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><channel><title>Bret Pimentel, woodwinds &#187; Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart</title> <atom:link href="http://bretpimentel.com/tag/wolfgang-amadeus-mozart/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://bretpimentel.com</link> <description>Saxophone, flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, folk and ethnic woodwinds</description> <lastBuildDate>Mon, 21 May 2012 12:07:12 +0000</lastBuildDate> <language>en</language> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=</generator> <item><title>Woodwind doubling recital program, Northwestern University, 1950</title><link>http://bretpimentel.com/woodwind-doubling-recital-program-northwestern-university-1950/</link> <comments>http://bretpimentel.com/woodwind-doubling-recital-program-northwestern-university-1950/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Mon, 01 Nov 2010 12:56:32 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Bret</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[History]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Bruce Howden]]></category> <category><![CDATA[George Frideric Handel]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Georges Hue]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Jacques Ibert]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Leonard Bernstein]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Paul Hindemith]]></category> <category><![CDATA[recital]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Robert James Tootelian]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart]]></category> <category><![CDATA[woodwind doublers]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.bretpimentel.com/?p=3469</guid> <description><![CDATA[A new Internet friend shared this gem with me (click for slightly larger): If you know these pieces (I&#8217;m familiar with all but the Howden&#8212;anybody know this one?), you know that this is a very impressive program. None of these are filler pieces, and the Mozart and the Ibert strike me as particularly large and<a
href="http://bretpimentel.com/woodwind-doubling-recital-program-northwestern-university-1950/" class="more-link">Read&#160;more&#160;&#8594;</a>]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A new Internet friend shared this gem with me (click for slightly larger):</p><p><a
href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=aHR0cDovL3N0YXRpYy5icmV0cGltZW50ZWwuY29tL3dwLWNvbnRlbnQvdXBsb2Fkcy8yMDEwLzEwL3Rvb3RlbGlhbl9wcm9ncmFtLmpwZw=="><img
class="alignnone size-full wp-image-3487" title="Program" src="http://static.bretpimentel.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/tootelian_program_small.jpg" alt="" width="480" height="872" /></a></p><p><span
id="more-3469"></span>If you know these pieces (I&#8217;m familiar with all but the Howden&#8212;anybody know this one?), you know that this is a very impressive program. None of these are filler pieces, and the Mozart and the Ibert strike me as particularly large and challenging.</p><p>I like the use of the understated <a
href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=aHR0cDovL2JyZXRwaW1lbnRlbC5jb20vd2hhdHMtaW4tYS1uYW1lLXdoYXQtZG91YmxlcnMtY2FsbC10aGVtc2VsdmVzLw==">term</a> &#8220;instrumentalist&#8221; here. And I&#8217;m glad that smoking in the recital hall is no longer an issue.</p><p>I asked the person who sent me this, a member of Mr. Tootelian&#8217;s family, if it would be all right if I shared this with my readers. Mr. Tootelian, now retired, kindly gave his consent. <img
src="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?view=1&#038;post_id=3469" width="1" height="1" style="display: none;" /></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://bretpimentel.com/woodwind-doubling-recital-program-northwestern-university-1950/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>The woodwind section in Mozart&#8217;s late symphonies</title><link>http://bretpimentel.com/the-woodwind-section-in-mozarts-late-symphonies/</link> <comments>http://bretpimentel.com/the-woodwind-section-in-mozarts-late-symphonies/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2003 06:00:34 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Bret</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[historical]]></category> <category><![CDATA[orchestral]]></category> <category><![CDATA[symphony]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://bretpimentel.com/blog/?p=558</guid> <description><![CDATA[Introduction The woodwind section of the symphony orchestra has long held a place of preeminence. Woodwind historian Anthony Baines gushes: &#8220;&#8230;the woodwind [section] is a small cluster of musicians in whom the greatest virtuosity in the symphony or opera orchestra is concentrated. It is the orchestra&#8217;s principal solo section&#8230; They are stars because composers for<a
