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Mozart’s Transformation of the

Cadenza in the First Movements


of his Piano Concertos

– Vincent C. K. Cheung

M ozart’s piano concertos are often acclaimed to be the composer’s finest


instrumental works. Thousands of musicians, including Beethoven and Brahms,
have been amazed by his piano concertos, and for this reason, many studies on
Mozart’s concertos have been done. The structure of his concertos, and especially
the structure of the first movements, has been analyzed thoroughly by many
musicologists, notably C. Girdlestone1 and A. Hutchings.2 However, few of them
pay serious attention to Mozart’s original cadenzas for his piano concertos. This
essay is an attempt to illustrate briefly how Mozart contributes to the evolution of
the cadenza by ensuring it to be an essential part of the structure of the first
movement, and by using it to reinforce the equality between the solo and the tutti.

I. Background: the state of the cadenza around 1750 and Mozart’s


transformation of the cadenza
We shall begin by examining the evolution of the cadenza as a genre up to
Mozart’s time. A cadenza can be defined as “a virtuoso passage inserted near the
end of a concerto movement or aria, usually indicated by the appearance of a
fermata over an inconclusive chord such as the tonic 6-4.”3 However, the history
of cadenza can be traced back to a long time before the emergence of concerto or
opera: composers since the Medieval era tended to prolong the endings of their
pieces with embellishments in order to amplify the effect of the closing cadence.4
The improvised cadenza in the modern sense did not appear until the early
Baroque period when the da capo aria and the concerto became popular:

1
CUTHBERT GIRDLESTONE, Mozart and his Piano Concertos (New York: Dover, 1964).
2
ARTHUR HUTCHINGS, A Companion to Mozart’s Piano Concertos (London: Oxford UP, 1950).
3
“Cadenza,” The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians - Vol. 3, 1980, by EVA BADURA-
SKODA.
4
BADURA-SKODA, 586-587.
2 VINCENT C. K. CHEUNG

Closely linked to this development [of cadenza] was the


emergence of ritornello form in the concerto and the
aria; this form articulated the main key areas of a
movement with more or less extended tuttis,
characteristically preceded by a strong solo cadence. It
was at such cadences in particular that the concentration
of ornamentation developed which was to give rise to
the tradition of the improvised cadenza.5

With the rise of the Neapolitan style of opera in the late 17th century, the
improvised cadenza, which contained nothing more than some non-thematic
passages unrelated to the cadenza’s parent movement, became longer so as to
display the virtuosity of the soloist. At around the same time, instrumental
cadenzas also began to appear in the concertos of Torelli.6 The length and the
virtuosity of both the vocal and instrumental cadenzas continued to grow. Daniel
Gottlob Türk, a prominent German theorist in the 18th century, was dissatisfied
with both the content and the length of the conventional cadenzas:

I would say nothing new, but only repeat often heard


complaints, if I spoke against the very great abuse of the
embellished cadenzas. For it is not seldom that a
concerto seems to be played solely for the sake of the
cadenzas. The performer struggles not only to achieve
pointless length, but also introduces all sorts of ideas that
have not the slightest relation with the preceding
composition, so that the good impression which the
piece has perhaps made upon the listener for the most
part has been “cadenza-ed away.”7

Thus, by the mid-18th century, the cadenza, whose primary function was to
display the soloist’s power, had become merely an awkward insertion near the
end of an aria or a concerto movement contributing little to the overall aesthetics
of the piece.
The empty virtuosity of the early Classical cadenzas certainly did not
content Mozart. While picking up the tradition of placing a cadenza near the end
of the first movement, Mozart also transforms it so that it becomes an integral part
of the movement’s structure instead of an insertion; with its perfect proportion to
its parent movement and its orchestral colour, Mozart’s cadenza also ensures
5
PHILIP WHITMORE, Unpremeditated Art - the Cadenza in the Classical Keyboard Concerto
(Oxford: Clarendon, 1991), 10.
6
BADURA-SKODA, 588.
7
DANIEL GOTTLOB TÜRK, Clavierschule (1789), as quoted in JOSEPH P. SWAIN, “Form and
Function of the Classical Cadenza,” The Journal of Musicology 6.1 (1988): 33.
MOZART’S TRANSFORMATION OF THE CADENZA 3

equality between the piano and the tutti. Despite these revolutionary changes to
the cadenza, Mozart does not forget its two original functions, namely, to
reinforce the effect of the final cadence and to display the agility of the soloist’s
fingers. As a result, Mozart definitely has an important place in the history of the
cadenza. We shall explore Mozart’s transformation of the cadenza in the
following sections.

