Piano Sonata in B-flat major, K. 498a

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The Menuetto and Trio from this sonata

The Piano Sonata in B-flat major, K. 498a (Anh. 136), is a piano sonata in four movements. It was first printed in 1798 by P. J. Thonus in Leipzig on behalf of Breitkopf & Härtel and attributed to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; an edition printed in c. 1805 already credited it as opus 26 of the Thomascantor August Eberhard Müller (1767–1817).[1] Some publications still attribute it to Mozart, often as Piano Sonata No. 20.[2]

Form

August Eberhard Müller

A typical performance lasts for about 19 minutes. The movements are:

  1. Menuetto
    Allegro (in B major, 3
    4
    time, 35 bars)
    Trio (in E major, 3
    4
    time, 24 bars)
  2. Rondo
– Allegro (B major, 6
8
time, 235 bars)

The musicologist Alfred Einstein suggested that the Menuetto from this work might be a piano arrangement of the "missing movement" of Mozart's Eine kleine Nachtmusik, K. 525 (1787).[3]

The Andante is an arrangement of the variations movement of the concerto K. 450 in B-flat major, and the Rondo incorporates arrangements of passages from the finales of the B-flat concerti K. 450, K. 456, and K. 595.

Recordings

See also

  • Piano Sonata in F major, K. 547a (Mozart)

References

External links