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Notes on this Composition

Works for the piano abound in Mozart's catalogue and apart from the series of piano concertos and sonatas, the instrument was used by Mozart in many of his ensemble chamber pieces. There are piano trios, quartets and a quintet for the extraordinary combination of piano and winds rather then the more usual setting of the soloist against a group of string players. The combination is however not unique to Mozart and Beethoven was to use the same plan for his own Opus 16 Quintet . The Piano Quintet dates from 1784 when Mozart's relationship with Stadler had been cemented by their joint Masonic interests and during the period when he was writing a series of remarkable Piano Concerti including the G major work written for Barbara Ployer and the ones in B flat written for Maria Theresa Paradis (K456) and the F major (K459) work composed with himself in mind. It is thus clear that this was a period when Mozart was concentrating on the keyboard works that remain one of his greatest contributions to the repertoire. It would be easy to see the Quintet in this respect as a chamber concerto for the instrument (as indeed some of the earlier concerti exist in such chamber forms) but the scoring is still somewhat unusual as opposed to say the Piano Quartets which can easily be considered as miniatures in the concertante vein. It is indeed that combination of solo piano against an accompaniment of oboe, clarinet, horn and bassoon that sets this work apart.Mozart was fond enough of these separate instruments to have composed individual concerti for each of them but here they are gathered together as an ensemble where each is given its own prominence and none outweighs the other in importance. The work is in three movements and begins with an opening, like those of Haydn's symphonies which brings an Allegro out of an initial slow introduction. This opening Largo is in the grand style and gives way to a rather pastoral Allegro moderato before the second movement Larghetto with its simple beginning and strange modulation before its recapitulation. Finally a Rondo in Allegretto time winds up the piece with a joyous main theme and its own cadenza. Comparisons are perhaps odious and Beethoven, although he imitated the work never really managed to surpass what Mozart considered to be one of his finest works to date. Before embarking on the two great masterpieces for Piano Trio with violin and cello (K502 and K542), Mozart wrote another Trio with Piano, this time for a different combination including clarinet and viola. The work was not only a preparation for those later works but was also published in that differing instrumentation by the publishing house of Artaria as a trio for "clavicembalo o Fortepiano con accompagnamneto d'un violino e viola . . si puo eseguire anche con un clarinetto (. . . . in other words "can be played also by clarinet"). The work was originally conceived as a showpiece for Francisca Jacquin who would have taken the original piano part with Mozart playing the viola and his great freemason friend Anton Stadler on the clarinet. It was, of course Stadler who was to inspire Mozart to write his two final great masterpieces for clarinet - the Concerto (K622) and the Quintet (K581). The opening Andante emphasises the key of E flat major which for Mozart was a key relating to friendship although on occasion this moves into dominant and subdominant as well as C minor. The Minuet which follows shows Mozart's grasp of counterpoint without ever falling into the trap of merely sounding academic whereas the final Rondeau is of songlike character mixing counterpoint, form and melody towards a totally satisfying conclusion.