href="http://bretpimentel.com/the-woodwind-section-in-mozarts-late-symphonies/" class="more-link">Read&#160;more&#160;&#8594;</a>]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Introduction</h2><p>The woodwind section of the symphony orchestra has long held a place 		of preeminence. Woodwind historian Anthony Baines gushes: &#8220;&#8230;the 		woodwind [section] is a small cluster of musicians in whom the greatest 		virtuosity in the symphony or opera orchestra is concentrated. It is the 		orchestra&#8217;s principal solo section&#8230; They are stars because composers 		for over two hundred years have made them so&#8230;&#8221;<a
id=\"ref1\" name=\"ref1\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUx"><sup>1</sup></a> Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart certainly made stars of 		the woodwinds—in fact, he may have been the most important link between 		the string-heavy ensembles of the early symphonies and the lush, varied 		sounds of the post-Beethoven orchestra.</p><p>Nathan Broder points out that Haydn and a multitude of lesser figures 		made contributions during this same period. However, when comparing 		Haydn and Mozart:</p><blockquote><p>Of the two, Mozart was the more progressive. Younger, more 			impressionable, more sensitive to contemporary music, and possessed 			of a wider knowledge of it because of his travels, it was he who, 			after having learned much from the symphonies of Haydn, took the 			lead and reached the pinnacle of pre-Beethoven instrumentation. It 			was he in whose work were combined all the progressive tendencies of 			the various outstanding composers of the time, and whose symphonies 			present a summing-up of orchestral advancement in the latter half of 			the eighteenth century.<a
id=\"ref2\" name=\"ref2\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUy"><sup>2</sup></a></p></blockquote><p><span
id="more-558"></span>The late symphonies<a
id=\"ref3\" name=\"ref3\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUz"><sup>3</sup></a> in particular provide insights into Mozart&#8217;s 		relationship with the woodwinds. These represent a mature, though 		certainly still evolving, approach to orchestration, with a heightened 		sensitivity to the character of each instrument. Within the six years 		that these six symphonies were written, we see Mozart move from the more 		traditional orchestration procedures to a more modern sensibility where 		the woodwinds are given pride of place as section and soloists capable 		of bearing the weight of full-fledged symphony themes.</p><p>Symphonists before Mozart took a relatively casual approach to the 		makeup of the woodwind section. According to Adam Carse, &#8220;a certain 		freedom of choice between oboe and flute,&#8221;<a
id=\"ref4\" name=\"ref4\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGU0"><sup>4</sup></a> and later clarinet, was common in orchestral 		writing and performance practice. In Mozart&#8217;s late symphonies, however, 		we begin to see flute parts written for the flute&#8217;s unique colors and 		idiosyncrasies, oboe parts written for that instrument&#8217;s distinctive 		tone, and even the bassoons promoted above the level of continuo 		workhorses. And the addition of the clarinet to the woodwind section can 		scarcely be discussed without mention of Mozart&#8217;s contributions.</p><h2>Mozart&#8217;s woodwind section</h2><p>The six symphonies under consideration show some variation in the 		makeup of the woodwind section:</p><table
border="0"><tbody><tr><th>Symphony</th><th>Flutes</th><th>Oboes</th><th>Clarinets</th><th>Bassoons</th></tr><tr><td>K.385 &#8220;Haffner&#8221; [original Salzburg version]</td><td>0</td><td>2</td><td>0</td><td>2</td></tr><tr><td>K.385 &#8220;Haffner&#8221; [version revised for Vienna]</td><td>2 (1st and 4th movements only)</td><td>2</td><td>2 (in A – 1st and 4th movements only)</td><td>2</td></tr><tr><td>K.425 &#8220;Linz&#8221;</td><td>0</td><td>2</td><td>0</td><td>2</td></tr><tr><td>K.504 &#8220;Prague&#8221;</td><td>2</td><td>2</td><td>0</td><td>2</td></tr><tr><td>K.543</td><td>1</td><td>0</td><td>2 (in B flat)</td><td>2</td></tr><tr><td>K.550 [original version]</td><td>1</td><td>2</td><td>0</td><td>2</td></tr><tr><td>K.550 [revised version]</td><td>1</td><td>2</td><td>2 (in B flat)</td><td>2</td></tr><tr><td>K.551 &#8220;Jupiter&#8221;</td><td>1</td><td>2</td><td>0</td><td>2</td></tr></tbody></table><p>According to Thomas Glastras:</p><blockquote><p>Mozart had two main criteria for which wind instruments he would 			use in his symphonies; 1) the aesthetic nature of the various winds, 			and 2) the availability of the various instruments. Of course, many 			times these two were obviously considered together, or rather, it 			would be impossible to say which came first.<a
