Symphony [No. 35] in D major K. 385
Hafner Music: Hafner Symphony with March in D major K. 408/2 (385a) – Urtext
[orch] duration: 20' 2. 2. 2. 2 – 2. 2. 0. 0 – timp – str
Description
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote his Hafner Symphony K. 385 in the summer of 1782 on the occasion of the elevation into the nobility of his friend and patron Sigmund Hafner. Next to the well-known movements, this version (A) also contained the March K. 408/2 (385a) and possibly a second, no longer extant minuet. Called Hafner=Musique by Mozart, the work was unquestionably a serenade at first. In early 1783 Mozart then reduced the Hafner Music for his subscription concert at the Vienna Burgtheater on 23 March 1783 to a four-movement symphony. This is the form in which the work was first printed in 1785 (Version B). For a further performance, Mozart added flute and clarinet parts to the symphony. In 1805, this version (C) was published by André in Offenbach, who thus began making it known.
The primary sources of the present Breitkopf Urtext edition are the autographs to K. 385 and K. 408/2 (385a). It thus becomes possible for the first time to play all three versions of the Hafner Music, since the variants of Versions A and B can be easily discerned through indications in footnotes and notes in small print.
PB 5373D
score
EAN: 9790004820896
67 pages / 25 x 32 cm / digital edition
PB 5552
study score
EAN: 9790004213629
56 pages / 16.5 x 22.5 cm / 119 g / stapled
OB 5373-15
violin 1
EAN: 9790004341001
12 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 70 g / stapled
OB 5373-16
violin 2
EAN: 9790004341018
12 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 70 g / stapled
OB 5373-19
viola
EAN: 9790004341025
12 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 70 g / stapled
OB 5373-26
basso (cello/double bass)
EAN: 9790004341032
12 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 70 g / stapled
OB 5373-30
wind parts
EAN: 9790004341049
84 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 363 g / folder
Description
Description
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote his Hafner Symphony K. 385 in the summer of 1782 on the occasion of the elevation into the nobility of his friend and patron Sigmund Hafner. Next to the well-known movements, this version (A) also contained the March K. 408/2 (385a) and possibly a second, no longer extant minuet. Called Hafner=Musique by Mozart, the work was unquestionably a serenade at first. In early 1783 Mozart then reduced the Hafner Music for his subscription concert at the Vienna Burgtheater on 23 March 1783 to a four-movement symphony. This is the form in which the work was first printed in 1785 (Version B). For a further performance, Mozart added flute and clarinet parts to the symphony. In 1805, this version (C) was published by André in Offenbach, who thus began making it known.
The primary sources of the present Breitkopf Urtext edition are the autographs to K. 385 and K. 408/2 (385a). It thus becomes possible for the first time to play all three versions of the Hafner Music, since the variants of Versions A and B can be easily discerned through indications in footnotes and notes in small print.