Perhaps - but the Rosetti concertos have even more rests.
 
Maybe it's a hidden joke.
 
-William
 
 
In a message dated 12/7/2010 3:04:32 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Maybe  it`s a chance for the horn player to play a few notes that aren`t so 
  
exposed after counting all those measures. A nice little warm  up?


In a message dated 12/7/2010 1:18:31 A.M. Central Standard  Time,  
[email protected] writes:

I know I  only have a  bachelor's degree in Music, but I did fairly well in 
 
my  theory  and analysis classes so I'm wondering if I'm correct or wrong 
in  

this  assumption:

When auditions call for the exposition  only  for a Mozart concerto, it's  
fairly easy to determine what  they mean  with the 1st and 2nd concertos. 
However  with the 3rd  concerto, I was  always unsure about playing the 
very 
short  
segment  of the  introduction which is present in at least the  Schirmer 
editions, and  so  the last few times I played it on a  recital I only 
started  
playing at what was  obviously the  exposition (introduction of the  theme) 
and let 
the piano  or  whoever play the full introduction. I  could have been 
wrong,  
but it was just  something I felt was a better  way to perform  it - why 
give 
away the show before  the theme starts?  Most  concerti in the classical 
period don't let the soloist  play   until the introduction of the theme 
and 
maybe 
it was some joke   by  Mozart so that the performer could make sure the 
right 
crook  was  in?  Or maybe the act of buzzing a few very quiet notes on the  
horn before  you  actually play is something Mozart noticed only  horn 
players  
doing and wanted to  make it part of the  concerto? Either way, maybe  I'm 
crazy, but it just seems odd   for it to be written that  way.

Of course, for the 4th concerto,  the introduction is the longest  and the  
horn passage in the  introduction of the first movement at  least to me 
sticks  
out  like a sore thumb. So, why is it in there? To  me, the  theme and 
exposition  doesn't start until the horn player  plays  the Bb arpeggio on 
whole 
notes, so why  not just omit that   section for performances and auditions? 
You're 
in unison with   the  violins or piano anyway.

I'm not a historian, and I don't  want to start  some huge argument. I 
could 

be completely wrong  about my ideas, but  maybe I'm not the only one who 
saw 
the   introduction passages for the  Horn as out of place? Is this an  
incorrect    assumption?

-William


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