id=\"ref5\" name=\"ref5\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGU1"><sup>5</sup></a></p></blockquote><p>This seems a reasonable explanation for the variation in Mozart&#8217;s 		woodwind section throughout the late symphonies, but Neal Zaslaw adds 		some additional possible criteria. First is range; Zaslaw points out 		that the flutes of Mozart&#8217;s day were weaker in their lower register, 		while the oboes &#8220;thinned out&#8221;<a
id=\"ref6\" name=\"ref6\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGU2"><sup>6</sup></a> above the treble staff. Therefore, depending on 		the key and register of the material, different instruments may have 		been appropriate for different situations.</p><p>Zaslaw also asserts that Mozart is more likely to use flutes in the 		keys of C, D, or E flat (five out of our six symphonies are in these 		keys—K.550 is in G minor) because in these keys the horns use shorter 		crooks and are pitched higher, leaving less space for high woodwind 		parts.<a
id=\"ref7\" name=\"ref7\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGU3"><sup>7</sup></a> The flutes, with their stronger and more 		expansive high range, are more effective in these cases than oboes, 		which would crowd the horns in their best register. This theory may 		explain why K.543 (in E flat) surprisingly omits the oboes altogether, 		using flute and two clarinets, with their stronger high registers, 		instead.</p><p>Finally, Zaslaw suggests that Mozart may have considered venue 		acoustics in his orchestrations, especially when writing for open, 		semicircular theaters rather than resonant, rectangular concert halls.<a
id=\"ref8\" name=\"ref8\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGU4"><sup>8</sup></a> Zaslaw points out that the Haffner 		symphony was first performed, with oboes and bassoons only, in a 		Salzburg hall, but performed later in a Vienna theater with added flutes 		and clarinets.</p><blockquote><p>Mozart&#8217;s expansion of the winds in K.385 may have been an effort to 			take full advantage of the Viennese orchestral forces at his 			disposal, but it was quite probably also an attempt to alter a work 			calculated for a hall to make it ideal for a theatre.<a
id=\"ref9\" name=\"ref9\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGU5"><sup>9</sup></a></p></blockquote><p>The woodwind instruments of Mozart&#8217;s day were, of course, somewhat 		different in construction and timbre from in ones in use by modern 		instrumentalists. Baines comments:</p><blockquote><p>Elementary though the old instruments appear to the eye, inwardly 			they are very subtle. Modern instruments possess many qualities that 			the old ones do not, but the converse is also true, and as one works 			patiently at the &#8216;antiques&#8217; they reveal musical beauties that fully 			explain how it was that Mozart and the rest were able to put them to 			such superlative use.<a
id=\"ref10\" name=\"ref10\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUxMA=="><sup>10</sup></a></p></blockquote><p>The bassoon was already well established as an orchestral instrument. 		But in the late symphonies, we see Mozart&#8217;s bassoon, as Adam Carse puts 		it, &#8220;release[d]&#8230; from its duty of always playing the bass part, and 		[getting] some measure of independence in the tenor register.&#8221;<a
id=\"ref11\" name=\"ref11\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUxMQ=="><sup>11</sup></a> In the Haffner symphony, our earliest example 		(1782), the score calls for Fagotti in the plural, though in the first, 		third, and fourth movements, they spend most of their time playing a 		deux, doubling the bass line. However, in the second movement, we see 		the bassoons joining the oboes as a four-part reed choir. In subsequent 		symphonies, Mozart gives the bassoons more and more freedom, sometimes 		functioning as bass instruments, sometimes as members of a unified 		woodwind section, and with increasing frequency as key soloists.</p><p>In Mozart&#8217;s time the oboes were &#8220;indispensable&#8221;<a