II. Mozart’s cadenza as an integral part of the first movement


Before examining how Mozart ensures the cadenza to be an indispensable
component of the first movement, we shall turn our attention to the general
principle underlying the structure of the first movement of a Mozart concerto for
it has an intimate yet subtle relationship with the structure of a Mozart cadenza.
Generally speaking, the first movement of a Classical concerto has the so-called
“double-exposition” form: in the “orchestral exposition,” the orchestra presents
the first and second subjects in the tonic key; following the orchestral exposition
is the “solo exposition” in which the accompanied solo presents both subjects
again with the first subject in the tonic and the second subject in the dominant.
The solo exposition usually ends with a trill, to be followed immediately by the
“central ritornello” in which the orchestra repeats some of the materials presented
in the orchestral exposition. The development and the recapitulation are the next
two sections, the latter being a repetition of the solo exposition except that both
themes are now in the tonic. The orchestra then concludes the movement by
repeating some materials in the orchestral exposition (the “closing ritornello”),
and this section is usually interrupted in the middle by a cadenza. This form is
essentially an amalgamation of the Baroque concerto-ritornelli form and the
Classical sonata form.
Clearly, the “double-exposition” form is an extremely repetitive form, thus
Mozart never follows this form strictly in his mature concertos. To illustrate
Mozart’s way of writing the first movement, all the materials in the movement
can be divided into four groups according to the materials’ characteristics:
1. the themes (T), referring to all the well-defined themes in the movement;
2. the transitions (tr), referring to all the passages with a connective character;
3. the bravura passages (B), referring to all the virtuoso passages in the solo part
that cannot be called melodies; and
4. the concluding idea (C), referring to the materials used to conclude both the
orchestral exposition and the whole concerto movement. Sometimes C may be
present in the central ritornello as well.
4 VINCENT C. K. CHEUNG

We can then draw a schematic diagram for each concerto movement to see how
these four groups of materials relate to each other. Note, however, that the above
division is somewhat arbitrary. Indeed, many passages with a connective
character have the quality of a well-defined theme, and many bravura passages
have the feature of a typical transition. The above designations are not intended
to be rigorous; they are only used to illustrate how Mozart constructs the first
movement and the cadenza. The diagram for the first movement of Piano
Concerto No. 18 (K. 456) is drawn below as an example. Similar diagrams can be
drawn for the first movement of all of the other concertos by Mozart (see Ex. 4-1
for the musical examples for Figure 4-1).

FIGURE 4-1. Schematic Representation of K. 456/i (see Ex. 4-1). Underlined =


orchestral section.

T1 - tr1 - tr2 - T2 - tr3 - tr4 - T3 - tr5 - C - T1 - tr1 - B1 - C - T4 - B2 - tr2 - T2 -


Orchestral Exposition Solo Exposition

tr3 - T3 - B3 - B4 - tr1 - tr5 - C - Development - T1 - tr1 - T4 - B2 - tr2 - T2


Central Ritornello Recapitulation

- tr3 - T3 - B3 - B4 - B5 - tr1 - Cadenza - tr4 - T3 - tr5 - C


Closing Ritornello

EXAMPLE 4-1a – 4-1p. The themes, transitions, bravura passages, and concluding
idea of Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 18, K. 456, 1st movement.

Ex. 4-1a. T1, mm. 1-4.

Ex. 4-1b. tr1(i), mm. 18-21.


MOZART’S TRANSFORMATION OF THE CADENZA 5

Ex. 4-1c. tr1(ii), mm. 24-25.

Ex. 4-1d. tr2, mm. 28-31.

Ex. 4-1e. T2, mm. 39-43.

Ex. 4-1f. tr3, mm. 47-48.

