Rondo in B flat major WoO 6
Original Finale of the Piano Concerto No. 2 – Urtext from the new Beethoven Complete Edition
[pno,orch] duration: 10' solo: pno – 1.2.0.2 – 2.0.0.0 – str
Description
Mozart no doubt proved a powerful source of inspiration in the genre of the piano concerto when Ludwig van Beethoven was composing his first work in this genre (B-flat major op. 19) in Bonn. In 1793 the young composer first wrote a final rondo with an inserted Andante, as Mozart had done in his Concerto K. 482. Beethoven then selected a different closing solution and kept the score of the B-flat major Rondo in his desk. There the work was rediscovered only after the composers death, and printed shortly afterward. The autograph thus represents Beethovens earliest surviving and complete orchestral score. The new Urtext edition of the score and orchestral parts is based on the new Beethoven Complete Edition (Henle).
OB 14679-15
violin 1
EAN: 9790004340882
4 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 36 g / stapled
OB 14679-16
violin 2
EAN: 9790004340899
4 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 36 g / stapled
OB 14679-19
viola
EAN: 9790004340905
4 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 36 g / stapled
OB 14679-23
violoncello
EAN: 9790004340912
4 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 35 g / stapled
OB 14679-27
double bass
EAN: 9790004340929
4 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 35 g / stapled
OB 14679-30
wind parts
EAN: 9790004340936
28 pages / 25 x 32 cm / 140 g / folder
Description
Description
Mozart no doubt proved a powerful source of inspiration in the genre of the piano concerto when Ludwig van Beethoven was composing his first work in this genre (B-flat major op. 19) in Bonn. In 1793 the young composer first wrote a final rondo with an inserted Andante, as Mozart had done in his Concerto K. 482. Beethoven then selected a different closing solution and kept the score of the B-flat major Rondo in his desk. There the work was rediscovered only after the composers death, and printed shortly afterward. The autograph thus represents Beethovens earliest surviving and complete orchestral score. The new Urtext edition of the score and orchestral parts is based on the new Beethoven Complete Edition (Henle).