id=\"ref12\" name=\"ref12\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUxMg=="><sup>12</sup></a> even in smaller 		orchestras. The large, established orchestra of the 18th century had 		flutes available, but used them less often than the oboes. When flutes 		were used, it was often in place of the oboes, sometimes only for one 		movement. It was not uncommon for the oboists also to play the flute, 		and, later, the clarinet.<a
id=\"ref13\" name=\"ref13\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUxMw=="><sup>13</sup></a> This is probably the intention in the Michael 		Haydn symphony mislabeled as K.444, where the oboes are replaced by 		flutes, likely played by the same musicians, during the first half of 		the second movement.</p><p>Mozart seems to have had a special affection for the clarinet. He was 		likely introduced to the new and still rare instrument by the virtuosos 		of the Mannheim orchestra. Broder mentions that in 1778 Mozart wrote to 		his father, sighing, &#8220;Oh, if only we too had clarinets!&#8221;<a
id=\"ref14\" name=\"ref14\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUxNA=="><sup>14</sup></a> Mozart&#8217;s concerto for the 		instrument is still the crowning jewel of the clarinetist&#8217;s repertoire.</p><h2>Woodwinds in the late symphonies</h2><p>Of the late symphonies, only the first, K.385,<a
id=\"ref15\" name=\"ref15\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUxNQ=="><sup>15</sup></a> has the complete 		woodwind section of the so-called &#8220;full high-Classical orchestra,&#8221;<a
id=\"ref16\" name=\"ref16\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUxNg=="><sup>16</sup></a> with pairs of flutes, oboes, clarinets, and 		bassoons, and this only after Mozart revised the orchestration for 		performance in Vienna. The woodwinds are used here in ways that only 		hint at the greater trust Mozart will give them in subsequent 		symphonies. Nathan Broder implies that the winds might have gotten more 		attention here had the symphony not been written in such haste; the 		symphony shows signs of having been conceived for the string section.<a
id=\"ref17\" name=\"ref17\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I25vdGUxNw=="><sup>17</sup></a></p><div
id="attachment_781" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 610px"><img
class="size-full wp-image-781" title="Example 1" src="http://static.bretpimentel.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/mozartex11.jpg" alt="Example 1" width="600" height="189" /><p
class="wp-caption-text">Example 1</p></div><p>The most interesting woodwind moments in this symphony belong to the 		oboes and bassoons which were in the original orchestration. Starting in 		measure 67 of the first movement they dominate a 7-measure woodwind 		interlude that sets up the tutti finish of the exposition. The 		descending &#8220;sigh&#8221; steps that characterize this interlude reappear 		starting in measure 118, at the closing of the development, in solo oboe 		and bassoon responses to the strings.</p><p>In the second movement Mozart does not add flutes and clarinets to 		his original orchestration; here the double reeds work closely with the 		horns in parts that are largely independent of the strings. The 		bassoons, surprisingly but very effectively, get to play a brief bass 		line almost free of the low strings (measures 12-15 and 61-64). The same 		instrumentation applies to the third movement, but in this minuet the 		reeds never play more than a supporting role to the violins and violas. 		The added flutes and clarinets reappear in the finale as little more 		than filler for tutti passages. The bassoons dutifully double the bass 		line, and the first oboe gets one all-too-brief moment of melody 		(measures 190-198), fortified at the octave by violins.</p><p>In the first movement of the &#8220;Linz&#8221; symphony (K.425) the oboes and 		bassoons make contributions to the introductory Adagio section and the 		coda, but participate significantly only in the development section (see 		measures 8, 169, and 123). Their only real thematic involvement occurs 		in the second theme gavotte (measure 71).</p><div
id="attachment_782" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 610px"><img
class="size-full wp-image-782" title="Example 2" src="http://static.bretpimentel.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/mozartex21.jpg" alt="Example 2" width="600" height="149" /><p