Ex. 4-1g. tr4, mm. 51-53.

Ex. 4-1h. T3, mm. 54-57.


6 VINCENT C. K. CHEUNG

Ex. 4-1i. tr5, mm. 61-63.

Ex. 4-1j. C, mm. 67-69.

Ex. 4-1k. B1, mm. 93-95.

Ex. 4-1l. T4, mm. 102-105.

Ex. 4-1m. B2, mm. 110-111.

Ex. 4-1n, B3, mm. 149-150.


MOZART’S TRANSFORMATION OF THE CADENZA 7

Ex. 4-1o. B4, mm. 165-166.

Ex. 4-1p. B5 (related to C), mm. 331-332.

Evidently, the structure of K. 456/i differs from the standard, repetitive


“double-exposition” form considerably. T4, a tune not heard before, is
introduced in the solo exposition. Besides, tr1 appears five times in the
movement, but it is never joined to the same passage for more than once: while
tr1 is connected to tr2 in the orchestral exposition, it is sandwiched between T1
and B1 in the solo exposition; in the central ritornello, tr1 is joined to tr5, but in
the recapitulation, it is placed next to T4; finally, in the closing ritornello, tr1 is
connected to the cadenza. Thus, in K. 456/i, the materials presented in the
orchestral exposition are reshuffled in the following sections so that straight
repetitions of materials can be avoided. This idea of generating variety in
Mozart’s concertos was first pointed out by A. Hutchings: he described this
method of constructing the first movement with two principles, namely, the
“principle of themes with open ends” and the “principle of variety in the order of
themes.”8 Figure 4-1 is but an elucidation of these two principles although
Hutchings originally presented them in a slightly different way.
Another conclusion that we may draw just by glancing over Figure 4-1 is
that although the order of materials in the orchestral exposition are varied when
they are repeated in the ensuing sections, the general structure of the movement
can still be observed: T1 marks the beginning of the two expositions and the
recapitulation, and the order of the four themes (T) in the solo exposition remains

8
HUTCHINGS, 15.
8 VINCENT C. K. CHEUNG

unchanged in the recapitulation (T1 - T4 - T2 - T3). (Of course, here we ignore


the intervening tr’s and B’s between the T’s.) Hence, we can extend the
Hutchings’ principles by saying that variety is generated by the reshuffling of
thematic materials within a general framework.
We are now ready to discuss the structure of the cadenza for this
movement. Mozart, unlike many early Classical composers, quoted thematic
materials from the concerto movement extensively in the cadenza. Generally,
according to Eva and Paul Badura-Skoda, the thematic materials are organized
into three sections:

In almost all Mozart’s major cadenzas one can make out


a clear division into three; an ‘opening’ (I), which begins
either with one of the themes of the concerto or with
virtuoso passage-work......a middle section (II), which is
almost always a sequential development of some
important theme or motive from the concerto
movement.......This is the starting point for a number of
virtuoso runs, arpeggios, etc., which lead to a closing
section (III) of the cadenza, usually ending on a trill.9

Again, we can easily discern the form of the cadenza by constructing a diagram
similar to Figure 4-1 for it. However, before doing that, let us define the fifth
group of materials present in a concerto movement, that is, the bravura passages
in the cadenza which are unrelated to the cadenza’s parent movement (U). The
schematic representation of Mozart’s cadenza for K. 456/i is presented below.
Note that in the cadenza Mozart usually quotes only a motive or a fragment from
each section of the parent movement. So, in the following diagram, for example,
tr1 does not represent a complete statement of tr1 as in the parent movement (see
Ex. 4-2 for the musical examples for Figure 4-2).

FIGURE 4-2. Schematic representation of the cadenza for K. 456/i (see Ex. 4-2).

tr1 - U - T1 - dev. of T1 - U - T3 - tr3 - U - B1 - U


Opening Middle Section Closing Section

9
EVA and PAUL BADURA-SKODA, Interpreting Mozart on the Keyboard, tr. Leo Black (London:
Barrie and Rockliff, 1962), 215-216.
MOZART’S TRANSFORMATION OF THE CADENZA 9

EXAMPLE 4-2. The structure of Mozart’s cadenza for K. 456/i.


