String Quartet No. 17 (Mozart)

1784 composition by W. A. Mozart From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's String Quartet No. 17 in B major, K. 458, nicknamed "The Hunt", is the fourth of the quartets dedicated to Haydn. It was completed in 1784.[1] It is in four movements:

  1. Allegro vivace assai
  2. Menuetto and Trio. Moderato
  3. Adagio, in E major
  4. Allegro assai
Bars 1 to 5

Neither Mozart nor Artaria (the publisher) called this piece "The Hunt". "For Mozart's contemporaries, the first movement of K.458 evidently evoked the 'chasse' topic, the main components of which were a 6
8
time signature (sometimes featuring a strong upbeat) and triadic melodies based largely around tonic and dominant chords (doubtless stemming from the physical limitations of the actual hunting horns to notes of the harmonic series)."[2] According to Irving, Mozart's first intention was to conclude with a polonaise and sketched 65 bars (p. 17).

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