Bassoon Concerto | |
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by W. A. Mozart | |
Key | B-flat major |
Catalogue | K. 191/186e |
Genre | Concerto |
Style | Classical period |
Composed | 1774 |
Movements | Three (Allegro, Andante ma Adagio, Rondo: tempo di menuetto) |
Scoring |
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The Bassoon Concerto in B-flat major, K. 191/186e, is a bassoon concerto written in 1774 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. It is the most often performed and studied piece in the entire bassoon repertory.[1] Nearly all professional bassoonists will perform the piece at some stage in their career, and it is probably the most commonly requested piece in orchestral auditions – it is usually requested that the player perform excerpts from the concerto's first two movements in every audition.
Although the autograph score is lost, the exact date of its completion is known: 4 June 1774.[2]
Mozart wrote the bassoon concerto when he was 18 years old, and it was his first concerto for a wind instrument.[3] Although it is believed that it was commissioned by an aristocratic amateur bassoon player Thaddäus Freiherr von Dürnitz, who owned seventy-four works by Mozart, this is a claim that is supported by little evidence.[4] Scholars believe that Mozart may have written five[5] bassoon concertos, but that only the first has survived.[better source needed]