10 VINCENT C. K. CHEUNG

Figure 4-2 indicates three notable features of the cadenza for K. 456/i:
1. All the quoted materials in the cadenza are cemented together by unrelated
passages (U).
2. The order of the quoted materials is different from their order in their parent
movement. For example, while tr1 is heard right after T1 in the two
expositions and the recapitulation of the movement, tr1 is placed before T1 in
the cadenza. Similarly, the order tr3 - T3 observed in the parent movement is
reversed in the cadenza.
3. The middle section contains more quoted themes (T) while the other two
sections concentrate on quoted bravura passages (B) and transitions (tr).
Analyzing the form of other surviving cadenzas and the form of their
corresponding parent movements, we notice that these three features recur
consistently in many of his cadenzas.10 The reason for the inclusion of unrelated
10
Exceptions are the cadenzas for K. 449/i and K. 451/i, which contain no quoted themes (T); the
cadenza for K. 453/i, which begins with T1; and the cadenza for K. 488/i, which consists of no
quoted materials.
MOZART’S TRANSFORMATION OF THE CADENZA 11

bravura passages is mainly for the soloist to display his/her technique in order to
fulfill the expectation of the listeners. More importantly, since quoted thematic
materials in the cadenza are reshuffled within a three-part general framework,
the cadenza has the same underlying principles of construction as its parent
movement, and the cadenza thus becomes more like an indispensable part of the
movement rather than being merely an unnatural insertion as exemplified by the
non-thematic cadenzas of Mozart’s contemporaries. This, then, is the first and the
most important strategy Mozart uses to integrate the cadenza into the movement.
To ensure that the cadenza is a structural component necessary for the
total completeness of the first movement form, Mozart has yet another problem to
solve. Because a cadenza, by definition, is always played after a fermata sign
over a tonic 6-4 chord, this “interrupted cadential formula [invariably] creates a
dramatic gap.”11 Just so that the cadenza will not sound like an artificial addition,
the transition from the orchestral tutti to the cadenza must be made seamless. In
the words of Eva and Paul Badura-Skoda, all good cadenzas must therefore have a
“linking character.”12 In Mozart’s cadenzas, the problem of maintaining
continuity is solved by two approaches: the harmonic approach and the thematic
approach.
Let us first consider the harmonic approach. As mentioned above, the I6-4
chord on which the tutti pauses is so unstable that theorists have long perceived
this chord as a “dominant chord with a double appoggiatura, which immediately
resolves to V.”13 As a result, the tension that the sudden termination of the
ritornello generates is stupendous, and to ensure continuity, the solo must be able
to “pick up” the tension from the orchestra in the beginning of the cadenza. This
responsibility of the solo therefore explains Mozart’s emphasis on the I6-4 chord in
the opening section of the cadenza, which contains many “written-out
dominants”14 (e.g. K. 453/i, Ex. 4-3). Indeed, Mozart emphasizes I6-4 not only in
the opening, but also in the closing section (e.g. K. 453/i, Ex. 4-5) because the
cadenza can enhance the closing effect of the cadence only if the solo generates
tension through I6-4, and releases the tension quickly by going to V7 and, after
that, I5-3. To contrast the instability of both ends of the cadenza, the middle
section thus tends to settle on I5-3 very briefly when the more lyrical themes from

11
ROBERT D. LEVIN, “Instrumental Ornamentation, Improvisation and Cadenzas,” in Performance
Practice: Music after 1600, eds. Howard Mayer and Stanley Sadie (Houndmills: Macmillan,
1989), 280.
12
EVA and PAUL BADURA-SKODA, 215.
13
SWAIN, 36.
14
EVA and PAUL BADURA-SKODA, 218. Eva and Paul Badura-Skoda also quoted K. 453/i to
illustrate the general harmonic plan in a Mozart cadenza.
12 VINCENT C. K. CHEUNG

the concerto movement comes in (e.g. K. 453/i, Ex. 4-4).15 This harmonic plan
consequently justifies Mozart’s tendency to quote transitions (tr) and bravura
passages (B) in the two outer sections since tr’s and B’s are harmonically more
unstable than the well-defined themes (T).

