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Difficulty (Explanation)
Other titles of this difficulty
Violin Concerto no. 4 D major K. 218
7 difficult

About the Composer

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Mozart is one of the few composers to have produced masterpieces in all genres. On the concert tours he undertook in his early years (London, Mannheim, Italy, Paris) he gained many varied musical impressions that he assimilated in his youth and which formed the prerequisite for his later consummate musical language.

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About the Authors

Wolf-Dieter Seiffert (Editor)

Dr. Wolf-Dieter Seiffert, born in 1959 in Frankfurt/M., read musicology, modern German literature, and philosophy at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität in Munich. On a scholarship from the “Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes”, he did his doctorate in 1990 with a thesis on “Mozarts frühe Streichquartette” (Rudolf Bockholdt). That same year, Seiffert started work at G. Henle Publishers as an editor. Parallel to his work at the publisher, he completed a diploma in business studies at the St. Gallen University, KMU-HSG, financed by the Günter Henle Foundation. Seiffert was managing director of G. Henle Verlag from 2000 to 2023.

Seiffert has edited numerous Urtext editions for G. Henle Publishers, predominantly on Mozart’s works.

Kurt Guntner (Fingering and bowing for Violin, Cadenzas)

Prof. Kurt Guntner was born in Munich on Mozart’s 183rd birthday. He studied the violin with Ludwig Ackermann, Max Rostal and Henryk Szeryng. At the age of 18, he made his solo debut in the Kongreßsaal at the German Museum in Munich, performing Beethoven’s Violin Concerto with the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra. At the age of 22 he was appointed first concertmaster with the Bavarian State Orchestra. After 10 eventful years at the Bavarian State Opera with conductors such as Ferenc Fricsay, Joseph Keilberth and Hans Knappertsbusch, Rudolf Kempe invited him to become the first concertmaster with the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra, giving him the opportunity to perform the violin solo in many of the great violin concertos.

Of particular appeal were the BR’s invitations to perform and record gr
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Product Safety Informations (GPSR)

G. Henle Verlag

Here you can find the information about the manufacturer of the product.

G. Henle Verlag e.K.
Forstenrieder Allee 122
81476 München
Germany
info@henle.de
www.henle.com

La réduction pour piano du Concerto pour violon No. 4 ré majeur KV 218 de Mozart se base sur la partition "Urtext" reposant elle-meme exclusivement sur l'autographe de Mozart. Cette réduction pour piano représente l'exemple par excellence d'une partition très musicale et d'exécution facile, ce qui facilitera certainement le travail des musiciens amateurs.

Pizzicato

... Zum einen ist der Klavierpart bei Henle wesentlich schlanker und durchsichtiger (und damit auch technisch leichter) gestaltet als bei anderen Verlagen ..., zum anderen überzeugt die Einrichtung der Violinstimme durch Kurt Guntner. Da gibt es keine pseudovirtuosen Schluchzer und Rutscher, die Strichvorschläge führen zu kurzer, luftiger Bogenführung, die neuen Kadenzen sind keine technisch überladenen Schaustücke, sondern nutzen relativ einfache, aber glanzvolle Mittel, das Instrument in seiner klanglichen Eigenart zu charakterisieren ... Einfach, aber durchdacht, geschmackvoll, verständlich, übersichtlich – so können Urtextausgaben eben auch sein.

Das Liebhaberorchester

L’originalité de cette réduction réside dans le fait que la partie de piano sonne bien tout en évitant au pianiste accompagnateur de trop grandes difficultés techniques, ne privilégiant pas le fait de rejoindre l’écriture orchestrale. Une grande attention a été portée à la distinction entre la « staccato » et le « trait », le point ayant tendance à prendre la forme du trait dans l’écriture rapide de Mozart, les manuscrits autographes de Mozart étant les seules sources de cette édition Urtext. Quelques problèmes d’éditions sont annotés là où ils se présentent ; la partie soliste est augmentée de propositions techniques et de cadences de Kurt Guntner.

Crescendo, 2001

Mr. Gunter`s suggested fingerings are entirely logical from a violinistic point of view with slurs and phrasing always in style. (It is interesting to compare earlier editions that contained many more shifts and less than exemplary slurring). His cadenza is an amalgam of several well-known examles while he also adds his own embellishments to the main motifs of each movement. The short improvisatory lead-ins back to the main theme in the last movement are fluidly and imaginatively written. This is altogether a painstaking, carefullys crafted account of the solo part.Siegfried Petrenz`s piano reduction is sufficiently abundant in harmony while the texture remains clearer than earlier versions that were more closely based on the orchestral writing. The keyboard part indicates the relevant instrumentation (for example, horns, oboes, violas and general tuttis)As is usually the case with Henle, this new publication is spacious in layout with well-organized page turns and meticulous attention to detail.

Music Teacher Magazine

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