class="wp-caption-text">Example 2</p></div><p>The Poco Adagio and Menuetto movements would miss the woodwinds 		little (besides octave doublings) were they removed altogether. The 		exception is the final eight measures of the Menuetto&#8217;s Trio section, in 		which the solo bassoon plays echoes to the violins and oboe (m. 50).</p><p>In the final movement, the woodwinds are once again relegated to 		strictly accompanimental roles except for teasingly short solos buried 		in the development section (mm. 201 and 204).</p><p>In the &#8220;Prague&#8221; Symphony, K.504, the woodwinds (here, a pair each of 		flutes, oboes, and bassoons) are used much more fully, and in more 		idiomatic ways. This is clear from the very introduction of the first 		movement. Within these 36 measures, the woodwinds are used in a 		surprising variety of formats. They are used in tutti in six-part 		harmony, in quartets of fl-ob-ob-bsn, fl-ob-bsn-bsn, and fl-fl-ob-ob, 		and in duets of fl-ob and ob-bsn. All three principal woodwind parts 		include brief solos.</p><div
id="attachment_783" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 610px"><img
class="size-full wp-image-783" title="Example 3" src="http://static.bretpimentel.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/mozartex31.jpg" alt="Example 3" width="600" height="426" /><p
class="wp-caption-text">Example 3</p></div><p>The woodwinds also make their true expository-material debut in this 		movement. In the seventh measure of the Allegro section (m. 43 of the 		movement) the winds seize a rare opportunity to powerfully rebuff the 		string section&#8217;s timid opening argument. The oboe then makes an eloquent 		solo statement. At the close of the first theme, the winds retain the 		stronger position while the strings, unusually, content themselves with 		subservient fanfare figures (m. 63).</p><p>As if to legitimize the dominance of the winds in the first theme, 		Mozart scores the second for a humbled string section. The bassoons 		comment in harmony on the strings&#8217; melody (m. 105).</p><p>The woodwinds participate actively and independently in the 		development section. At the recapitulation, the oboe develops its solo 		remarks from the exposition, and then passes them to the flute for 		further commentary (m. 217).</p><p>In the second movement, the woodwinds are perhaps less independent 		but make up the difference in vividness of color. Mozart 		enthusiastically avails himself of the palette of available woodwind 		colors here (see especially the flute in mm. 36 and 61, the oboe in mm. 		20, 60, and 67, and the bassoon in mm. 31 and 82).</p><p>The finale casts the woodwind choir as a foil to the string section. 		Though used primarily for contrast rather than exposition, the woodwind 		passages (often unaccompanied!) are given weight and authority that 		belies their mostly nonfunctional nature. The principal flute leads 		these woodwind episodes much in the manner of a prima donna operatic 		soprano.</p><p>Mozart&#8217;s three final symphonies showcase a mature, personal approach 		to orchestration. Christoph Wolff opines:</p><blockquote><p>… one likes to single out Mozart&#8217;s Last three symphonies of 1788 as 			a category in its own right where Mozart demonstrates an 			extraordinary and largely unprecedented command in his handling of 			symphonic form and orchestral possibilities. And it is nearly a 			cliché to characterize his technique of instrumentation as natural, 			intuitive and most ingenious … The degree of refinement in Mozart&#8217;s 			orchestral writings from the mid-1780s on is well above everything 			else in both theory and practice of instrumentation. We have no 			choice but to regard Mozart as basically a self-taught master of 			instrumentation. This is by no means a revolutionary notion, since 			there are so many elements and aspects of Mozart&#8217;s style that are 			without any precedents.</p></blockquote><p>Mozart&#8217;s purpose in writing the final &#8220;trilogy&#8221; of symphonies has 		been debated at length. In a 1992 article, I. Grattan-Guiness makes a 		convincing argument that Mozart wrote them, despite desperate financial 		circumstances and a lack of commissions (as far as modern scholarship 		has been able to determine), as an expression of Masonic devotion. If 		this is indeed the case, it seems strange that Mozart wrote three 		symphonies in such a short time with different woodwind sections—surely 		works of such personal import and free of practical limitations would be 		written with an ideal woodwind section in mind (which we might presume 		would include one flute and two each of oboes, clarinets and bassoons)? 		It is probably a safe guess that the clarinets were added to Mozart&#8217;s 		original K.550 orchestration as a consideration for some later 		performance of that work. After such success with the clarinets in 		previous works, it is surprising that Mozart omitted them in K.551, 		unless it were written with a specific commission in mind.