EXAMPLE 4-3. Opening section of the cadenza for K. 453/i.

EXAMPLE 4-4. Middle section of the cadenza for K. 453/i.

EXAMPLE 4-5. Closing section of the cadenza for K. 453/i.

Continuity over the gap created by the fermata sign over the I6-4 chord is
also maintained by the thematic approach although Mozart uses this approach
only in six of his cadenzas. Providing it with a stronger connecting character,
Mozart begins the cadenza by repeating the tune heard immediately before the
cadenza in K. 271, No. 9; K. 415, No. 13 (Ex. 4-6); K. 449, No. 14; K. 450, No.

15
Exceptions are the cadenzas for K. 451/i and K. 459/i, which never settle themselves on I5-3.
MOZART’S TRANSFORMATION OF THE CADENZA 13

15; K. 451, No. 16; and K. 456, No. 18. Since transitions (tr) are usually repeated
in the beginning of the closing ritornello, the thematic approach agrees with the
hypothesis above that the cadenza tends to open with transitions (tr) or bravura
passages (B). Together with a careful harmonic plan, this strategy ensures the
cadenza to be an essential structural component of the movement.

EXAMPLE 4-6. Maintaining continuity over the gap using the thematic approach
in the cadenza for K. 415/i.

There is still one more point to consider before the cadenza can be fully
fused with the concerto form, namely, the potential for the cadenza to disrupt the
symmetry of the whole movement. Ignoring the cadenza for a while, we shall
find that the Classical concerto form is highly symmetric:

Orch. Expo. - Solo Expo. - Central Ritornello - Dev. + Recap. - Closing Ritornello
Orch. only Orch.+Pf. Orch. only Orch.+Pf. Orch. only

However, with the intrusion of the cadenza in the middle of the closing ritornello,
the symmetry of the form is ruined:

Orch. Expo. - Solo Expo. - Central Ritor. - Dev. + Recap. - Cadenza - Closing Ritor.16
Orch. only Orch.+Pf. Orch. only Orch.+Pf. Pf. only Orch. only

16
Very technically speaking, the closing ritornello should be divided into two halves by the
cadenza. But since the first half of the closing ritornello is usually very short, we can say that the
entire closing ritornello comes after the cadenza for the sake of argument.
14 VINCENT C. K. CHEUNG

Mozart was probably partially conscious of this problem. In three of his mature
piano concertos (K. 466, No. 20; K. 482, No. 22; and K. 491, No. 24), Mozart
inserts a passage for pianoforte alone between the orchestral exposition and the
solo exposition (Ex. 4-7 – 4-9). This solo entry restores the symmetry of the form:

Orch. ex - solo entry - Solo ex. - Central Ritor - Dev. + Recap. - Cadenza - Closing Ritor.
Orch. only Pf. only Orch.+Pf. Orch. only Orch.+Pf. Pf. only Orch. only

Although in these three concertos the solo entry is only about 10 bars long (much
shorter than a typical Mozart cadenza), the fact that it is the first tune for the piano
alone in the concerto marks it as important in the structure (this is analogous to
the importance of the first theme in a Classical sonata). Owing to the rarity of the
solo entry among the 27 piano concertos by Mozart, we should not say Mozart
was fully aware of its potential to reestablish the piece’s symmetry. Had Mozart
had the chance to write a dozen more piano concertos, the function of the solo
entry might have been exploited more fully.

EXAMPLE 4-7. The solo entry in K. 466/i.

EXAMPLE 4-8. The solo entry in K. 482/i.

EXAMPLE 4-9. The solo entry in K. 491/i.


MOZART’S TRANSFORMATION OF THE CADENZA 15

To summarize briefly before the next section of this essay: in the first
movements of Mozart’s piano concertos, the cadenza is integrated into the
concerto form by three strategies. First, the cadenza shares the same principles of
construction with its parent concerto movement. Second, both the harmonic and
thematic plans of the cadenza ensure smooth transition over the gap created by the
abrupt termination of the first half of the closing ritornello on the tonic 6-4 chord.
Finally, in concertos No. 20, 22, and 24, the solo entry restores the form’s
symmetry, which would otherwise be destroyed by the cadenza.

