Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

The embellishment in Mozart's keyboard music with specific application to seven of his late piano concertos

Background to the study It was the practice in Mozart's day for performers to make improvisatory additions to the written text. They would add ornaments, fill in skeletal passages and decorate works according to their ability and taste. Mozart himself was well-known for his gift of improvising, whic...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Goodall, Shane Leslie
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: College of Music 2024
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613215383355392
access_status_str Open Access
author Goodall, Shane Leslie
author_browse Goodall, Shane Leslie
author_facet Goodall, Shane Leslie
author_sort Goodall, Shane Leslie
collection Thesis
description Background to the study It was the practice in Mozart's day for performers to make improvisatory additions to the written text. They would add ornaments, fill in skeletal passages and decorate works according to their ability and taste. Mozart himself was well-known for his gift of improvising, which he put to good use when performing his concertos. Problem to be studied All Mozart's works published in his lifetime show a great attention to detail. He wrote out ornaments, cadenzas, and lead-ins, and embellished recurring themes. This can be seen in his keyboard sonatas and concertos. However, there are some instances where he was rushed for time when composing, and he used abbreviations, or left recurring themes unembellished. In his piano concertos written for his own performance for example, some sections have been abbreviated and need filling out. Other places require embellishment. These aspects are characteristic of the late piano concertos, and are used in this study, namely: K.466 in D minor, K.482 in Eb major, K.488 in A major, K.491 in C minor, K.503 in C major, K.537 in D major, and K.595 in B b major. The author is of the opinion that modem-day pianists may lack the improvisational skills practised in the latter part of the eighteenth century, and it is therefore problematic for them to lV realise these works fully. The embellishment of these concertos involve adding ornaments such as appoggiaturas, auxiliary notes, turns, cambiatas, echappees, passing notes and trills; filling out abbreviated areas; and improvising lead-ins where fermatas occur over the dominant harmony. Purpose of the study It is the author's aim to provide pianists performing these concertos with sufficient information to embellish these works by: supplying an index of the ornamentation used by Mozart in his keyboard works; applying this information to the piano concertos, in conjunction with suggestions and recommendations obtained form literature on the topic. Conclusions reached Once the study of Mozart's embellishment and relevant literature has been made, care must be taken when applying this information. It is equally bad to add too much embellishment as it is to add none at all. C.P .E. Bach sums up this in the following statement: Good embellishments must be distinguished from bad, the good must be correctly performed, and introduced moderately and fittingly.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40420
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:36.207Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher College of Music
publisherStr College of Music
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40420 The embellishment in Mozart's keyboard music with specific application to seven of his late piano concertos Goodall, Shane Leslie Embellishment (Music) Background to the study It was the practice in Mozart's day for performers to make improvisatory additions to the written text. They would add ornaments, fill in skeletal passages and decorate works according to their ability and taste. Mozart himself was well-known for his gift of improvising, which he put to good use when performing his concertos. Problem to be studied All Mozart's works published in his lifetime show a great attention to detail. He wrote out ornaments, cadenzas, and lead-ins, and embellished recurring themes. This can be seen in his keyboard sonatas and concertos. However, there are some instances where he was rushed for time when composing, and he used abbreviations, or left recurring themes unembellished. In his piano concertos written for his own performance for example, some sections have been abbreviated and need filling out. Other places require embellishment. These aspects are characteristic of the late piano concertos, and are used in this study, namely: K.466 in D minor, K.482 in Eb major, K.488 in A major, K.491 in C minor, K.503 in C major, K.537 in D major, and K.595 in B b major. The author is of the opinion that modem-day pianists may lack the improvisational skills practised in the latter part of the eighteenth century, and it is therefore problematic for them to lV realise these works fully. The embellishment of these concertos involve adding ornaments such as appoggiaturas, auxiliary notes, turns, cambiatas, echappees, passing notes and trills; filling out abbreviated areas; and improvising lead-ins where fermatas occur over the dominant harmony. Purpose of the study It is the author's aim to provide pianists performing these concertos with sufficient information to embellish these works by: supplying an index of the ornamentation used by Mozart in his keyboard works; applying this information to the piano concertos, in conjunction with suggestions and recommendations obtained form literature on the topic. Conclusions reached Once the study of Mozart's embellishment and relevant literature has been made, care must be taken when applying this information. It is equally bad to add too much embellishment as it is to add none at all. C.P .E. Bach sums up this in the following statement: Good embellishments must be distinguished from bad, the good must be correctly performed, and introduced moderately and fittingly. 2024-07-09T12:47:03Z 2024-07-09T12:47:03Z 1996 2024-07-09T12:42:43Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MMus http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40420 eng application/pdf College of Music Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Embellishment (Music)
Goodall, Shane Leslie
The embellishment in Mozart's keyboard music with specific application to seven of his late piano concertos
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The embellishment in Mozart's keyboard music with specific application to seven of his late piano concertos
title_full The embellishment in Mozart's keyboard music with specific application to seven of his late piano concertos
title_fullStr The embellishment in Mozart's keyboard music with specific application to seven of his late piano concertos
title_full_unstemmed The embellishment in Mozart's keyboard music with specific application to seven of his late piano concertos
title_short The embellishment in Mozart's keyboard music with specific application to seven of his late piano concertos
title_sort embellishment in mozart s keyboard music with specific application to seven of his late piano concertos
topic Embellishment (Music)
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40420
work_keys_str_mv AT goodallshaneleslie theembellishmentinmozartskeyboardmusicwithspecificapplicationtosevenofhislatepianoconcertos
AT goodallshaneleslie embellishmentinmozartskeyboardmusicwithspecificapplicationtosevenofhislatepianoconcertos