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Rondo for Piano and Orchestra in A major (Mozart)


The Rondo for Piano and Orchestra in A major, K. 386 is a concert rondo by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, believed by Alfred Einstein to have been composed in late 1782.

Mozart wrote the Rondo in A major at around the same time as his three first Vienna piano concertos, nos. 11, 12 and 13.

It was once believed that Mozart left this piece unfinished, because when Constanze Mozart sold the manuscript in 1799 to J. A. André, the concluding pages were missing. However, Alan Tyson discovered the previously-missing conclusion in the British Library in 1980. Before this, the rest of the autograph had been dismembered and scattered, and the only known version that was complete was Cipriani Potter's piano arrangement from about 1838. Alfred Einstein, using this and only 2 then-known leaves of the score, published a reconstruction of the rondo in 1936, and further leaves that came to light were reflected in the Neue Mozart-Ausgabe and a 1962 completion by Paul Badura-Skoda and Charles Mackerras. The final leaves discovered by Tyson have now been incorporated into most recent recordings of the rondo, such as those of Murray Perahia and Malcolm Bilson.

The musicologist Alfred Einstein believed that the piece was intended as either the original or a replacement finale for his Piano Concerto No. 12 in A. Both pieces are in the same key, and both were composed at similar times. However, there are considerable differences. The three concertos were composed by Mozart to be a quattro (with just four strings in accompaniment), whilst the Rondo cannot be, as the cellos have an independent line from the basses. The first page of the manuscript was also titled and dated by Mozart, suggesting individuality.


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