Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Piano Sonata in F major, K. 547a (Anh. 135) is a sonata in two movements. It was originally published as an original sonata by Breitkopf and Härtel in 1799 but was soon found to be an amalgam of movements culled from other compositions. It is sometimes called Mozart's Piano Sonata No. 19.
Movements
The work has two movements:
- Allegro (a solo-piano transcription of the second movement of the violin sonata, K. 547)
- Allegretto (a transposition of the finale to the C major "Sonata Facile" into F major)
The set of six keyboard variations on an original Andante, KV 54/547b/Anh.138a are sometimes played as an additional third movement to this piece. These variations are themselves also transcribed from the same violin sonata (K. 547) as the Allegro with its fourth variation (which was violin-centric in the original) re-written.[1]
See also
Notes
External links
- Piano Sonata in F major, K.Anh.135/547a: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
- Thema in F mit fünf Variationen KV Anh. 138a (KV 547a, 3. Satz): Score and critical report (in German) in the Neue Mozart-Ausgabe (Third movement, K. 54/547b)
- The Complete Mozart Piano Sonatas / Rodrian - MIDI files of the work. Here this sonata is moved into the canon and is placed as Piano Sonata No. 16, thus pushing the Sonata facile down to No. 17.
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