III. Cadenza and the equality between the solo and the tutti
As mentioned in the first section, instrumentalists and singers during
Mozart’s time tended to improvise monstrously long cadenzas. These lengthy
cadenzas put the accompanying orchestra into a more subsidiary place in an aria
or a concerto movement since a longer proportion of the piece was devoted to the
soloist alone. Contrary to these “out of proportion” arias and concertos, Mozart’s
piano concertos emphasize the equality between the soloist and the tutti, which
Girdlestone has shown by analyzing thoroughly the symphonic treatment of
tunes.17 Here, this important concept in Mozart’s concertos will be illustrated by
examining the proportion of the cadenza to its parent concerto movement.
In order to accurately depict the relative dimensions of Mozart’s cadenzas,
the duration of the different sections of the movements with authentic cadenzas
available in a representative recording of the complete Mozart concertos18 were
measured. The results are summarized in the following table:

17
GIRDLESTONE, 56-70.
18
WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART, The Piano Concertos and Rondo K. 382 & 386, in 3 vols.
[sound recording], English Chamber Orchestra, pf. & cond. Murray Perahia (Sony Classical, SX
4K 46 442 – SX 4K 46 444, 1991).
16 VINCENT C. K. CHEUNG

TABLE 4-1. The duration of the different sections of the first movements with
authentic cadenzas available.19

Concerto Total Orch. Solo Cent. Dev.+ Clos. Cadenza Clos. Pf. Orch. Pf. +
Movement duratio Exp. Exp. Ritor Recap Ritor (s) Ritor. only only Orch.
n (s) (s) . (s) . (2nd (%) (%) (%)
(s) (s) (1st half)
half) (s)
(s)
K. 413 /i 524 74 132 11 223 18 45 21 8.9 23.6 67.8
K. 414 /i 627 118 145 13 248 15 71 17 11.3 26.0 62.7
K. 415 /i 592 100 146 20 223 22 56 25 9.5 28.2 62.4
K. 449 /i 513 115 103 18 174 15 60 28 11.7 34.3 54.0
K. 450 /i 666 110 146 31 241 21 86 31 12.9 29.0 58.1
K. 451 /i 644 132 163 31 211 19 70 18 10.9 31.0 58.1
K. 453 /i 685 130 165 24 232 17 76 41 11.1 31.0 58.0
K. 456 /i 679 120 168 31 239 21 70 30 10.3 29.8 59.9
K. 459 /i 762 122 198 36 280 24 67 35 8.8 28.4 62.7
K. 488 /i 699 131 136 25 268 29 77 33 11.0 31.2 57.8
K. 595 /i 794 154 177 30 301 11 96 25 12.1 27.7 60.1

Glancing over the last three columns of Table 4-1, we find that the relative
duration of the different sections in the first movements are strikingly consistent:
the cadenza, the only section in which the piano plays alone, always takes up
about 10% of the movement; sections in which the solo does not take part always
fill about 30% of the piece while the sections in which the solo and the tutti
cooperate take up the remaining 60%. This 1:3:6 ratio indeed reveals very clearly
the relationship between the solo and the tutti: since a concerto is a combat
between the two forces, it is reasonable and necessary for the sections in which
both the piano and the orchestra take part to occupy more than half of the
movement. But in those sections, the solo, with its virtuosity as its “weapon,”
wins against the tutti. In order to compensate for the tutti’s loss, Mozart allocates
more time for the tutti to shine alone without the solo. Hence, the three orchestra-
only sections are 20% longer than the cadenza. The equality between the two
parties is consequently ensured.
Apart from the above ratio analysis, the orchestral colour of the cadenzas
also suggests that Mozart was thinking not only of the piano but also of the
orchestral instruments when writing a concerto. Mozart has two methods of
making the cadenza sound like a section with more than one instrument involved.
The texture can be suddenly changed between thin to thick as if the solo and the
tutti are playing a tune alternately (e.g. in K. 415, Ex. 4-10; and K. 449, Ex. 4-11),

19
SWAIN (44) did a similar study using the number of measures in the cadenzas as the basis.
However, Swain emphasized only the relative length of the cadenza and ignored the relative
lengths of the other sections.
MOZART’S TRANSFORMATION OF THE CADENZA 17

or the register can suddenly be shifted between low to high as if two instruments
are echoing each other (e.g. in K. 453, Ex. 4-12; and K. 595, Ex. 4-13). These
two methods not only add stylistic flair to the cadenza, but also confirm Mozart as
a master who paid equal attention to all instrumental parts.

