "The harmonic nature of the bass voice did not preclude Mozart, as Bach did repeatedly, from allowing it to contain moments of melodic interest at which point the typical 2+1 linear texture then becomes a three-voice counterpoint."[5]
II. Andante
This movement contains a theme and six variations in D minor, foreshadowing the finale of his upcoming String Quartet in D minor, K. 421.[1] The sixth variation is a siciliana in 6
8 time.
III. Tempo di menuetto
Two sections of the menuet are repeated – with slight variations – and the violin is only present on the repeats. The trio section is in B-flat major,[2] and the movement ends with repeat of the menuet and a coda.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d Neal Zaslaw; William Cowdery, eds. (1990). The Compleat Mozart: A Guide to the Musical Works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1st ed.). New York: Mozart Bicentennial at Lincoln Center and W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 293–294. ISBN 0393028860.
- ^ a b "Sonata in F, K. 377". Los Angeles Philharmonic. Retrieved 18 November 2025.
- ^ For discussion, see program notes made by Cliff Eisen for the complete recording of the Mozart violin sonatas made by David Breitman and Jean-François Rivest, Analekta AN29821-2: [1].
- ^ Source: the commentary for the Neue Mozart Ausgabe edition of the sonatas; on line at [2].
- ^ Lacroix, Frederic (27 June 2014). "Texture and Balance in the Keyboard and Violin Sonatas of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart". Cornell University Library: 71. Retrieved 16 November 2025.
External links
- 21. Sonate in F, KV 377 (374e): Score in the Neue Mozart-Ausgabe
- Violin Sonata in F major, K.377/374e (W. A. Mozart): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
- Animated score on YouTube, Henryk Szeryng, violin and Ingrid Haebler, piano
- Concert performance on YouTube, Anne-Sophie Mutter, violin, and Lambert Orkislk, piano