</p><p>The most immediately striking feature of the K.543 woodwind section 		is the omission of the oboes. Somehow less conspicuous is the 		substitution of clarinets—they are handled with subtlety, though given 		small moments in the spotlight. The use of a single flute seems curious 		from a perspective of post-Beethoven scoring practices, especially since 		Mozart scores the flute higher here than in any of the previous late 		symphonies. The clarinets provide stronger high-register support than 		the oboes (especially those of Mozart&#8217;s time) would have been able to 		offer, but the intervals between flute and first clarinet are 		precariously wide in places. Still, a cursory survey of Mozart&#8217;s 		orchestral works shows a strong preference for the single flute.</p><div
id="attachment_784" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 610px"><img
class="size-full wp-image-784" title="Example 4" src="http://static.bretpimentel.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/mozartex41.jpg" alt="Example 4" width="600" height="280" /><p
class="wp-caption-text">Example 4</p></div><p>Throughout K.543, the woodwinds are used almost exclusively as a 		unit, sometimes supporting the strings and sometimes playing 		contrapuntally with them. The most remarkable woodwind occurrence is the 		clarinet solo in the Trio of the Menuetto with its equally interesting 		Alberti-bass-like figure in the second clarinet (m. 45 of the movement). 		The second clarinet here uses the low &#8220;chalumeau&#8221; register to 		extraordinary effect in a perhaps unprecedented manner. Also very 		effective are several places throughout the symphony where Mozart uses a 		clarinet-bassoon choir (1st mvt. mm. 115, 152; 2nd mvt. mm. 39, 73; 4th 		mvt. mm. 89, 139, 198).</p><p>The G minor symphony, K.550, is of special interest because Mozart 		modified the original orchestration, with flute, two oboes, and two 		bassoons, to accommodate the addition of two clarinets in B flat. In the 		case of the Haffner symphony, parts were added for flutes and clarinets, 		but in this case the original oboe parts have been changed to allow the 		clarinets to take a more integral role in the orchestration.</p><p>In many places, clarinets have been added to tutti sections without 		modifying the oboe parts. In several instances, however, what was 		formerly an oboe-bassoon duet has been changed to the clarinet-bassoon 		sonority so favored in K.543 (see 1st mvt. mm. 45, 55, 72, 140 [tied 		whole notes]). In other places, the woodwind choir has been revoiced to 		blend the clarinets seamlessly into the texture (1st mvt. mm. 127, 153, 		196, etc.), or the clarinets have simply taken the place of the oboes in 		the woodwind choir (1st mvt. mm. 14, 148, 160, etc.).</p><p>In the Menuetto movement, the woodwinds are used at the end of the 		second strain to soothe the listener with a soft, legato melody after 		the relative harshness of the preceding measures. Mozart elects to 		replace the oboes with sweeter-sounding clarinets at this juncture, 		though he keeps the original oboe parts to give added brilliance to the 		G major Trio section while the clarinets sit out.</p><p>The final Allegro Assai movement adds clarinets to ensemble passages 		leaving the original oboe parts nearly unaltered. Virtually every oboe 		solo, however, has been stripped from the original part and given to the 		clarinet (mm. 86, 190, and 262; the sole exception is m. 146).</p><p>In the C major &#8220;Jupiter&#8221; symphony (K.551), we see further evidence 		that Mozart&#8217;s woodwind section has coalesced into a full member of the 		orchestra, capable of carrying important thematic material, but having 		risen above novelty.</p><div
id="attachment_785" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 610px"><img
class="size-full wp-image-785" title="Example 5" src="http://static.bretpimentel.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/mozartex51.jpg" alt="Example 5" width="600" height="169" /><p
