Bassoon Concerto
- Composer
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
- Type
- Concerto
- Opus
- K 191
- Tonality
- B flat major
- Year composed
- 1774
- Instruments
- Bassoon, Orchestra
Free sheet music
-
- Full Score
- Rating
Buy printed editions
We have selected some printed editions we think may be useful.
-
- Bassoon Concerto, K. 191 (Orch.)
- Price
- $9.95
- Instruments
- Bassoon
- Publisher
- Alfred Publishing
-
- Bassoon Concerto
- Price
- $10.95
- Instruments
- Bassoon
- Publisher
- Baerenreiter
-
- Bassoon Concerto In Bb Major, K. 191
- Price
- $19.95
- Instruments
- Bassoon, Piano
- Publisher
- Baerenreiter
About
The Bassoon Concerto in B flat major (K. 191), written in 1774 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, is the most standard piece in the entire bassoon repertory. Nearly all professional bassoonists will perform the piece at some stage in their career, and it is probably the most commonly requested piece in orchestral auditions – it is usually requested that the player perform the excerpts from concerto's first two movements in every audition.
Although the autograph is lost, the exact date of the finishing is known: 4 June 1774.
Mozart wrote the bassoon concerto when he was 18 years old, and it was his first concerto for wind instruments. Although it is believed that it was commissioned by an aristocratic amateur bassoon player Thaddäus Freiherr von Dürnitz, who owned seventy-four works by Mozart, this is a claim that is supported by little evidence. Scholars believe that Mozart wrote perhaps three bassoon concerti, but that only the first has survived.
Structure
The piece itself is divided into three movements:
Media
The above text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License ( creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ ). It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bassoon Concerto (Mozart)" ( en.wikipedia.org/ ... i/Bassoon_Concerto_(Mozart) ).
Although the autograph is lost, the exact date of the finishing is known: 4 June 1774.
Mozart wrote the bassoon concerto when he was 18 years old, and it was his first concerto for wind instruments. Although it is believed that it was commissioned by an aristocratic amateur bassoon player Thaddäus Freiherr von Dürnitz, who owned seventy-four works by Mozart, this is a claim that is supported by little evidence. Scholars believe that Mozart wrote perhaps three bassoon concerti, but that only the first has survived.
Structure
The piece itself is divided into three movements:
- I. Allegro
- II. Andante ma Adagio
- III. Rondo: tempo di menuetto
Media
The above text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License ( creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ ). It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bassoon Concerto (Mozart)" ( en.wikipedia.org/ ... i/Bassoon_Concerto_(Mozart) ).