EXAMPLE 4-10. The sudden change of texture in the cadenza for K. 415/i.

EXAMPLE 4-11. The sudden change of texture in the cadenza for K. 449/i.
18 VINCENT C. K. CHEUNG

Example 4-12. The sudden shift of register in the cadenza for K. 453/i.

Example 4-13. The sudden shift of register in the cadenza for K. 595/i.

IV. Conclusion: Mozart’s place in the History of the Cadenza


In the above two sections, we have gone through how Mozart transforms
the cadenza from an unnatural and lengthy insertion to a fully functional unit
whose proportion to the movement observes the concept of equality between the
dipoles. In spite of the structural complexity of his cadenzas, Mozart, like his
contemporaries, did seem to welcome other cadenzas supplied by the soloists
since all the surviving cadenzas (except the one for K. 488) were not written
directly into the autograph score of the concertos.20 Indeed, Mozart treated his
own cadenzas as his “personal property” rather than something for publication.21
On the other hand, the fact that so many cadenzas survived as well as the high
quality of the cadenzas suggest that Mozart probably always wrote down what he
would play in the cadenza before performing a concerto of his own. Thus, we can
view Mozart’s cadenzas as a transition between the cadenzas of the early
Classical composers, who usually left the cadenzas for improvisation, and the
cadenzas of the late Beethoven, who insisted the performers to use his version
with the words “non si fa una cadenza” in his Fifth Piano Concerto.22 Most
composers in the 19th century followed Beethoven’s tradition of supplying their
own version of cadenzas to their concertos.

20
SWAIN, 35.
21
WHITMORE, 128.
22
As quoted in EVA BADURA-SKODA, 592.
MOZART’S TRANSFORMATION OF THE CADENZA 19

Moreover, the structural relationship between the cadenza and the


concerto movement in Mozart’s piano concertos is just one of the many examples
showing the Classical conception of perfect balance and proportion between
different sections of an ideal musical form. In this respect, Mozart’s design of the
cadenza is but a reflection of the musicians’ belief in rationality during the age of
Enlightenment.
October 31st 1997
For Prof. Gregory G. Butler

References

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Musicians, vol. 3. Edited by Stanley Sadie, 586-593. London:
Macmillan, 1980.

BADURA-SKODA, EVA and PAUL. Interpreting Mozart on the Keyboard. Trans.


Leo Black. London: Barrie and Rockliff, 1962.

GIRDLESTONE, CUTHBERT. Mozart and his Piano Concerto. New York: Dover,
1964.

HUTCHINGS, ARTHUR. A Companion to Mozart’s Piano Concertos. London:


Oxford UP, 1950.

LEVIN, ROBERT D. “Instrumental Ornamentation, Improvisation and Cadenzas.”


In Performance Practice: Music after 1600. Edited by Howard Mayer and
Stanley Sadie. Houndmills: Macmillan, 1989.

MOZART, WOLFGANG AMADEUS. The Complete Original Cadenzas. Edited by


Lili Kraus. New York: Belwin-Mills, 1972.

MOZART, WOLFGANG AMADEUS. The Piano Concertos and Rondo K. 382 & 386,
in 3 vols. [sound recording.] English Chamber Orchestra. Pf. & Cond.
Murray Perahia. Sony Classical (SX 4K 46 442 - SX 4K 46 444), 1991.

SWAIN, JOSEPH P. “Form and Function of the Classical Cadenza.” Journal of


Musicology 6, No.1 (1988): 27-59.

WHITMORE, PHILIP. Unpremeditated Art - the Cadenza in the Classical Keyboard


Concerto. Oxford: Clarendon, 1991.

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