class="wp-caption-text">Example 5</p></div><p>In the first movement alone, several examples prove this to be the 		case. In measure 24, the flute and oboe (joined shortly by the bassoon) 		subdue and calm the fiery opening motive, reducing the violins to a 		whisper. The simplicity of this woodwind motive belies its power—in 		measure 37, it returns at forte in the dominant key, whipping the 		strings again into a frenzy. Mozart further entrusts the woodwinds with 		the opening bars of the development section (m. 121), where they play a 		four-note figure, unaccompanied, in authoritative octaves, driving the 		orchestra into E flat major. The woodwinds continue to play a major role 		throughout the extensive development section, on a completely equal 		footing with strings, brasswinds, and timpani, but perhaps having the 		advantage in variety and subtlety of color. This mature, sophisticated 		woodwind section continues to manifest itself throughout the remainder 		of the symphony, imparting a stern dignity to the Andante Cantabile, a 		lightness (without frivolity) to the minuet, and diving headlong into 		the fuguelike fray of the finale.</p><h2>Conclusion</h2><p>In the space of six years and six symphonies, Mozart bridged the gap 		between earlier woodwind scoring practices and the dictates of his own 		genius. Indeed, Mozart&#8217;s mighty woodwinds would become the birthright of 		Beethoven, Wagner, and Schoenberg. Haydn said, close to the end of his 		life, &#8220;Only in my old age have I learned how to use the 		wind-instruments.&#8221; From whom else but Mozart could the great Haydn have 		learned such a lesson?</p><h2>Bibliography</h2><h3>Recommended Recording</h3><p>Wiener Philharmoniker, cond. Leonard Bernstein, <em>Mozart: The Late Symphonies; Symphonies Nos. 25 &amp; 29</em> (Hamburg: 		Deutsche Grammophon, recorded 1984-1990).</p><h3>Recommended Scores</h3><p><em>Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Later Symphonies (Nos. 35-41) In Full 		Score</em> (New York: Dover, 1974).</p><p><em>Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Five Symphonies in Score,</em> ed. Hugo 		Liechtentritt (New York: Books and Music, 1939).</p><p><em>W. A. Mozart Symphonie 38 [K.504], D major</em> (Germany: Philharmonia).</p><p><em>Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony No. 39 in E flat major, K.543</em> (New York: Edwin Kalmus).</p><p><em>Mozart Symphony in G Minor, K.550</em>, ed. Nathan Broder (New 		York: W. W. Norton, 1967).</p><p><em>Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony No.41 in C major, K.551</em> (New 		York: Edwin Kalmus).</p><h3>Books and articles</h3><p>Baines, Anthony. Woodwind Instruments and their History (London: 		Faber and Faber Ltd., 1959).</p><p>Broder, Nathan. &#8220;The Wind-Instruments in Mozart&#8217;s Symphonies,&#8221; The 		Musical Quarterly (1933), 238-259.</p><p>Carse, Adam. The Orchestra in the XVIIIth Century (Cambridge: W. 		Heffer &amp; Sons, Ltd., 1940).</p><p>Grattan-Guiness, I. &#8220;Why did Mozart write three symphonies in the 		summer of 1788?&#8221; The Music Review, vol. 53, no. 1 (1992), 1-6.</p><p>de St. Foix, G. The Symphonies of Mozart, trans. Leslie Orrey, 		(England: Wessex, 1932)</p><p>Tovey, Donald. Essays in Musical Analysis (London: Oxford, 1935).</p><p>Wolff, Christoph. &#8220;Aspects of Instrumentation in Mozart&#8217;s Orchestral 		Music,&#8221; L&#8217;interpretation de la Musique Classique de Haydn a Schubert 		(Paris: Editions Minkoff, 1977).</p><p>Zaslaw, Neal. &#8220;Mozart&#8217;s Orchestral Flutes and Oboes,&#8221; Mozart Studies, 		ed. Cliff Eisen (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991).</p><h2>Notes</h2><p><a
id=\"note1\" name=\"note1\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjE=">1.</a> Anthony Baines, <em> Woodwind Instruments and their History</em> (London: Faber and Faber Ltd., 1959), 25.</p><p><a
id=\"note2\" name=\"note2\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjI=">2.</a> Nathan Broder, &#8220;The 		Wind-Instruments in Mozart&#8217;s Symphonies,&#8221; <em>The Musical Quarterly</em> (1933), 238-239.</p><p><a
id=\"note3\" name=\"note3\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjM=">3.</a> Beginning with K.385 		(1782), and omitting K.444, of which it is now known that only the 		introduction to the first movement was written by Mozart (and the 		remainder by Michael Haydn).</p><p><a
id=\"note4\" name=\"note4\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjQ=">4.</a> Adam Carse, <em>The 		Orchestra in the XVIIIth Century</em> (Cambridge: W. Heffer &amp; Sons, Ltd., 1940), 126.</p><p><a
id=\"note5\" name=\"note5\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjU=">5.</a> Thomas Glastras, <em> Thirty-Five First Movements of Mozart Symphonies: Their Structural 		Development, Distribution of Instruments and Parts, and Character</em> (Master&#8217;s thesis: Indiana University, 1954).</p><p><a
id=\"note6\" name=\"note6\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjY=">6.</a> Neil Zaslaw, &#8220;Mozart&#8217;s 		Orchestral Flutes and Oboes,&#8221; <em>Mozart Studies</em>, ed. Cliff Eisen 		(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991), 204.</p><p><a
