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Friday, November 25, 2022

Mozart, Horn Concerto 3 in E-flat major


The horn, or French horn, is one of the wind instruments that the child Mozart heard more than once at home, in Salzburg, when Leopold met with his friends to make chamber music. From then on he loved its timbre, which, together with the flute or the oboe, was more "pastoral" than the harpsichord or even the stringed instruments. And from that time, too, dates his closeness to Joseph Leutgeb, the most skilled horn player of his time, an essential guest in the evenings Leopold organized at his home in Getreidegasse.

The enterprising "horn man"
The four horn concertos composed by Mozart in Vienna between 1783 and 1791 are dedicated to Leutgeb. The horn player had left his position in the Salzburg court orchestra in 1771 to start a commercial "venture" in Vienna in his forties. It was a store specializing in cheese and related foodstuffs, but as the story goes, without giving up music altogether. The venture was partially financed by Leopold through a loan that Leutgeb was never able to repay, despite the continuous reminders of the debt that Mozart read in the letters he received from his father. The horn player had failed, irretrievably, but Wolfgang was there to support him and return him to music.

Wolfgang, the playful one
The friendship and affection professed were great. But this does not detract from the fact that, in the vein that characterized the Salzburg genius from childhood, he made healthy fun – if one can say so – of the unsuccessful entrepreneur. Surprising – to say the least – are the singular invectives in Italian that Mozart allowed himself to intersperse in the autograph pages of the four concertos. He called him a thousand names: seccatura di coglione, trillo di pecore, porco infame, are a few of them. Leutgeb did not take it badly. He understood that the brilliant son of his friend Leopold was having fun with him, not at his expense.

Horn Concerto No. 3 in E-flat major, K. 447
The four horn concertos (plus a quintet he composed later for horn and strings - K. 407) are masterpieces for the instrument, brilliant and solid, which enriched horn music, not very abundant at the time. The concerto K. 447 in E flat major is the third that Mozart composed for Leutgeb. Its solo parts abound in passages that are quite a challenge for the interpreter, even more so if one considers the precariousness of the instrument of the time.

Movements:
00:00  Allegro
08:10  Romanza. Larghetto
12:54  Allegro

The performance is by the Czech instrumentalist Radek Baborák, accompanied by the RTVE Orchestra, under the baton of the Russian-born French conductor Jean Jacques Kantorow.