id=\"note7\" name=\"note7\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjc=">7.</a> Zaslaw, 205.</p><p><a
id=\"note8\" name=\"note8\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjg=">8.</a> Ibid.</p><p><a
id=\"note9\" name=\"note9\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjk=">9.</a> Zaslaw, 210.</p><p><a
id=\"note10\" name=\"note10\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjEw">10.</a> Baines, 274.</p><p><a
id=\"note11\" name=\"note11\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjEx">11.</a> Carse, 33-34.</p><p><a
id=\"note12\" name=\"note12\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjEy">12.</a> Carse, 34.</p><p><a
id=\"note13\" name=\"note13\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjEz">13.</a> Zaslaw, 202.</p><p><a
id=\"note14\" name=\"note14\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjE0">14.</a> Broder, 252.</p><p><a
id=\"note15\" name=\"note15\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjE1">15.</a> For analysis, see 		International Music Edition. <em>Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Five Symphonies 		in Score</em>, ed. Hugo Liechtentritt (New York: Books and Music, 1939).</p><p><a
id=\"note16\" name=\"note16\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjE2">16.</a> Zaslaw, 201.</p><p><a
id=\"note17\" name=\"note17\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjE3">17.</a> Broder, 254.</p><p><a
id=\"note18\" name=\"note18\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjE4">18.</a> Measure numbers based on Dover edition. <em>Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: 		Later Symphonies</em> (Nos. 35-41) In Full Score. New York: Dover, 1974.</p><p><a
id=\"note19\" name=\"note19\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjE5">19.</a> For analysis, see 		Donald Tovey, <em>Essays in Musical Analysis</em> (London: Oxford, 1935), 		183-185.</p><p><a
id=\"note20\" name=\"note20\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjIw">20.</a> For analysis, see 		Philharmonia edition. <em>W. A. Mozart Symphonie 38, D major</em> (Germany: Philharmonia).</p><p><a
id=\"note21\" name=\"note21\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjIx">21.</a> Christoph Wolff, &#8220;Aspects of Instrumentation in Mozart&#8217;s Orchestral 		Music,&#8221; <em>L&#8217;interpretation de la Musique Classique de Haydn a Schubert</em> (Paris: Editions Minkoff, 1977), 37-38.</p><p><a
id=\"note22\" name=\"note22\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjIy">22.</a> See G. de St. 		Foix, <em>The Symphonies of Mozart</em>, trans. Leslie Orrey, (England: 		Wessex, 1932), 94-95.</p><p><a
id=\"note23\" name=\"note23\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjIz">23.</a> I. 		Grattan-Guiness, &#8220;Why did Mozart write three symphonies in the summer of 		1788?&#8221; <em>The Music Review</em>, vol. 53, no. 1 (1992), 1-6.</p><p><a
id=\"note24\" name=\"note24\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjI0">24.</a> For analysis, see 		Kalmus edition. <em>Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony No. 39 in E flat 		major, K.543</em> (New York: Edwin Kalmus).</p><p><a
id=\"note25\" name=\"note25\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjI1">25.</a> See Broder, 257.</p><p><a
id=\"note26\" name=\"note26\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjI2">26.</a> For analysis, see 		Norton Critical Scores edition. <em>Mozart Symphony in G Minor, K.550</em>, 		ed. Nathan Broder (New York: W. W. Norton, 1967).</p><p><a
id=\"note27\" name=\"note27\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjI3">27.</a> The Dover edition 		includes the original parts, plus the added clarinets and modified oboe 		parts.</p><p><a
id=\"note28\" name=\"note28\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjI4">28.</a> For analysis, see 		Kalmus edition. <em>Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony No.41 in C major, 		K.551</em> (New York: Edwin Kalmus).</p><p><a
id=\"note29\" name=\"note29\" href="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?url=I3JlZjI5">29.</a> Quoted in Broder, 259. <img
src="http://bretpimentel.com/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-feed-statistics/feed-statistics.php?view=1&#038;post_id=558" width="1" height="1" style="display: none;" /></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://bretpimentel.com/the-woodwind-section-in-mozarts-late-symphonies/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> </channel> </rss>
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